John Ryder (bishop) explained

Type:Archbishop
Honorific Prefix:The Most Reverend
John Ryder
Honorific Suffix:D.D.
Archbishop of Tuam
Bishop of Ardagh
Archdiocese:Tuam
Appointed:19 March 1752
Term:1752-1775
Retired:-->
Predecessor:Josiah Hort
Successor:Jemmett Browne
Ordination:14 May 1721
Ordained By:Edmund Gibson
Consecration:21 February 1742
Consecrated By:John Hoadly
Birth Date:c. 1697
Birth Place:Nuneaton, Warwickshire, England
Death Date:4 February 1775
Tomb:-->
Nationality:English
Parents:Dudley Ryder
Spouse:Alice Wilmot
Frances Hutchinson
Children:2
Previous Post:Bishop of Killaloe (1742–1743)
Bishop of Down and Connor (1743–1752)
Alma Mater:Queens' College, Cambridge

John Ryder (c. 1697 – 4 February 1775) was the Church of Ireland Bishop of Down and Connor, from 1743 to 1752, and then Archbishop of Tuam, from 1752 to his death in 1775.

Life

The son of Dudley Ryder, haberdasher, he was born at Nuneaton, Warwickshire, about 1697. His grandfather was another Dudley Ryder (died 1683), an ejected rector of Bedworth. He was educated at Charterhouse School and Queens' College, Cambridge, where he graduated BA in 1715, MA in 1719, and DD in 1741.

In 1721 Ryder was appointed as vicar of Nuneaton and held the living until his appointment as Church of Ireland bishop of Killaloe by letters patent of 30 January 1742. He was consecrated in St Bridget's, Dublin, on 21 February. Only a year later he was translated to the see of Down and Connor, and was further promoted, in March 1752, to be archbishop of Tuam and bishop of Ardagh. His views were evangelical.

Ryder spent his later years at Nice, where he died on 4 February 1775 from the effects of a fall from his horse. He was buried on 6 February in a ground near the shore, purchased for Protestant burials by the British consul. The area was later eroded by the sea.

His daughter Catherine married a John Hamilton and, travelling on the Continent, met and became a dear friend of Yekaterina Romanovna Vorontsova-Dashkova, a major figure of the Russian Enlightenment. Princess Dashkova came to Ireland and spent time with the family. Two of John Ryder's relations, Martha and Katherine Wilmot went to Russia to renew the friendship.[1]

References

Attribution

Notes and References

  1. An Irish Peer on the Continent, 1801–03 by Catherine Wilmot (1920)