Leigh Richmond Brewer Explained

Type:Bishop
Honorific Prefix:The Right Reverend
Richmond Brewer
Honorific Suffix:D.D.
Bishop of Montana
Church:Episcopal Church
Diocese:Montana
Elected:1880
Term:1880–1904
Retired:-->
Predecessor:Daniel S. Tuttle
Successor:William F. Faber
Ordination:July 1, 1866
Ordained By:Arthur Cleveland Coxe
Consecration:December 8, 1880
Consecrated By:Frederic Dan Huntington
Birth Date:20 January 1839
Parents:Sheldon Sykes Leigh Brewer & Lura Crampton
Children:1
Previous Post:-->
Alma Mater:Hobart College
Signature:Signature of Leigh Richmond Brewer.png

Leigh Richmond Brewer (January 20, 1839 - August 28, 1916) was a bishop of Montana in The Episcopal Church.[1]

Biography

Brewer was born on January 20, 1839, in Berkshire, Vermont to Sheldon Sykes and Lura Brewer. He graduated from Hobart College in 1863. During the course he was awarded a prize in Latin during his sophomore year, a prize in Greek during his junior year, the first White essay prize and the second Cobb essay prize in the senior year. He graduated from the General Theological Seminary in 1866.[2] [3]

He was ordained deacon by Henry C. Potter, Bishop of New York on July 1, 1866, in the Church of the Annunciation in New York. He was ordained a priest by Bishop Arthur Cleveland Coxe of Western New York on June 16, 1867. He became rector of Grace Church in Carthage, New York. After 6 years he became rector of Trinity Church in Watertown, New York. His elected to the episcopacy came in 1880 when he was elected Bishop of Montana. He was consecrated in Trinity Church Watertown on December 8, 1880, by Bishop Frederic Dan Huntington of Central New York, together with Bishop Daniel S. Tuttle of Utah, William Bissell of Vermont, Benjamin Wistar Morris of Oregon and Benjamin Henry Paddock of Massachusetts.

Notes and References

  1. News: Bishop Leigh R. Brewer . . August 29, 1916 . The New York Times . 2015-08-17.
  2. 1887 . The Rt. Rev. Leigh Richmond Brewer, D.D. . Living Church Quarterly . 81.
  3. 1967. BREWER, Leigh Richmond . Who Was Who in America . 136.