Wallace John Gardner Explained

Type:Bishop
Honorific Prefix:The Right Reverend
Wallace John Gardner
Honorific Suffix:D.D., S.T.D.
Elected:March 10, 1936
Term:1937–1954
Retired:-->
Successor:Alfred L. Banyard
Ordination:June 2, 1912
Ordained By:Frederick Burgess
Consecration:June 3, 1936
Consecrated By:Paul Matthews
Birth Date:25 July 1883
Death Place:Trenton, New Jersey, United States
Buried:St. Mary's Episcopal Church, Burlington, New Jersey
Parents:Frederick A. Gardner & Sarah Jane McConnell
Previous Post:Coadjutor Bishop of New Jersey (1936-1937)

Wallace John Gardner (July 25, 1883 – October 22, 1954) was the sixth bishop of New Jersey in The Episcopal Church.[1]

Biography

Gardner was born on July 25, 1883, in Buffalo, New York, the son of Frederick A. Gardner and Sarah Jane McConnell and the fourth of five children. He was educated in Catskill, New York and later at St Stephen's College in Annandale-on-Hudson, New York from where he graduated in 1906 with a Bachelor of Arts. He then worked as a teacher in private schools between 1906 and 1908, after which he became a student at the General Theological Seminary in New York City. He received his Master of Arts from St Stephen's in 1910 and his Doctor of Divinity in 1923. he was awarded a Doctor of Sacred Theology from General in 1937, Rutgers University in 1938 and Philadelphia Divinity School in 1939.

He was ordained deacon in 1911 and priest in 1912. After his diaconal ordination he became chaplain of St Mary and St Paul Cathedral school in Garden City, New York. In 1919 he became rector of St Paul's Church in Flatbush, Brooklyn and then vicar of the Chapel of the Intercession in New York City in 1933. In 1936 he was elected Bishop Coadjutor of New Jersey and was consecrated on June 3, 1936. On November 1, 1937, he succeeded as diocesan bishop. He remained bishop till his death in 1954.[2]

Notes and References

  1. Book: Redmile, Robert David . 2006 . The Apostolic Succession and the Catholic Episcopate in the Christian Episcopal Church . Xulon Press . 1600345166.
  2. William Starr Myers (2000). Prominent Families of New Jersey, Volume 1, p. 602. Genealogical Publishing Com, Baltimore. .