William Gordon (bishop of Alaska) explained

Type:Bishop
Honorific Prefix:The Right Reverend
William J. Gordon Jr.
Bishop of Alaska
Church:Episcopal Church
Appointed:-->
Term:1948–1974
Retired:-->
Predecessor:John Boyd Bentley
Successor:David Cochran
Other Post:Assistant Bishop of Michigan (1976–1986)
Ordination:July 25, 1943
Ordained By:John Boyd Bentley
Consecration:May 18, 1948
Consecrated By:Henry Knox Sherrill
Birth Date:6 May 1918
Buried:Overlook Cemetery, Eden, North Carolina
Parents:William Jones Gordon & Anna Barrow Clark
Children:4
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Alma Mater:University of North Carolina

William Jones Gordon Jr. (May 6, 1918 - January 4, 1994) was bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Alaska from 1948 to 1974 and was known as the "Flying Bishop of Alaska" for his ministry of flying his own plane across the vast diocese.[1]

Early life and education

Gordon was born on May 6, 1918, in Spray, North Carolina to the Reverend William Jones Gordon and Anna Barrow Clark. He studied at the University of North Carolina and graduated with a Bachelor of Arts in 1940. He attended Virginia Theological Seminary and earned a Bachelor of Divinity in 1943.

Career

He was ordained deacon on January 24, 1943. Invited to Alaska by Bishop John B. Bentley in 1943, he served five years as missionary-in-charge on the Arctic Coast, mostly in Point Hope, Alaska. He was ordained priest by Bishop Bentley on July 25, 1943, in St Mark's Church in Nenana, Alaska. Gordon was consecrated bishop of Alaska on 18 May 1948 in the Church of the Good Shepherd, Raleigh, North Carolina by 13 bishops of the Episcopal Church. Among them was his predecessor, Bishop Bentley, Bishop Edwin A. Penick of North Carolina and Presiding Bishop Henry Knox Sherrill who served as chief consecrator.[2]

Before earning his pilot's license in 1949, Gordon had traveled about 6,000 miles by dogsled to minister to villages along Alaska's Arctic Sea coast. After returning to the state as a bishop but before earning his wings, Gordon visited all of the churches in his diocese on a three-month, 3,500-mile trip by boat. After earning his wings, Gordon logged over 1 million miles on a small plane purchased by the church for him to visit his flock.

He retired in 1974 and later served as assistant bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Michigan. Gordon died in Midland, Michigan, in 1994.

In order to continue Gordon's ministry, the Diocese of Alaska founded the Wings of the Spirit Transportation Endowment in 1992 as a non-profit corporation.

References and external links

Specific

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Episcopal Bishop of Alaska Installed in Raleigh, 1948 . This Day in North Carolina History . N.C. Department of Natural and Cultural Resources.
  2. Thomas, T. (1989). An Angel on His Wing: The Story of Bill Gordon, Alaska's Flying Bishop. Morehouse Pub Co, New York, NY. .