Edward Every

Anglican missionary bishop
The basics

Quick Facts

IntroAnglican missionary bishop
wasPriest
Work fieldReligion
Gender
Male
Birth13 April 1862
Death16 January 1941 (aged 78 years)
The details

Biography

The Right Rev. Edward Francis Every, CBE, DD, MA (13 April 1862 – 16 January 1941) was an Anglican priest and author: a missionary bishop, in South America for a 35-year period during the first half of the twentieth century.

Biography

He was the second son of Sir Henry Flower Every, 10th Bart, and educated at Harrow and Trinity College, Cambridge. Ordained in 1885, after a curacy in West Hartlepool he became Vicar of Seaham then St Cuthbert’s, Gateshead. In 1902 he was appointed Bishop of the Falkland Islands, and he was consecrated bishop by the Archbishop of Canterbury at St Paul's Cathedral on 13 July 1902. In 1910 he became bishop of the Anglican Diocese in Argentina and Eastern South America. In 1937 he returned to England to become Rector of Egginton, and an Assistant Bishop and Honorary Canon of Derby Cathedral. On his death that diocese's bishop added to his obituary in The Times saying

"Above all he was, most obviously, one of the saints of the Most High: the trumpets will assuredly have sounded for him on the other side."

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