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Samuel
Seabury
1729-1796
B.A.
1749
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S amuel
Seabury has been dismissed as "a somewhat pompous, opinionated eccentric with
few redeeming qualities." Worse yet, this Connecticut-born Anglican priest sided
with Britain in the American Revolution. Narrowly escaping a lynch mob, he fled
to British-occupied New York and served as a guide to General Howe's Redcoats
on Long Island. And yet, just a few years after independence, the reluctant
American had become the country's first Episcopal bishop and would play a crucial
role in establishing the American church.
The Church of England
in America reached an impasse with the arrival of independence. This socially
influential denomination (two-thirds of the signers of the Declaration of
Independece were members) had depended on British bishops to ordain its clergy
and provide the crucial link to the roots of Christianity (the traditional
"apostolic succession"). The American church now needed bishops of its own,
but such titles could only be conferred by existing bishops -- which meant
those in Britain.
Seabury himself
was no doubt surprised to be selected as the first American bishop designate.
But he had undeniable qualifications: a clergyman father, Yale education,
doctorate from Oxford, and ordination (in 1753) as a priest in England.
Following consecration
in Scotland, Seabury returned to Connecticut in 1785 as bishop of Connecticut
and, eventually, Rhode Island. By the time of his death, the American Episcopal
Church had overcome a near-schism, on its way to becoming a denomination with
worldwide representation.
