Diocese of Oregon
       
 
A History of the Diocese of Oregon
A History of the Diocese of Oregon
compiled by Richard Van Orman, Historiographer

St. Michael FacklerThe first recorded service using the American Book of Common Prayer in the Pacific Northwest, was in Oregon City, December 1, 1847, when The Rev. St. Michael Fackler baptized James McKinlay, son of Archabald and Julia Ogden McKinlay and grandson of Peter Skene Ogden. Fr. Fackler’s presence in Oregon was unknown to the national church. He had left his parish of Christ Church, Lexington, Missouri, in his search of improved health, earning his way shepherding the first flock of sheep to reach Oregon. He is without a doubt one of the West’s more colorful clergy. He was known as the “Mountain Man with the turned around collar

The first use in Oregon, of the English Book of Common Prayer had been in the fall of 1824, by Governor George Simpson of the Hudson Bay Company at Fort George ( Astoria). The first Anglican priest in Oregon was the Hudson’s Bay Company chaplain, The Rev. Herbert Beaver who arrived at Ft. Vancouver on November 6, 1836 Wm Richmond


Because Fr. Fackler considered himself without jurisdiction he did not engage in active work of the church until The Rev. Wm Richmond the first designated missionary, from the Board of Missions, arrived in Portland, May 11, 1851

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The Rev. St. Michael Fackler
Peter Skene Ogdon
The Rev. Herbert Beaver
The Rev. Willian Richmond
Trinity Parish, Portland
St. Paul’s Parish, Oregon City
St. John the Evangelist Parish, Milwaukie
St. Paul’s Parish, Salem

The Rt. Rev. Thomas Felding Scott
Griswold Press
Greatest Flood in Oregon
The Rt. Rev. Benjamin Wistar Morris
Oregon Episcopal School
Good Samaritan Hospital

Diocese Of Olympia
Diocese Of Spokane

The Rt. Rev. Charles Scadding
Missionary District of Eastern Oregon
Seal of the Diocese
The Rt. Rev. Walter Taylor Sumner D.D.
The Rt. Rev. Benjamin Dunlop Dagwell
The Rt. Rev. James Walmesley Frederic Carman
The Rt. Rev. Hal Raymond Gross
The Rt. Rev. Matthew Paul Bigliardi
The Rt. Rev. Robert Louis Ladehoff
The Rt. Rev. Johncy Itty PhD

 

trinity The first Episcopal Church established in Oregon was Trinity Parish, Portland, which was organized by Fr. Richmond and Fr. Fackler on May 18, 1851. One week later a second church, St. Paul 's Parish, Oregon City, was organized by the same Fathers on May 25, 1851. The next three congregations established were Grace, Champoeg, June 1851; Ascension, Lafayette, June 1851; and St. John the Evangelist Parish, Milwaukie, December 10, 1851. In 1852, a nother congregation, Incarnation, Butteville, was organized. St. Paul ’s Parish, Salem, held its first service on May 14, 1853.

Thomas Fielding ScottOn August 2, 1853, t he First Convocation of Clergy and Laity of the Episcopal Church in the Oregon and Washington Territories was held at Oregon City . The House of Bishops created the vast Missionary District of the Oregon and Washington Territories and elected Thomas Fielding Scott first Missionary Bishop. On January 8, 1854, Bishop Scott was consecrated at Christ Church, Savannah, Georgia. He arrived in Portland, on April 22, 1854. His episcopate covered what is today Oregon, Washington, Idaho, and Western Montana. Because the English Church had no Bishop in British Columbia, he also assisted there. His clergy consisted of: Fr. Fackler at Oregon City; Fr. McCarty an Army Chaplain at Vancouver Barracks; and Fr. Cridge the Hudson Bay Company Chaplain at Victoria, Vancouver Island. The Second Convocation was held at Trinity, Portland, on June 17, 1854. The Bishop’s first consecration of a church, Trinity Church, Portland, was on September 24, 1854.

"Griswold" pressThe first issue of the periodical the Oregon Churchman, which continues to this day as the Oregon Church News, was printed on the “Griswold” Press in Oregon City, in October of 1861.

On December 3, 1861, Grace Church, Champoeg, along with the entire community was destroyed by the greatest flood in Oregon History. Neither community nor church were ever rebuilt at what is today Champoeg State Park.

Fr. Fackler founded the first church in Boise, Idaho, in 1864. According to Samuel Clemons, in the Grim Voyage, Fr. St. Michael died on a trip to New York of cholara aboard a steamer at Key West, Florida, on January 6, 1867. Bishop Scott died during a trip to New York, on July 14, 1867, and is buried at Trinity Church, New York City.

Benjamin Wistar Morris The Second Bishop, Benjamin Wistar Morris was consecrated on December 3, 1868, at Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. He would be one of the longest serving Bishop’s in Episcopal Church history. He arrived in Portland, on June 2, l869. During his episcopate he established St. Helen's Hall Girls School, Portland, now the Oregon Episcopal School, on September 14, 1869. The Bishop Scott Grammar School for boys was opened in September of 1870. schoolThe first patient was admitted to Good Samaritan Hospital, Portland, on October 10, 1875. He formed 18 parishes that are still an active part of the Diocese. The territory that would eventually become the Diocese of Olympia and the Diocese of Spokane was organized into a missionary district on December 15, 1880. The General Convention, on October 8, 1889, voted to admit the Missionary District of Oregon, as a Diocese with the Rt. Rev. Morris as Bishop. Bishop Morris died on April 7, 1906, in Portland, after an episcopate of 38 years. He was buried in Lone Fir Cemetery, Portland.
Charles ScaddingA native of Toronto, Ontario, Charles Scadding was consecrated Third Bishop of the Diocese of Oregon on September 29, 1906. Consent was given by the Genera1 Convention on October 14, 1907, to the division of the Diocese of Oregon to create the Missionary District of Eastern Oregon. In 1908, the Seal of the Diocese was adopted. Bishop Scadding died May 14, 1914, at Portland.
Diocese of Oregon seal
Walter Taylor SumnerThe Fourth Bishop of Oregon was Walter Taylor Sumner D.D. Dean of the Cathedral of Sts. Peter and Paul, Chicago. Nationally, known as a clergyman interested in social welfare he served on the Chicago School Board where he was influential in the field of vocational education and succeeded Jane Addams at Hull House. He was consecrated January 6, 1915, in the Cathedral of Sts. Peter and Paul, Chicago. His episcopate spanned the Great War and into the Great Depression. Sumner was honored as host, in Portland, for the General Convention of the Protestant Episcopal Church, in 1922. He opened the retreat center at Gearhart, that would serve the diocese for the next 53 years. He passed away September 4, 1935 at Good Samaritan, Portland.
Benjamin Dunlop DagwellThe Fifth Bishop of Oregon was Benjamin Dunlop Dagwell, Dean of St. John’s Cathedral, Denver, Colorado. He was consecrated on February 12, 1936, at Trinity Church, Portland, thus becoming the first Bishop to ever to be consecrated in Oregon. His episcopate took the church through the Great Depression, World War II, and into the period of most rapid church expansion in its history. Under his leadership twenty-three new congregations were organized and sixteen moved from missionary to parochial status. Two hospitals were added: Good Samaritan, Corvallis; and Rogue Memorial, Medford. By the time of his retirement, August 24, 1958, he had built more than half of all Oregon churches and more than half of all the clergy serving the Oregon Diocese had been ordained by him. He was named Portland’s First Citizen in 1958. He went on to serve the Anglican congregation at St. Paul’s; Rome, Italy (1960–1961). He died in Portland, Oregon, June 2, 1963.

James Walmesley Frederic Carman

On February 7, 1956, at Trinity Church, Portland, James Walmesley Frederic Carman was consecrated Bishop Coadjutor. On August 24, 1958, he was enthroned as the Sixth Bishop of Oregon. The Diocesan Offices relocated to the beautiful 13 acre Kerr Estate which is located near Lake Oswego, and became known as the Bishop’s Close. Bishop Carman retired January 31, 1974, and died November 30, 1979, at Portland.

Hal Raymond GrossIt was under Bishop Carman that the first and only Suffragan Bishop of Oregon, Hal Raymond Gross was elected in December 1964, and consecrated, February 26, 1965, at Trinity Church, Portland. Although several Bishops have originated from Pacific Northwest Bishop Gross was born in Walla Walla, Washington, raised and educated in Oregon, and served his entire ministry here. He retired on January 15, 1979, and died October 13, 2002 at Woodburn.
Matthew Paul BigliardiThe Seventh Bishop of Oregon was Matthew Paul Bigliardi a former Navy officer and native of Pennsylvania, who served as Dean of Trinity Cathedral, Phoenix, Arizona. He was consecrated on January 31, 1974, in Memorial Coliseum, Portland. In 1979, the Gearhart camp which had served the diocese since 1926, was closed and the larger retreat center and camp at Triangle Lake, Lane County, was purchased. Bishop Bigliardi retired on December 31, 1985. For a period of time he served in Paris, France, as Bishop-in-Charge of the Anglican Churches in Europe. He died February 26, 1996, Maitland, Florida.
Robert Louis LadehoffRobert Louis Ladehoff, Rector, St. John’s, Fayetteville, North Carolina, was elected Bishop Coadjutor, and consecrated November 30, 1985, at the University of Portland. He was enthroned as the Eighth Bishop of Oregon, January 1, 1986. He ordained the first woman priest in Oregon. On November 19, 1993, Trinity Church was consecrated as Trinity Cathedral. He served 16 years until his retirement September 20, 2003.
Johncy IttyThe current and Ninth Bishop of Oregon is Johncy Itty PhD. A native of Bhopal, India, was received to the Episcopal Church on December 29, 1995, from the Church of South India. He served as the Canon, Cathedral of the Incarnation; Garden City, New York, prior to his election. He was consecrated on September 20, 2003, at the Salem Armory, Salem.

 

 

 
 
 
 
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