Tripti Joshi (Editor)

George Errington (bishop)

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Installed
  
30 March 1855

Role
  
Bishop

Term ended
  
July 22, 1862

Name
  
George Errington

Ordination
  
December 22, 1827

Consecration
  
July 25, 1851

Nationality
  
British

Died
  
1886


George Errington (bishop) The trial of Mrs Harriet Errington wife of George Errington

Other posts
  
Bishop of Plymouth (27 June 1851–30 March 1855)

Province
  
Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Westminster

Denomination
  
Roman Catholic Church

George Errington (1804–1886), the second son of Thomas Errington and Katherine (Dowdall) of Clints Hall, Richmond, Yorkshire, was a Roman Catholic churchman.

He was consecrated first Bishop of Plymouth on 25 July 1851, having previously been rector of the church of St. John the Evangelist in Salford. He was a boyhood friend of Nicholas Wiseman, who became Cardinal Archbishop of Westminster in 1850.

In 1855 while Wiseman applied for a coadjutor, Errington was appointed, with the title of Archbishop of Trebizond in partibus. Two years later, Henry Edward Manning was appointed Provost of Westminster and he established in Bayswater his community of the Oblates of St Charles. Errington showed conscientious, but implacable hostility to Manning, and embraced in this even Wiseman, in so far as he was supposed to be acting under Manning's influence. The estrangement was largely a matter of temperament. However it was grave enough for Errington to be deprived by Pope Pius IX of his coadjutorship with right of succession in July 1860, and he retired to Prior Park, near Bath, where he died a full generation later, on 19 January 1884.

In August 1856, Dr Errington founded St Boniface's Catholic College, Plymouth. In 1995, the school named one of their houses after him.

References

George Errington (bishop) Wikipedia