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George Murray (bishop of Rochester)

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Name
  
George Murray

Successor
  
Consecration
  
6 March 1814

Alma mater
  
Predecessor
  
Parents
  
Lord George Murray

Term ended
  
1860 (death)



Other posts
  
Dean of Worcester1828–1845Bishop of Sodor and Man1813–1827

Born
  
12 January 1784Farnham, Surrey (
1784-01-12
)

Buried
  
Kensal Green, Middlesex

Died
  
February 16, 1860, Chester Square, London, United Kingdom

Place of burial
  
Kensal Green Cemetery, London, United Kingdom

Books
  
Glimpse: Selected Aphorisms, Introduction to Engineeri, Diversion, The Tales of Molly Brand an, Whiteout: Poems

George Murray (12 January 1784 – 16 February 1860) was an Anglican bishop. He was Bishop of Rochester from 1827 until his death in 1860. He was previously the Archdeacon of Man, Dean of Worcester and Bishop of Sodor and Man.

Contents

Background and education

Murray was born in Farnham, Surrey, the second son of George Murray, Bishop of St David's, himself the second son of John Murray, 3rd Duke of Atholl, Chief of Clan Murray. Murray's mother, Anne Charlotte (d.1844), was the daughter of Francis Grant (MP and general); she served as Lady-in-Waiting to Charlotte of Mecklenburg-Strelitz (wife of George III). Murray's youngest sister was Amelia was also a courtier, and a writer.

Murray attended Harrow before matriculating at Christ Church, Oxford, on 22 December 1801, graduating Bachelor of Arts (BA) in 1806, proceeding Oxford Master of Arts (MA Oxon) in 1810, and Doctor of Divinity (DD) by diploma on 13 March 1814.

Ministry

On 29 September 1808, Murray was installed, like his father, as the Archdeacon of Man; on 22 May 1813 he was nominated as Bishop of Sodor and Man by his cousin John Murray, 4th Duke of Atholl and consecrated on 6 March 1814. On 24 November 1827 he was elected Bishop of Rochester, receiving back the temporalities on 14 December 1827, and on 19 March 1828 was appointed Dean of Worcester, being succeeded in 1845 by John Peel.

While commending the character of the leaders of the Oxford Movement, Murray attacked some of the Tracts for the Times, especially Nos. 81 and 90, in his episcopal charge of October 1843. Several of his sermons and charges were published.

Family

Murray married, on 5 May 1811, Sarah Hay-Drummond, second daughter of Robert Hay-Drummond, 10th Earl of Kinnoull (by his wife Sarah Harley, daughter and co-heiress of Thomas Harley, Lord Mayor of London), by whom he had five sons and six daughters, including Herbert Harley Murray and the George Murray (Rector of Southfleet, Kent), grandfather of Ralph Hay Murray and ancestor of Bruce Murray, 12th Duke of Atholl. His youngest daughter, Eleanor Margaret Murray, married John Jolliffe Tufnell of Langleys in Essex. They had 10 children and he already had 7 children from his previous marriage; their daughter, Louisa Tufnell, married the Hon Edward Strutt, co-founder of Strutt & Parker (estate agents).

After a protracted illness, Murray died at his town residence in Chester Square, London, on 16 February 1860, aged 76. He was buried in the family vault at Kensal Green.

References

George Murray (bishop of Rochester) Wikipedia