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George Tomlinson (bishop)

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Church
  
Church of England

Name
  
George Tomlinson

Died
  
February 6, 1863

In office
  
1842–1863

Role
  
Clergy

Diocese
  
Diocese in Europe

George Tomlinson (1794 – 6 February 1863) was an English cleric, the Anglican Bishop of Gibraltar from 1842 to 1863.

He was first educated at St Saviour's Grammar School, Southwark, and entered St John's College, Cambridge in 1818, matriculating in 1819. He graduated B.A. in 1823, M.A. in 1826, and D.D. in 1842. He was founder of the Cambridge Apostles.

Ordained in 1822, Tomlinson became chaplain to William Howley, the Bishop of London, and was employed as a tutor by Sir Robert Peel. In 1825 he became secretary to the City of London Infant School Society, a High Church alternative around Howley, Peel and Charles Blomfield to the Infant School Society of Samuel Wilderspin.

From 1831 to 1842 Tomlinson was secretary to the SPCK. There he wrote for the Saturday Magazine, and founded the Clergy List and Ecclesiastical Gazette. In 1840 he undertook an ecumenical mission in the Levant, and wrote a report on it.

Tomlinson arrived in Gibraltar in 1842 with Robert Thomas Wilson, the new governor, on HMS Warspite. He died there on 9 February 1863, at age 62.

Family

Tomlinson married twice. His first wife was Louisa, daughter of Sir Patrick Stuart KCMG; they were married in 1848, and she died in 1850. His second wife was Eleanor Jane, daughter of Colonel Fraser of Castle Fraser; they were married in 1855.

References

George Tomlinson (bishop) Wikipedia