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Sidney Catlin Partridge

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Nationality
  
American

Religion
  
Episcopalian, Anglican


Name
  
Sidney Partridge

Education
  
Full Name
  
Sidney Catlin Partridge

Born
  
September 1, 1857 (
1857-09-01
)
New York City, New YorkUnited States

Occupation
  
First Bishop of Kyoto (1900–1911)Second Bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of West Missouri (1911–1930)

Employer
  
Anglican Church in JapanThe Episcopal Church

Spouse(s)
  
Charlotte Irene Partridge (1884 - 1886, her death)Agnes Laura Louise Partridge (1901 - 1930)

Children
  
Helen Louise ChapinAmalia Ortwed Lucy Lymon

Died
  
June 22, 1930, Kansas City, Missouri, United States

Sidney Catlin Partridge (September 1, 1857 – June 22, 1930) was the first Bishop of Kyoto (1900–1911) and the second Bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of West Missouri (1911–1930).

He was born in New York City. He graduated from Yale in 1880, where he served on the eighth editorial board of The Yale Record and was a member of Skull and Bones.

After completing his graduate studies at Berkeley Divinity School in 1884, John Williams, Bishop of Connecticut, ordained him to the diaconate on June 4, 1884. He then worked as a missionary in China under Bishop William Jones Boone, Jr..

He was consecrated first Bishop of Kyoto on February 2, 1900 in Trinity Cathedral, Tokyo. Other bishops in attendance included

  • William Awdry, Bishop of South Tokyo
  • Hugh James Foss, Bishop of Osaka
  • Philip Kemball Fyson, Bishop of Hokkaido
  • Frederick Rogers Graves, Bishop of Shanghai
  • John McKim, Bishop of North Tokyo
  • He was decorated as a Knight of the Order of the Dannebrog following his marriage to the daughter of the Danish consul general at San Francisco on November 27, 1901.

    He was a bishop associate of the American Branch of the Confraternity of the Blessed Sacrament.

    On June 12, 1928, Rev. Partridge offered the invocation at the opening of the 1928 Republican National Convention in Kansas City.

    He died in Kansas City, Missouri.

    References

    Sidney Catlin Partridge Wikipedia


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