- Source: Episcopal Eastern Diocese
At the founding of The Protestant Episcopal Church in the United States, all of New England was considered one diocese — the Diocese of Connecticut — led by Bishop Samuel Seabury. In 1811, the congregations in Massachusetts petitioned the General Convention to form a separate diocese consisting of the states of Massachusetts (including Maine), Rhode Island, New Hampshire, and Vermont. Titled the Eastern Diocese of the Episcopal Church in the United States of America, its first bishop was Alexander Viets Griswold.
Vermont elected its own bishop in 1832, and separated from the Eastern Diocese. New Hampshire also separated in 1832. The Eastern Diocese ceased to exist in 1843, when Rhode Island and Maine also elected bishops, following the death of Bishop Griswold.
See also
Episcopal Diocese of Massachusetts
List of Episcopal bishops
Ecclesiastical provinces and dioceses of the Episcopal Church § Dioceses no longer in existence
References
Albright, Raymond W. (1964). A History of the Protestant Episcopal Church, New York:Macmillan. pp. 165ff
Julia Chester Emery, Alexander Viets Griswold and the Eastern Diocese (1921)
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Dikandung Tanpa Noda
- Somaliland
- Daftar gereja terbesar di dunia
- Episcopal Eastern Diocese
- Ecclesiastical provinces and dioceses of the Episcopal Church
- Episcopal Diocese of New Hampshire
- Episcopal Diocese of Washington
- Episcopal Diocese of Michigan
- Episcopal Diocese of Southeast Florida
- Episcopal Diocese of Massachusetts
- List of Catholic dioceses in the United States
- Episcopal Diocese of the Great Lakes
- Episcopal Diocese of Maryland