Howard Mowll

Australian bishop

Dorothy Anne Martin
(m. 1924)
Previous post(s)Assistant Bishop and Bishop of Western ChinaEducationAlma materKing's College, CambridgeCoat of armsCoat of arms of Howard Mowll

Howard West Kilvinton Mowll (1890–1958) was the Anglican Bishop of Western China from 1925 to 1933, and Archbishop of Sydney from 1933 until his death in 1958.[1][2]

Biography

Mowll was born in Dover and attended Dover College until 1903 and later matriculated at the King's School, Canterbury.[3]

He succeeded William Cassels in 1926 as Bishop of Western China. As a staunch evangelical, upon returning from the mission field of Western China (Sichuan), Mowll experienced early difficulties in a predominantly liberal church before rising to national prominence during the war years. In 1947 he was elected Primate of Australia.

Within a month of World War 2 starting he had formed the Church of England National Emergency Fund, (CENEF), which was supported with volunteers and fundraising by the Sydney Diocesan Churchwomen's Association. CENEF funded huts for recreation and chaplains in military camps around Sydney, as well as at St Andrew's Cathedral, Sydney and other churches around Sydney. To continue to help ex service people after the war and youth work, CENEF raised funds to buy 201 Castlereagh Street, Sydney, and Rathane in the Royal National Park. CENEF leveraged the Castlereagh Street building to buy land at Gilbulla and 117 acres in Castle Hill for a retirement village. This retirement village was one of his great achievements (some say his wife Dorothy was the driving force behind the idea), and became the first retirement village in Australia. Today this site remains the flagship for Anglican Retirement Villages, Diocese of Sydney. In 1947, following the War, he was elected Primate of Australia.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Crockford's Clerical Directory 1940-41, Oxford, OUP, 1941.
  2. ^ "Most Rev. H. W. K. Mowll", The Times, 26 October 1958; p. 10.
  3. ^ Who was Who 1897–1990, London, A & C Black, 1991, ISBN 0-7136-3457-X.

External links

Media related to Howard Mowll at Wikimedia Commons

  • v
  • t
  • e
Anglican Missionary Bishops in China, 1849–1949
ShensiChekiang
North China
  • Charles Scott
  • Frank Norris
  • Thomas Scott
Western Szechwan
Eastern Szechwan
ShantungFukien
Honan
Kwangsi and Hunan
  • v
  • t
  • e
Bishops
Archbishops
  • v
  • t
  • e
  • v
  • t
  • e
Church of the East
Church
buildings
Missionaries
Native
Catholics
Related
Diocese
Church
buildings
Missionaries
Missionaries
Missionaries
Related
Seventh-day
Adventist
(Main article)
  • Francis Arthur Allum
  • John Nevins Andrews
  • Claude Lockyer Blandford
  • Alexander Blackburn Buzzell
  • Holman Carl Currie
  • Johann Heinrich Effenberg
  • Cecil Bennett Guild
  • Alton Eugene Hughes
  • Sidney Henton Lindt
  • Ernest L. Lutz
  • Ida Mae Matson
  • Emma Neale Ortner
  • Evaline Osborne
  • Dorothy Spicer
  • Merritt C. Warren
  • Dallas R. White
  • George L. Wilkinson
  • Charles A. Woolsey
  • Chengdu Young Men's Christian Association [zh]
  • Grace Service
  • Robert Roy Service
  • Y. C. James Yen
Disciples of
Christ
  • Henry Cornelius Bartel [zh]
  • Nellie Schmidt Bartel
Other
denominations
Native
Protestants
Eastern Orthodox


Authority control databases Edit this at Wikidata
International
  • ISNI
  • VIAF
People
  • Australia
    • 2
  • Trove