Gay Mandeville

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Gay Lisle Griffith Mandeville (20 May 1894 – 19 July 1969) was the first native-born Bishop of Barbados from 1951 until 1960.[1]

He was educated at Harrison College and Codrington College, Barbados.[2] After graduation, he was ordained in 1918 and began his ecclesiastical career with a curacy at St George, St Kitts followed by the post of Rector of Saba in what was then the Dutch West Indies and is now a special municipality of the Netherlands. He then returned to his home country where he was successively Vicar of St Bartholomew then St Stephen; Rector of St Philip (1943–1950), Vicar General (1948–1951) and Dean (1950–1951) and finally Bishop of Barbados.

References

  1. ^ Crockford's Clerical Directory 1975–76. London: Oxford University Press, 1976. ISBN 0-19-200008-X
  2. ^ "Madeville, Henry Rudge". Who's Who & Who Was Who. Vol. 1920–2016 (April 2014 online ed.). A & C Black. Retrieved 24 April 2016. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
Anglican Communion titles
Preceded by
James Hughes
Bishop of Barbados
1951–1960
Succeeded by
Lewis Evans
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  • Thomas Clarke
  • Lovell Phillips
  • Alfred Shankland
  • Hubert Hutchinson
  • Gay Mandeville
  • Gordon Hazlewood
  • Harold Crichlow
  • William Dixon
  • Frank Marshall
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Bishops of Barbados and of Barbados and the Windward Islands
* simultaneously Bishop of the Windward Islands, as Bishop of Barbados and the Windward Islands (1877–1927)


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