Bishop Wilfred Wood KA
Dublin Core
Title
Bishop Wilfred Wood KA
Subject
arrival
Description
Wilfred Denniston Wood KA (born 15 June 1936) was Bishop of Croydon from 1985 to 2003, the first black bishop in the Church of England
Born in Barbados to Wilfred Coward and Elsie Elmira Wood, in Proute, St Thomas, Wood [later Sir Wilfred] attended Southborough Boys’ Primary School and Combermere School.
Having being ordained Deacon on the island after completion of studies in 1962, Bishop Wood’s journey had just begun as he was sent to the Diocese of London, first serving in a parish called St. Stephen’s Shepherd’s Bush, where he served as a curate, then honorary curate, of St Thomas with St Stephen, Shepherd’s Bush, until 1974.
He soon came to wider attention in Britain for speaking out on racial injustice. In 1974 he joined the Diocese of Southwark, where he stayed until his retirement.
In 1977 he was appointed Rural Dean of East Lewisham and Honorary Canon of Southwark Cathedral. He was Archdeacon of Southwark from 1982 until his consecration as Bishop of Croydon in 1985, where he oversaw the Croydon Episcopal Area and assisted the Bishop of Southwark.
Throughout his Ministry, Bishop Wood had a strong interest in race relations and social justice in London, as it was for this interest that he was appointed the Bishop of London Officer in race relations, also serving on a number of other important boards, from 1978 to 1981.
Source
stories,arrival
Date
1962
Type
Story
Identifier
6248
Spatial Coverage
current,51.484803739516046,-0.12084960937500001;origin,13.15437605541853,-59.54589843750001;
Europeana
Europeana Type
TEXT
Story Item Type Metadata
End Date
1962
Citation
“Bishop Wilfred Wood KA,” EU-LAC, accessed November 23, 2024, https://eu-lac.org/omeka/items/show/6742.
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