Alan Rogers | |
---|---|
Bishop of Edmonton | |
Church | Church of England |
Diocese | Diocese of London |
In office | 1970–1975 |
Successor | Bill Westwood |
Other post(s) |
|
Orders | |
Consecration | 1959 |
Personal details | |
Born | Alan Francis Bright Rogers 1907 |
Died | 2003 (aged 95–96) |
Nationality | British |
Denomination | Anglican |
Education | Westminster City School |
Alan Francis Bright Rogers (1907–2003)[1] was an Anglican bishop who held three different posts in an ecclesiastical career spanning over half a century.[2]
Educated at Westminster City School, trained for the priesthood at King's College London and ordained in 1932, he began his career with a curacy at St Stephen's, Shepherd's Bush.[3] From 1934 he served the Anglican Church in Mauritius, firstly as a missionary priest then as Archdeacon of Mauritius. Returning to England he became Vicar of Twickenham followed by a spell as Rural Dean of Hampstead before appointment to the episcopate as Bishop of Mauritius in 1959.[4] Translated to become Bishop of Fulham (a suffragan bishop of the Diocese of London with delegated responsibility from the Bishop of London for northern and central Europe) in 1966,[5] his final appointment was a sideways move to become Bishop of Edmonton[6] (another suffragan bishop of that Diocese, but actually ministering there) four years later. That See was erected on 29 May 1970[7] in order to supervise a new district of the diocese created by the experimental area scheme that year.[8]
In retirement he continued to serve the church as an honorary assistant bishop (in the Diocese of Peterborough and then the Kensington area of the London diocese) for a further quarter of a century.