Walter Whitford

Walter Whitford
Bishop of Brechin
ChurchChurch of Scotland
SeeBrechin
In office1635–1638
PredecessorThomas Sydserf
SuccessorVacant (until 1662)
Orders
Consecration7 December 1635
Personal details
Bornc. 1581
Probably Lanarkshire, Scotland
Died1647 (aged 65–66)
England

Walter Whitford (c. 1581 – 1647) was a seventeenth-century Scottish minister, prelate and Royalist. After graduating from the University of Glasgow in 1604, he began a career in the Church of Scotland taking a variety of posts until being appointed Bishop of Brechin in 1635.

As a bishop, Whitford was already mistrusted by hardline Presbyterians, and he made himself more unpopular by backing the attempt by the monarchy to impose Archbishop William Laud's prayer book on his congregation. After the abolition of episcopacy by the Church of Scotland in 1639, Whitford was deprived of his bishopric and fled to England. There he retained his sympathy for the monarchy, gaining a small position there before dying in 1647.