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Kirkman George Finlay - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Kirkman George Finlay

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Right Reverend Kirkman George Finlay (October 1, 1877 - August 27, 1938) was the first Bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Upper South Carolina.

Bishop Kirkman George Finlay
Denomination Episcopal Church
Senior posting
See Episcopal Diocese of Upper South Carolina
Title Diocesan Bishop
Period in office October, 1922August 27, 1938
Predecessor none
Successor John James Gravatt
Personal
Date of birth October 1, 1877
Place of birth Greenville, South Carolina
Date of death August 27, 1938
Place of death Kanuga, North Carolina

Contents

[edit] Background & Early Ministry

Kirkman George Finlay was born to James Finlay and Marian Ponsonby Gun. A few years prior to his birth, Finlay's family came to South Carolina from Scotland by way of Canada. Within months of arriving in Greenville, five of the eight Finlay children died of diphtheria. James Finlay was financially well-off, and "as a gentleman farmer"[1] operated a farm in Greenville named The Cedars. Finlay was born October 1, 1877.

Finlay attended a private school in Greenville, and later attended Furman University, receiving a Bachelor of Literature degree in June, 1899.

Finlay's older brother, John, had studied for the ministry and had been ordained to the diaconate, but died before he could be ordained to the priesthood. Soon after his graduation from Furman, Finlay left for Sewanee. While at Sewanee, during the summer of 1901, Finlay met his future wife, Lucy Reed of St. George; they married on April 22, 1903 in Clemson, South Carolina. Finlay's first cure was Holy Trinity, Clemson; additionally, Finlay was responsible for St. Paul's, Pendleton; Ascension, Seneca; and St. John's, Walhalla. The couple's first son, James Alexander Finlay, was born in 1906, but died in October, 1907.

Finlay was called as rector of Trinity Church in Columbia in 1907; he remained there for thirteen years. During his time at Trinity Church, he helped move the parish away from the renting of pews as a source of income, and instituted "the Every Member Canvass as the chief source of parish support".[1] In June, 1918, Finlay was granted a leave of absence to serve in France with the YMCA; he served for a total of seventeen months. Finlay returned from France in 1919, and was active politically when social justice concerns were debated in the state legislature.

In 1920, Finlay was elected bishop coadjutor of the diocese, and he ended his term as rector of Trinity Church on December 31 of that year. He was consecrated bishop on January 20, 1921 by Bishops Williams Alexander Guerry (South Carolina, and acting for the Presiding Bishop), Frederick F. Reese (Georgia), and Joseph B. Cheshire (North Carolina).[2]

[edit] Episcopacy

As bishop coadjutor of the Episcopal Diocese of South Carolina, Finlay was responsible for the Piedmont region of the state. The diocese was divided in October, 1922, and he became bishop diocesan of the Episcopal Diocese of Upper South Carolina.

During the 1920s and 1930s, Finlay was responsible for many endeavors to create churches and schools for African Americans. In 1928, he became Chairman of the Board of Trustees of the Voorhees Normal and Industrial School for Negroes at Denmark, South Carolina. By 1934, all but the two South Carolina dioceses afforded African Americans representation with a vote in diocesan affairs, and Finlay was working hard to change this; though the change was not approved in the 1934 diocesan convention, it was approved in the 1947 diocesan convention.

Finlay was one of the church leaders instrumental in the creation of the Kanuga Conference Center in the late 1920s and early 1930s.

Finlay died at Kanuga on August 27, 1938.[3] He is buried in the churchyard of Trinity Church, Columbia.

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b Phifer, Mary Hardy (1949). Kirkman George Finlay. Chicago: Manz Corporation, 3. 
  2. ^ Clarke, Philip G. (1972). A Brief History of the Diocese of Upper South Carolina: Fiftieth Anniversary Year, 1922-1972, 5. 
  3. ^ Kanuga, History. Kanuga Conference Center. Retrieved on 2007-05-12.

[edit] External links



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