Ozi William Whitaker
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Ozi William Whitaker (May 10, 1830 – February 9, 1911) was a leading evangelical in the Episcopal Church who became missionary bishop of Nevada and Arizona, then coadjutor and eventually the 5th diocesan bishop of the
Episcopal Diocese of Pennsylvania The Episcopal Diocese of Pennsylvania is a diocese of the Episcopal Church of the United States, encompassing the counties of Philadelphia, Montgomery, Bucks, Chester, and Delaware in the state of Pennsylvania. The diocese has 36,641 members ...
.


Early life and education

Born in
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, he attended Shelburne Falls and Brattleboro Academies in 1851–52, then taught New Salem Academy in 1853. He attended
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and after graduating in 1856 attended the
General Theological Seminary The General Theological Seminary of the Episcopal Church (GTS) is an Episcopal Church (United States), Episcopal seminary in New York City. Founded in 1817, GTS is the oldest seminary of the Episcopal Church and the longest continuously operating ...
and married. He received a doctorate of Divinity from
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in 1869, and an honorary doctor of law degree from the
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in 1898.


Career

Whitaker was ordained to the diaconate on July 15, 1863, and as an Episcopal priest on August 7, 1863. He was elected the first rector of St. Paul's Church in Englewood, New Jersey in 1865. He technically remained there until March, 1867, although active as a missionary in the surrounding countryside. In 1863, Whitaker founded a small Episcopal congregation in
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, then in the Nevada Territory, a year after his wife helped found a Sunday School in
Virginia City, Nevada Virginia City is a census-designated place (CDP) that is the county seat of Storey County, Nevada, United States, and the largest community in the county. The city is a part of the Reno, Nevada, Reno–Sparks, Nevada, Sparks Reno, NV Metropolitan ...
. During a visit to his sister in 1865, he helped food He became missionary bishop of Nevada and Arizona succeeding Joseph Cruikshank Talbot in 1869 (Nevada did not receive separate diocesan status until 1971) During Bishop Charles McIlvaine of Ohio, bishop Alfred Lee of Delaware and bishop
Manton Eastburn Manton Eastburn (1801 in Leeds, England – 1872) was an Episcopal bishop who served as the fourth Bishop of Massachusetts from 1843 till 1872. Biography After graduation from Columbia University, he studied at the General Theological Seminary o ...
of Massachusetts consecrated him on October 13, 1869. For many years, Bishop Whitaker made St. Paul's the Prospector Episcopal Church in Virginia City his base, and even rebuilt it after a disastrous fire in 1875. Rt.Rev. Whitaker also established in 1874 the Chapel of the Good Shepherd, a missionary church for Asian railroad workers in
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and the following year a chapel for Chinese workers in Virginia City (which was destroyed by a citywide fire a few months later in October 1875). Growing anti-Chinese feeling also prompted its prime mover, Ah Foo, to become a missionary in China. Bishop Whitaker also established a mission to the Paiute tribe, St. James Mission in
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. Bishop Whitaker personally founded Trinity Church Mission in
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in 1873, which somehow barely escaped the fire which destroyed much of the city in 1878. After securing a land grant from the
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, in 1879 he established Bishop Whitaker's School for Girls, a school for girls (both
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and
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) overlooking the
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in Reno. However, in 1886 the
University of Nevada The University of Nevada, Reno (Nevada, the University of Nevada, or UNR) is a public land-grant research university in Reno, Nevada, United States. It is the state's flagship public university and primary land grant institution. It was founded ...
established a free school nearby and its founder moved to Philadelphia, so the Episcopal school closed in 1894. Bishop Whitaker initially translated to the Diocese of Pennsylvania to serve as coadjutor to bishop William B. Stevens, and stopped overseeing the Nevada diocese in 1888, after the General Convention transferred oversight to bishop
Abiel Leonard Abiel Leonard (June 26, 1848 – December 3, 1903) was a missionary bishop of the district of Episcopal Diocese of Utah and Episcopal Diocese of Nevada, serving from 1888 to 1903. Early life Abiel Leonard was born in Fayette, Missouri on June 2 ...
of
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and a year after Bishop Whitaker succeeded Bishop Stevens as diocesan bishop of Pennsylvania. He served as the diocese's fifth bishop from 1887 to 1911. From 1904 until his death, he also led the
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as its 10th president (Pennsylvania's first bishop, William White, had founded the society). Beginning in 1902, his eventual successor, Alexander Mackay-Smith served as his coadjutor.


Death and legacy

The elderly bishop died in Philadelphia after contracting influenza, and the funeral was held at the Church of Our Savior. Although the Episcopal school Rev. Whitaker founded in Reno closed in 1894 and its buildings were used first by the University of Nevada and later as a hospital, the site is now a park named after its founding missionary bishop. The
University of Arizona The University of Arizona (Arizona, U of A, UArizona, or UA) is a Public university, public Land-grant university, land-grant research university in Tucson, Arizona, United States. Founded in 1885 by the 13th Arizona Territorial Legislature, it ...
has some of his papers, as do Yale and the University of Michigan in their Protestant Episcopal bishops collections.(1 March 1999). ''Arizona and Southwestern: Biographical File.'' University of Arizona. http://speccoll.library.arizona.edu/sites/default/files/AZBIO.pdf


References

*
William Stevens Perry William Stevens Perry (January 22, 1832 – May 13, 1898) was a 19th-century bishop of the Protestant Episcopal Church in the United States of America and an educator. He served as the second bishop of the Diocese of Iowa from 1876 to 1898. Bio ...
, ''The Bishops of the American Church, Past and Present'' {{DEFAULTSORT:Whittaker, Ozi William 1830 births 1911 deaths People from Salem, Massachusetts 19th-century Anglican bishops in the United States 20th-century Anglican bishops in the United States Episcopal bishops of Pennsylvania Episcopal bishops of Arizona Episcopal bishops of Nevada