Jonathan Mayhew Wainwright (bishop)


Jonathan Mayhew Wainwright I was a provisional Episcopal bishop in Manhattan, New York City.

Early life

Wainwright was born in Liverpool, England on February 24, 1792. He was the son of Peter Wainwright and Elizabeth Wainwright, who met on a trip to England from the United States and married in 1790. His father was a prosperous English tobacco merchant who emigrated from England to Boston and became a citizen after the American Revolution. His mother was the daughter of Reverend Jonathan Mayhew of Boston. His parents didn't return to Massachusetts until eleven years later, in 1802. Among his siblings was Eliza Wainwright, who married Dr. Walter Channing, a prominent obstetrician. His brother, Robert Dewar Wainwright, was the father of Richard Wainwright, an American Civil War naval officer.
Jonathan graduated from Harvard College in 1812, where he was afterward a tutor. He received the degree of D.D. from Union College in 1823, and from Harvard in 1835. The degree of D.C.L. was conferred upon him by Oxford University in 1852.

Career

On April 13, 1817, he was ordered deacon in the Episcopal Church in Trinity Church, Boston and on May 29, 1818, he was ordained as a priest in Christ Church, Hartford, Connecticut, of which he later became rector.
In November 1819, he moved to New York and became assistant minister in Trinity Church. He was made rector of Grace Church in 1821, and remained in that charge until 1834, when he became rector of Trinity Church, Boston. In 1837m he returned to Trinity Parish, New York, as assistant in charge of St. John's Chapel, which post he retained until he was elevated to the episcopate with the exception of six months' service in 1850 as rector-elect of Calvary Church in Gramercy Park.
He was for many years secretary of the house of bishops, and was instrumental in the founding of New York University. He was considered one of the first pulpit orators of his day. He wielded great social influence, was a ripe scholar, and was a devoted lover of music, contributing toward its improvement in the churches of his denomination. He was secretary of the board of trustees of the General Theological Seminary in 1828-34, and a trustee or officer of many other institutions and societies.
In 1844, he engaged in a controversy with his friend George Potts, which grew out of an assertion that Rufus Choate made at a celebration of the New England society. The orator said that the Pilgrim fathers had founded a "state without a king and a church without a bishop." At the dinner that followed, Wainwright, in responding to a sentiment, said in reply that "there is no church without a bishop." The subsequent discussion with Potts, which was carried on in nineteen letters in the New York Commercial Advertiser, was published as a book No Church Without a Bishop; or, the Controversy between the Rev. Drs. Potts and Wainwright. With a Preface by the Latter, and an Introduction and Notes by an Anti-Sectarian.
On October 1, 1852, Wainwright was elected provisional bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of New York.

Personal life

In August 1818, Wainwright was married to Amelia Maria Phelps, the daughter of Timothy Phelps and Janet Phelps. Together, they were the parents of fourteen children:
He died at his residence at 5:00 pm on September 21, 1854 in Manhattan, New York City. He was buried at Trinity Church Cemetery.

Descendants

Through his son John Howard, he was the grandfather of Jonathan Mayhew Wainwright, a U.S. Representative and United States Assistant Secretary of War. Through his son Jonathan, he was the grandfather of Jonathan Mayhew Wainwright and Robert Powell Page Wainwright.

Works

Besides the pamphlet mentioned above, he wrote: