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In December 1907, the Diocese of Atlanta held its first convention at Christ Church in Macon, Georgia. In 2007, the diocese celebrated its centennial, and published a history of the diocese: The Diocese of Atlanta: Centennial Celebration 1907–2007, which is available from the Cathedral of St. Philip Book Store, Atlanta, Georgia.
On May 24, 2019, after the installation of Gregory as Archbishop of the Archdiocese of Washington, the college of consultors in Atlanta elected Konzen as the administrator of the archdiocese. Konzen's administrator responsibilities ended on May 6, 2020, with the installation of Bishop Gregory Hartmayer as the new archbishop of Atlanta.
In 2002 he moved to Atlanta, Georgia, where he became Rector of St Paul's Episcopal Church. [2] Wright was elected Bishop of Atlanta on June 2, 2012, and was consecrated on October 13, 2012, in the Martin Luther King Jr. International Chapel at Morehouse College by Presiding Bishop Katharine Jefferts Schori. [3]
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the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Atlanta (Diocese of Atlanta, 1956–1962) Topics referred to by the same term This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title Diocese of Atlanta .
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In the early 1900s, Episcopalians in what is now midtown Atlanta petitioned the Episcopal Diocese of Georgia to establish a new church in midtown. During this time, the city of Atlanta was growing and expanding northward, and Episcopalians in the northern parts of the city wanted a place of worship closer to them than the churches in downtown Atlanta, which at the time included what would ...
On April 22 of that year, Stephen Elliott, Bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Georgia, consecrated the parish's first church building, with Quintard as its rector. [1] [2] This church house, bounded by Broad Street, Walton Street, and Forsyth Street in downtown Atlanta, cost $12,000 to build and held its first church service on April 24.