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William Pinkney - fifth Episcopal Bishop of MD - Oak Hill Cemetery - 2013-09-04. Bishop Pinkney died in office on July 4, 1883. He is buried in Oak Hill Cemetery in Washington, [6] with the grave sculpture financed by his friend, the financier W.W.Corcoran. The Maryland diocesan convention the following year elected William Paret his successor ...
William Pinkney (March 17, 1764 – February 25, 1822) was an American statesman and diplomat, and was appointed the seventh U.S. Attorney General by President James ...
The current brick building with a steep pitched roof, round-arched stained glass windows and bell tower was erected in 1877 at the urging of its former rector, and on April 22, 1878 was consecrated by Rt. Rev. William Pinkney, who had by then risen to become suffragan Episcopal Bishop of Maryland and who would become the diocesan bishop upon ...
In 1870 Reverend William Pinkney was appointed to assist Bishop Whittingham with his labors. In 1872 Whittingham represented the American church at the Lambeth conference , and he subsequently attended the meeting of Old Catholics at Bonn in a similar capacity.
He graduated from the University of Maryland and Berkeley Theological Seminary before his ordination to the diaconate in 1876 by Bishop William Rollinson Whittingham and priesthood in 1877 by Bishop William Pinkney. [2]
Sep. 6—MYSTIC — Bill Pinkney had already sailed solo around the world via Cape Horn ― the first Black man to do so ― when he joined the Mystic Seaport Museum's board of trustees in 1994.
Rose Catherine Pinkney (born 1964), American television executive; Thomas Pinckney (1750–1828), American statesman, diplomat, and major general; William Pinkney (1764–1822), American statesman, diplomat and 7th United States Attorney General; William Pinkney (bishop) (1810–1883), Bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Maryland
Note, this does not mean it was the only diocese that bishop presided over. For example, the Diocese of Delaware was under the supervision of the Diocese of Pennsylvania under William White. "PB" refers to whether the bishop became a Presiding Bishop in TEC and, if so, which number in the sequence.