George Harvey Bickley

George Harvey Bickley (February 25, 1868 December 24, 1924) was an American bishop of the Methodist Episcopal Church, elected in 1920.

Personal life and career

A plaque commemorating the construction of Telok Ayer Chinese Methodist Church in Singapore which was unveiled by Bickley on January 9, 1924

Bickley was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. He was from an old Philadelphia family, his father and grandfather being local elders and church builders. Indeed, his grandfather gave up a fortune and was disowned for becoming a Methodist.

George entered the Traveling Ministry of the Philadelphia Annual Conference in 1890. His uncle and six of his cousins were also in the Methodist ministry. One of these cousins was Bishop Charles Wesley Burns. Rev. Bickley was at one time chairman of Philadelphia Sunday meetings. He was Area Secretary of the Centenary of American Methodism. Also prior to his election to the Episcopacy, he served as a Pastor and a District Superintendent.

Bishop Bickley died on December 24, 1924 in Philadelphia. He was buried in St. James Cemetery in Olney, Philadelphia.

Selected writings

  • Address: The Problem of the City, Pennsylvania Convention, Methodist Men, in Better Things, C.F. Armitage, editor, 1916.
  • Sermons and addresses which are part of the Methodist Bishops' Collection.

Biography

Funeral addresses given by Bishops Berry, Leonard and Welch, typed, also in the Methodist Bishops' Collection.

gollark: Nuclear is much better, but people go "OH NO NUCLEAR SCARY" and yet seemingly do not care about the alternative effectively being fossil fuels?
gollark: Or batteries, which have their own problems.
gollark: The panels are really energy-intensive to produce anyway, degrade after 20 years, and you need uncool fossil-fuel plants to cover for the solar panels when they don't produce, which is often.
gollark: Except for remote places which can't get grid connectivity.
gollark: Solar is somewhat uncool in my opinion.

See also

  • List of Bishops of the United Methodist Church



This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.