A Freemason, Ridgeway was under the jurisdiction of the United Grand Lodge of England. In 1897 he was granted the honorific rank of Past Grand Chaplain in recognition of his services to English Freemasonry, as part of a series of similar honorary promotions intended to mark the diamond jubilee of Queen Victoria.[7]
After two years (1906–1908) as Dean of Carlisle Ridgeway was appointed Bishop of Chichester in 1908.[8][9] His appointment was at the age of 66, and the result of a dispute between the Archbishop of Canterbury and the Prime Minister, who was then the key figure in the nomination process for bishops. There was disagreement over rival candidates, and Ridgeway appears to have been a compromise.[10]
During World War I, Ridgeway provided support for soldiers in the large military camps in Sussex, and encouraged the recruitment of temporary chaplains.[11]
Ridgeway died on 28 February 1927 aged 85 in London, and was buried at Limpsfield.[3] An obituary noted that he had " ... too much sense of humour ever to take himself heavily, and was too much a man of the world ever to lose his realism."[12]
Legacy
After his death Ridgeway's widow presented his pectoral cross to the Chichester Cathedral library,[13] and commissioned a memorial to him which can be seen in the nave.[14]
^"The London School Board. Result of the Poll". The Daily News. 28 November 1891.
^Horsley (The Rev'd Canon), JW (1906). "Notes on the Grand Chaplains of England". Ars Quatuor Coronatorum. Vol. 19. London: Quatuor Coronati Correspondence Circle Ltd. p. 195.
^New Bishop Of ChichesterThe Times Tuesday, 17 December 1907; pg. 9; Issue 38518; col F