The land now known as the District of Columbia once comprised parts of Montgomery County and Prince George's County in Maryland. A congregation which later became known as Rock Creek parish was founded in 1712, and by seven years later had built a chapel of ease for (Broad Creek Parish), which was the spiritual counterpart to secular government in Prince George's County. The congregation built a larger, Georgian style building in 1775, which is now known as St. Paul's Episcopal Church, Rock Creek Parish (Washington, D.C.). It is the oldest religious institution within the District of Columbia. The former glebe (farm to support the parish priest) became the non-denominational Rock Creek Cemetery, now also home to the InterFaith Conference of Metropolitan Washington.
As European settlement moved westward and the area's population increased, additional congregations began and built chapels within what Maryland's General Assembly in 1776 designated Montgomery County. These congregations had split off from Broad or Rock Creek parish and became Prince George's Parish in 1726 (later Christ Episcopal Church (Rockville, Maryland)) and Eden or Sugarland Parish in 1737 (which later became St. Peter's Church (Poolesville, Maryland)), only to be reassigned to the newly formed diocese of Washington over a century later.
Construction of the Gothic Revival "Cathedral Church of Saint Peter and Saint Paul in the City and the Diocese of Washington" (usually known as the Washington National Cathedral) on Mount Saint Albans at the intersection of Massachusetts and Wisconsin Avenues in northwest Washington began with a charter issued by the United States Congress in 1893 and on September 29, 1907, the cornerstone was laid in the presence of 26th President Theodore Roosevelt and a crowd of 20,000 and continued with fits and starts until its general completion in the early 1990s, with a ceremony attended by 41st President, George H. W. Bush, serving as a "national house of prayer for all people" and becoming a national landmark for the Protestant Episcopal Church in the U.S.A. and icon for the Anglican Communion in the world.
Bishops
The first African-American bishop for the Diocese was elected and ordained with John Thomas Walker as the sixth prelate in 1977 who served until his death 12 years later. After the eighth bishop of Washington, John Bryson Chane, announced his intention to retire in the fall of 2011,[3] a diocesan convention on June 18, 2011, elected Mariann Edgar Budde as its first female diocesan bishop. She was ordained and consecrated on November 12, 2011.
Paul Moore, Jr. (1919–2003), Bishop Suffragan, 1964-1970 (subsequently Coadjutor Bishop of New York 1970-1971 and 13th Bishop of New York 1972–1989)
John Thomas Walker (1925–1989), Bishop Suffragan, 1971-1976 and Bishop Coadjutor, 1976 to 1977 (subsequently Bishop of Washington pro tempore and 6th Bishop of Washington)
William Benjamin Spofford Jr. (1921–2013), Assistant Bishop, 1979–1984, 1990 (previously Bishop of Eastern Oregon, 1969–1979)
George Theodore Masuda (1913–1995), Assisting Bishop, 1985-1986 (previously Bishop of North Dakota 1965–1979)
Ronald Hayward Haines (1934–2008), Bishop Suffragan 1986-1989 (subsequently Bishop of Washington pro tempore and 7th Bishop of Washington)
William Benjamin Spofford Jr. (1921–2013), Assistant Bishop, 1979–1984, 1990 (previously Bishop of Eastern Oregon, 1969–1979)
Jane Hart Holmes Dixon (1937–2012), Bishop Suffragan 1992–2000, Bishop of Washington 'pro tempore' 2001-2002
Allen Lyman Bartlett Jr. (1929–), Assisting Bishop 2001-2004 (previously Coadjutor Bishop of Philadelphia 1986-1987 and Bishop of Pennsylvania 1987–1998)
Barbara Clementine Harris (1930–2020), Assisting Bishop 2003-2007 (previously Bishop Suffragan of the Diocese of Massachusetts 1989–2003)
Chilton Abbie Richardson Knudsen (1946–), Assisting Bishop 2019–present (previously Bishop of Maine 1997–2008; Interim Bishop, Diocese of Kentucky 2011- 2012; Assistant Bishop, Diocese of New York 2013–2014; Assistant Bishop, Diocese of Long Island 2014–2015; Assistant Bishop, Diocese of Maryland 2015–2018.)