He returned to Edinburgh as a deacon in 1853 but soon after went to Stirling to serve as a curate. He was ordained as a priest in 1854 and returned to Edinburgh in 1856 as chaplain to the Bishop of Edinburgh, Charles Terrot, based at St Mary's Episcopal Cathedral. His role as chaplain to the bishop ended on Terrot's death in 1872. Dean Montgomery did not continue the relationship. From 1857 till death he was incumbent at St Paul's Church at St John's Hill in the Canongate.
In 1866 he was living with his young family at 15 Findhorn Place in The Grange district in south Edinburgh.[3] He appears to have remodelled the house in the later 19th century, greatly altering the attic level to add more rooms.
From 1885 onwards he lectured at the Institute for Complete Training of Lady Nurses.
He died at 15 Findhorn Place[5] on 14 February 1905 and is buried with his wife and mother in New Calton Cemetery in Edinburgh, close to his mentor, Bishop Terrot.[2]
Family
He married Mary Calder Marshall around 1865.
His son was Charles Richard Teape (1866–1919). He was also a minister.[6] Charles Richard sometimes is listed as Charles Stanley. He died in Ilfracombe in Devon. A further son, Edward James Teape (1879–1955) died in Lincolnshire.
Publications
The Indian Crisis (1857)
Prayers of Scripture (1866)
Teaching of the Scottish Episcopal Church on the Lord's Supper (1868)
The Alt-Katholic Movement in Germany (1873)
Ritualism Exposed (1882)
Pope's Pastoral (1886)
The Post-Pentecostal Church (1886)
The True History of the Scottish Communion Office (1889)
The Queen's Diamond Jubilee: A Sermon (1897)
Berkeleian Philosophy
References
^Scottish Episcopal Clergy 1689–2000, David Bertie