Diocese of Chelmsford
Diocese of the Church of England
Diocese of Chelmsford
Dioecesis Chelmsfordiensis
Coat of arms
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Ecclesiastical province Canterbury Archdeaconries Barking, Chelmsford, Colchester, Southend, Stansted, West Ham Parishes 463[ 1] Churches 588 (As of August 2014[update] )[ 2] Schools 140[ 3] Formation 23 January 1914 Denomination Church of England Cathedral Chelmsford Cathedral Language English Bishop Guli Francis-Dehqani , Bishop of Chelmsford Suffragans Roger Morris , area Bishop of Colchester [ 4] Lynne Cullens , area Bishop of Barking Adam Atkinson , area Bishop of Bradwell Archdeacons Chris Burke , Archdeacon of Barking Ruth Patten , Archdeacon of Colchester Mike Power , Archdeacon of West Ham Kate Peacock , Archdeacon of Stansted Jonathan Croucher , Archdeacon of Chelmsford Archdeacon of Southend (vacant)chelmsford.anglican.org
The Diocese of Chelmsford is a Church of England diocese , part of the Province of Canterbury . It was created on 23 January 1914 from part of the Diocese of St Albans . It covers Essex and part of East London . Since 1984 it is divided into three episcopal areas, each with its own area bishop. The diocese covers around 1,500 square miles (3,900 km2 ) with a population of more than 3 million. It has 463 parishes and 588 churches.
History
The diocese was created on 23 January 1914, as part of the provisions of the Bishoprics of Sheffield, Chelmsford and the County of Suffolk Act 1913. It covered the entire county of Essex and that part of Kent north of the River Thames (North Woolwich) .[ 5] The area had since 4 May 1877 been part of the Diocese of St Albans .[ 6] Before 1 January 1846 the area was part of the Diocese of London and then the Diocese of Rochester .
Geographic area
The diocese covers a region of around 1,500 square miles (3,900 km2 )[ 3] and has a population of more than 3 million.[ 2] It covers Essex and five East London boroughs of Barking and Dagenham , Havering , Newham , Redbridge , and Waltham Forest . The diocese has seen one of the strongest regenerations in Europe , which continues. The Thames Gateway , the M11 corridor, Stansted and Southend airports, Harwich , Tilbury , London Gateway , Purfleet ports and most of the housing built in connection with the London 2012 Olympics are in the diocese. It is co-terminous with the boundaries of the Catholic Diocese of Brentwood .
Organisation
The diocese of Chelmsford is overseen by the Bishop of Chelmsford . Since the area scheme was created in 1983[ 7] and inaugurated in January 1984,[ 8] the diocese has been divided into three episcopal areas which are overseen by an area bishop. The diocese is divided further into archdeaconries , each divided into a number of deaneries .[ 9]
The suffragan See of Colchester was created in 1882, for the Diocese of St Albans until 1914. Barking in 1901 also for St Albans, and Bradwell in 1968.
Bishops
Left to right: Peter Hill, Bishop of Barking; Stephen Cottrell, Bishop of Chelmsford; Roger Morris, Bishop of Colchester
Alongside the diocesan Bishop of Chelmsford (Guli Francis-Dehqani ), the Diocese has three area (suffragan) bishops: Roger Morris , area Bishop of Colchester ; Lynne Cullens , area Bishop of Barking ; and Adam Atkinson , area Bishop of Bradwell .
Alternative episcopal oversight (for parishes in the diocese which reject the ministry of priests who are women) is provided by the provincial episcopal visitor , Norman Banks , Bishop suffragan of Richborough , who is licensed as an honorary assistant bishop of the diocese in order to facilitate his work there.
Churches
The diocese has 463 parishes[ 1] and a total of 588 churches.[ 2]
Deanery
Clergy
Church
Founded (building)
Epping Forest & Ongar
S. Brazier-Gibbs
St Laurence, Blackmore
Medieval
SS Peter & Paul, Stondon Massey
I. Farley
St John the Baptist, Buckhurst Hill
1837
H. Aucken
St Martin, Chipping Ongar
Medieval
St Peter, Shelley
Medieval (1888)
St Andrew, Greensted-juxta-Ongar
Anglo-Saxon
St Margaret of Antioch, Stanford Rivers
Medieval
L. Batson
O. Maxfield-Coote
A. Summers
St John the Baptist, Epping
Medieval (1889)
All Saints, Epping Upland
Medieval
St Alban the Martyr, Coopersale
1852
St Andrew, North Weald Bassett
Medieval
C. Hawkins
St Germain, Bobbingworth
Medieval
St Mary the Virgin, Moreton
Medieval
St Nicholas, Fyfield
Medieval
St Christopher, Willingale
Medieval
J. Pickles
All Saints, High Laver
Medieval
St Mary the Virgin, Little Laver
Medieval
St Mary Magdalen, Magdalen Laver
Medieval
St Mary, Matching
Medieval
C. Davies
St John the Baptist, Loughton
1846
St Nicholas, Loughton
Medieval (early C20th)
M. Macdonald
M. White
St Mary the Virgin, Loughton
1871
L. Petitt
St Michael & All Angels, Loughton
1937
S. Gibbs
St Mary the Virgin, High Ongar
St James, Marden Ash
All Saints, Norton Mandeville
J. Fry
St Mary the Virgin, Stapleford Tawney
St Mary the Virgin, Theydon Bois
All Saints, Theydon Garnon
St Michael, Theydon Mount
C. Kosla
P. Preston
St Mary, Chigwell
All Saints, Chigwell Row
St Winifred, Chigwell
St Mary & All Saints, Lambourne
St Mary the Virgin, Stapleford Abbotts
P. Smith
V. Yeadon
Holy Cross & St Lawrence, Waltham
Holy Innocents, High Beach
St Lawrence, Ninefields
St Thomas, Upshire
References
Sources
External links
Office holders
Guli Francis-Dehqani , Bishop of Chelmsford
Roger Morris , area Bishop of Colchester
Lynne Cullens , area Bishop of Barking
Adam Atkinson , area Bishop-designate of Bradwell and Archdeacon of Charing Cross
AEO : Bishop suffragan of Richborough (vacant) & Rob Munro , Bishop suffragan of Ebbsfleet
Jessica Martin , Dean-designate of Chelmsford
Chris Burke , Archdeacon of Barking
Ruth Patten , Archdeacon of Colchester
Mike Power , Archdeacon of West Ham
Kate Peacock , Archdeacon of Stansted
Jonathan Croucher , Archdeacon of Chelmsford
Archdeacon of Southend (vacant)
Historic offices
51°44′07″N 0°28′20″E / 51.7352°N 0.4723°E / 51.7352; 0.4723