Bishop of Brechin Primus of the Scottish Episcopal Church
Church
Scottish Episcopal Church
Diocese
Brechin
In office
1875–1903
Predecessor
Alexander Forbes
Successor
Walter Robberds
Other post(s)
Primus of the Scottish Episcopal Church (1886–1901)
Orders
Ordination
1845
Consecration
28 October 1871 by Archibald Campbell Tait
Personal details
Born
(1820-08-25)25 August 1820
Swaffham Prior, Cambridgeshire, England
Died
17 September 1903(1903-09-17) (aged 83) Dundee, Scotland
Nationality
English
Denomination
Anglican
Parents
George Bitton & Catherine Rowland
Spouse
Ellen Scudamore (m.1844) Sophia Henrietta Ogle (m.1879)
Previous post(s)
Bishop of Colombo (1871-1875)
Alma mater
Trinity Hall, Cambridge
Hugh Willoughby Jermyn (25 August 1820 – 17 September 1903) was an Anglican bishop in the second half of the 19th century[1] and the very start of the 20th.
^“A History of the Church of England in India” Chatterton, E: London, SPCK, 1924
Hugh Willoughby Jermyn (25 August 1820 – 17 September 1903) was an Anglican bishop in the second half of the 19th century and the very start of the 20th...
English Member of Parliament, nephew of Henry Jermyn Henry Jermyn, 1st Baron Dover (c. 1636 – 1708) HughJermyn (1820-1903), Anglican bishop Carsen Germyn...
son was HughJermyn. The third daughter Helena Margaret married John Arthur Power. Catherine Jermyn died of tuberculosis. Anna Maria Jermyn died in childbirth...
died in office. 1847 1875 Alexander Forbes Died in office. 1875 1903 HughJermyn Also Primus 1886–1901; died in office. 1904 1934 Walter Robberds Also...
The Marquess's subsidiary titles are Earl of Bristol (created 1714), Earl Jermyn, of Horningsheath in the County of Suffolk (1826), and Baron Hervey, of...
Ordination 1865 by Hamilton Verschoyle Consecration 21 September 1886 by HughJermyn Personal details Born (1840-06-29)29 June 1840 Cork, Ireland Died 30...
Scottish Episcopal Church Diocese Brechin In office 1904–1934 Predecessor HughJermyn Successor Kenneth Mackenzie Other post(s) Primus of the Scottish Episcopal...
Barbican Theatre. He then appeared in a production of Helping Harry at the Jermyn Street Theatre in 2001; and in 2004 as the title character in a run of Don...
Treasures was conceived and directed by Tim McArthur, first produced at the Jermyn Street Theatre. Sondheim's "Pretty Women" and "Everybody Ought to Have a...
retrieved 19 May 2023 Maxwell, Dominic (14 June 2023). "If So, Then Yes at Jermyn Street Theatre, SW1". ISSN 0140-0460. Retrieved 14 June 2023. Billington...
from a publication now in the public domain: Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Dover, Henry Jermyn, Earl of". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 8 (11th ed.). Cambridge...
jazz-rock band put together by former Luke & The Apostles keyboard player Peter Jermyn with several musicians who had played with Bruce Cockburn in the final lineup...
reference to the Savage Club) in a spacious loft over 5–6 Market Street, off Jermyn Street, Piccadilly. In March 1923, while playing Decameron Nights at Drury...
James Craggs the Elder (1657 – 16 March 1721), of Jermyn Street, Westminster and Charlton, Lewisham, Kent, was an English financier and Whig politician...
have received particular media attention. The academic and writer Deborah Jermyn has dubbed Nancy Meyers "Hollywood's reigning 'romcom queen.'" Scholarship...
Supporting Role. In 2023 she played elder Emma Hamilton and Mrs Cadogan in Jermyn Street Theatre’s world premier production of Infamous by April de Angelis...
occupant of the original house to stand on the site was Thomas Jermyn, 2nd Baron Jermyn (?1670-1676). He passed the house on to Robert Villiers, 3rd Viscount...