Linton Smith
Bishop of Warrington; Bishop of Hereford; Bishop of Rochester

Linton Smith

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Bishop of Warrington; Bishop of Hereford; Bishop of Rochester
Gender:
Male
Work field:
Birth:
4 July 1869
Death:
7 October 1950
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Biography

Introduction

Martin Linton Smith (4 July 1869 – 7 October 1950) was an Anglican bishop who served in three dioceses during the first half of the twentieth century.

Smith was born into a clerical family and educated at Repton and Hertford College, Oxford. Ordained priest in 1894 he was a curate at four parishes before securing his own incumbency at Colchester in 1902. By now married to Kathleen Dewe with a young family, he gained experience in Liverpool eventually becoming a Cathedral Canon. His finest hour, however, was the First World War where he gained the DSO for his sterling work at The Somme, Arras and Ypres.

When peace came he was raised to the episcopate, firstly for two years as the suffragan Bishop of Warrington; then translated to the more senior post of diocesan Bishop of Hereford in 1920, serving there for a decade; and, finally, a further nine years as Bishop of Rochester. Retiring to Cheltenham in 1940 he died after a long life “rich in service”.

Works

Lambeth and Reunion: An Interpretation of the Mind of the Lambeth Conference of 1920, with Frank Theodore Woods and Martin Linton Smith (London: Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge, 1921).

Church of England titles
New title Bishop of Warrington
1918–1920
Succeeded by
Edwin Kempson
Preceded by
Hensley Henson
Bishop of Hereford
1920–1930
Succeeded by
Charles Carre
Preceded by
John Harmer
Bishop of Rochester
1930–1940
Succeeded by
Christopher Chavasse