George Tomlinson (bishop)
George Tomlinson (12 March 1794 – 6 February 1863)[2] was an English cleric, the Anglican Bishop of Gibraltar from 1842 to 1863. BiographyTomlinson was born in Lancashire, the son of Eleanor Jane Fraser and John Tomlinson.[3] He was first educated at St Saviour's Grammar School, Southwark,[4] and entered St John's College, Cambridge, in 1818, matriculating in 1819. He graduated B.A. in 1823, M.A. in 1826, and D.D. in 1842.[5] He was founder of the Cambridge Apostles.[4] Ordained in 1822, Tomlinson became chaplain to William Howley, the Bishop of London, and was employed as a tutor by Sir Robert Peel.[5] In 1825 he became secretary to the City of London Infant School Society, a High Church alternative around Howley, Peel and Charles James Blomfield to the Infant School Society of Samuel Wilderspin.[6] From 1831 to 1842, Tomlinson was secretary to the SPCK.[5] There he wrote for the Saturday Magazine, and founded the Clergy List and Ecclesiastical Gazette. In 1840 he undertook an ecumenical mission in the Levant and wrote a report on it.[7] On 24 August 1842, Tomlinson was consecrated a bishop at Westminster Abbey. He arrived in Gibraltar in 1842 with Robert Wilson, the new governor, on HMS Warspite.[8] He died there on 9 February 1863, aged 68.[5] FamilyTomlinson married twice. His first wife was Louisa, daughter of Gen. Sir Patrick Stuart; they were married in 1848, and she died in 1850.[9] His second wife was Eleanor Jane, daughter of Colonel Charles Mackenzie Fraser, 10th Laird of Inverallochy and 6th of Castle Fraser; they were married in 1855.[1] References
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