Charles Henry Davis (bishop)

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DioceseMaitland
Installed25 February 1848
Term ended17 May 1854
SuccessorJames Murray

Charles Henry Davis OSB
Bishop of Diocese of Maitland
DioceseMaitland
Installed25 February 1848
Term ended17 May 1854
SuccessorJames Murray
Orders
Ordination8 November 1840 at
Downside Abbey, Somerset, England
by Thomas Joseph Brown OSB
Consecration25 February 1848 at
Downside Abbey, Somerset, England
by William Bernard Ullathorne OSB
Personal details
BornCharles Henry Davis
(1815-05-18)18 May 1815
Usk, Monmouth, United Kingdom
Died17 May 1854(1854-05-17) (aged 38)
Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
NationalityAustralian
DenominationCatholic Church
OccupationCatholic bishop

Charles Henry Davis (18 May 1815 – 17 May 1854) was an English Benedictine bishop of the Catholic Church. He served as the first Bishop of Maitland and first Coadjutor Archbishop of Sydney.

Davis was born in Usk, Wales in 1815, to Michael and Jane Davis. He had eight siblings, two of whom died as infants. He was the second youngest of six boys. All six were educated by the monks of Downside Abbey and three of them, including Charles, became Benedictine priests.[1]

Davis concluded his studies at Downside Abbey in 1833 and immediately joined the Benedictine Order. On 1 March 1833, he was clothed in the Benedictine habit by Dom George Turner OSB. The future Archbishop of Sydney, John Bede Polding, was the novice master and subprior at Downside Abbey while Davis was a novice.[2]

He was professed as a Benedictine monk on 24 June 1834, with Polding receiving his vows. He received tonsure and minor orders from Polding in the chapel at Downside on 20 September 1834. He was ordained a subdeacon on 28 May 1836 by Bishop Peter Augustine Baines OSB. He was then ordained a deacon at Prior Park on 23 February 1839.[3]

Priesthood

Davis was ordained as a Benedictine priest on 8 November 1940 in the Downside Abbey chapel by Bishop Thomas Joseph Brown.[4]

Following his ordination, he was given a raft of responsibilities in the Abbey. He was cellarer (1841 to 1847), Prefect of Students (1839 to 1847), infirmarian (1840 to 1847), organist (1834 to 1847) and cantor. In 1844, he was made parish priest of St Benedict's Church, Downside.[5] He displayed considerable talents as an organist, singer and composer.[6]

In 1832, Polding had been appointed Vicar Apostolic of New Holland and Van Diemen's Land, Australia and he arrived in the colony in 1835. He began petitioning for a new diocese to be created in Newcastle to assist in the pastoral care of Catholics in the region.[7]

Episcopate

Illness and Death

References

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