John Farthing (bishop)
Canadian Anglican bishop (1861–1947)
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Early life and education
John Cragg Farthing was born in Toronto to an upper-class Anglican family. He had a sister Ann Cragg Farthing. He was educated at Caius College, Cambridge, England.[2] Ann Farthing became an Anglican missionary, working in the United States territory of Alaska for years during the early 20th century in the Yukon interior.
Clergyman
After Farthing's return to Canada from Cambridge, he was ordained and embarked on an ecclesiastical career with a curacy at Woodstock, Ontario, swiftly followed by elevation to vicar within the same parish.[3]
Promotion followed rapidly and he was, successively, called as a Canon of St Paul's Cathedral, London, Ontario, and Dean of Ontario. He left Ontario when called in 1909 as Bishop of Montreal, serving until 1939.[4] A keen observer of Montreal life,[5] he was a moderate prelate.[6]
Marriage and family
He married Mary Kemp. They had two sons, John Farthing, who became a philosopher.[7] and Hugh Cragg Farthing, a lawyer who followed a political and judicial career in Alberta
Arms
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