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Henry C. Lay

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439:, then returning to Huntsville shortly before its capture by federal forces under General Ormsby Mitchell in April 1862. Lay was among the twelve prominent Huntsville citizen hostages locked in the Probate Judge's office for thirteen days as security their fellow citizens' "good behavior" towards the occupying enemy. Three weeks after his release, Mrs. Lay delivered her seventh child, a son, but days later their daughter Lucy died. In August 1862 the Federal troops retreated from Huntsville, but they left about 100 Union soldiers too sick to move. Bishop Lay immediately began visiting them, but soon resumed his travels. He left his eldest son (Henry Jr.) in a Virginia boarding school in October, and proceeded to 272: 1296: 664: 45: 587:, Bishop of Mississippi. The House of Deputies debated condemnatory resolutions, but did not pass them. Instead, the deputies passed a simple resolution of thanksgiving for the restoration of peace in the country and unity in the Church. The General Convention also affirmed Wilmer's election, notwithstanding his arrest, and also that of Charles Todd Quintard as Bishop of Tennessee 628:
travels in Europe convinced him of the advantages of having such a complex (despite the practice of the Diocese of Virginia where he had been raised and other Southern dioceses). Lay also worked to provide for aged priests, serving for many years as trustee of the general clergy relief fund. In 1877, he addressed the General Convention in Boston.
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dismantled the interior of Christ Church and with his parishioners turned it into the sixth. In the late spring 1863, Lay made a 30-day, 400-mile horseback trip of his diocese, and by early summer began substituting in Louisiana for Bishop Polk, who had become a Confederate General (called the "Fighting Bishop"). With the fall of
704:, niece of Atkinson, on May 13, 1847. The couple had three sons who survived their parentsโ€”Henry C. Lay, Jr (who became a civil engineer, 1850โ€“1914), George William Lay (who became a priest, 1860โ€“1932), and Beirne Lay (Yale graduate and writer)--and a daughter, Louisa Lay (1866โ€“1906), who remained in Easton. His grandson 450:
After the council, Lay returned to Arkansas by himself, though by now neighboring Indian territory was under Federal control. By January 1863, he had settled at Little Rock, which served as the base for the Confederate Trans-Mississippi Department. The city had five improvised army hospitals, and Lay
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His family later donated his papers, including his extensive correspondence with his wife during his travels, to the University of North Carolina. His traveling communion set from his days as missionary bishop, and other artifacts, were left with the Diocese of Easton, where they are often displayed
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to raise funds for his missionary work. In the summer of 1860, Lay moved his wife, four children and three slaves (including a newly purchased twelve-year-old named Lizzy) to Fort Smith, where a gift from a Virginia cousin enabled them to buy a small house so they could plant a vegetable garden and
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The new diocese was agricultural and maritime, in many ways similar to his first parish assignment. Lay worked to repair the aged and decaying churches within the diocese, and also secured the land to form a small cathedral complex at Easton, since the diocese even lacked housing for him and his
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forces on April 24, 1861. Lay returned home from a diocesan tour to check on his family, then decided to advise his clergy that they no longer needed pray for the President. He wrote after the fall of Fort Sumter, "I am now Southern, Secession and all that. But I could weep day and night for the
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In June, 1864, at the invitation of Stephen Elliott, Confederate Presiding Bishop and Bishop of Georgia, Lay traveled to Fort Sumter to hold services for the Confederate garrison, as well as to attend Polk's funeral in Augusta and serve Charleston's citizens and soldiers. During the siege of
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which they had found in the Confederate War Department's files. Lay was then released, provided with train fare home, and managed to reach Lincolnton in time to for the birth of another daughter on September 25, 1865. Four days later he left for the General Convention in
594:, Presiding Bishop and Bishop of Connecticut, in 1861, it was never acted upon before Brownell died in January 1865. Thus, after the General Convention still acknowledged Lay as Bishop of the Missionary District of the Southwest, he returned to his diocese, landing at 598:
circa 3 a.m. on December 31, 1865. Disappointed to find "not one open church, not one clergyman officiating," Lay rallied the impoverished and discouraged congregations and convinced clergy to return. He also left temporarily to attend the First
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in 1867. In 1868, the diocese held a convention. However, Lay realized he no longer had the physical strength to perform fully the duties of a missionary bishop, and had accepted the position of the first bishop of the newly created
579:, Bishop of South Carolina, opposed reunion, and was blind and nearly infirm, and so did not attend. Three other Confederate bishops took a wait-and-see attitude and chose not to travel to Philadelphia: Elliot, Bishop of Georgia; 525:
After the war, Federal detectives arrested Lay as he was vesting for a service at St. Luke's Church. He was taken to Washington, D.C., where he was interrogated about papers written by Alabama's Confederate Senator
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ordained Lay a priest on July 12, 1848. During his eleven-year leadership, the sixty member congregation built a brick church, still standing, which could seat 600. Lay was chosen as a deputy to the
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Robert Emmet Gribbin, Jr., Henry C. Lay: Pioneer in the Southwest, (New York: The National Council, 1962) (in the Pioneer Builders in the Church pamphlet series edited by Powel Mills Dawley), p. 4.
648:. During his final years at Easton, Lay traveled to deliver sermons, lectures and eulogies outside his diocese, including of his friend Atkinson in 1881. Some are readily available through 435:) also sided with the Confederate cause. His young son Thomas soon died and was buried in the garden. For the next four years, the Lay family never again settled โ€” traveling first to 676:
Lay died on September 17, 1885, at the Church Home in Baltimore after years of poor health, culminated by a lingering illness. Three days later, after a viewing in the unfinished
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which he had begun (and which was completed in the decades after his death), and a funeral service attended by the bishops of Maryland and Delaware, Henry C. Lay was buried in
1371: 390:, Lay was elected missionary bishop of the Southwest, with jurisdiction over "Arkansas, the Indian territory, Arizona and New Mexico", and consecrated by Meade, Cobbs, 575:, Bishop of Alabama, was under house arrest for instructing his clergy not to pray for the President of the United States as part of his opposition to military rule. 640:, had already been published in four editions by the Church Book Society in 1854. The same publisher in 1860 issued two volumes of short sermons and tracts entitled 315:
on September 1, 1839 (before reaching his sixteenth birthday) and graduated with a Master of Arts degree on July 4, 1842. Lay then tutored the children of General
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misery before us and the folly that has brought us to it." His brothers colonels George Lay (a West Point graduate) and John Lay (on the staff of general
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parish. His mother died when Henry was 10, and his father six years later. Lay attended the Richmond Academy run by Socrates Maupin. He then entered the
402:, planning that his wife and three children would follow when he settled down. After an exploratory trip around his new diocese (which extended west to 1346: 544: 339:
on October 12, 1844, taking the first and second year courses simultaneously. He graduated in due course and on July 10, 1846, was ordained deacon by
1080: 284: 271: 410:, where Polk had established Christ Church in 1840. After returning to Huntsville for the birth of his son, Lay went on an extended tour from 959: 304: 729:"University of Virginia Library Online Exhibits | All the Hoos in Hooville: 175 Years of Life at the University of Virginia" 681: 199: 636:
About 1880, Bishop Lay retired and began writing and publishing extensively, for church and popular audiences. His first book,
1381: 1045: 772: 1351: 1081:"RELIGIOUS CONFERENCES.; GENERAL EPISCOPAL CONVENTION. THE FIFTEENTH DAY'S SESSION AT BOSTON REPORT OF COMMITTEE ON EXPENSES" 387: 1376: 677: 1356: 556: 351:, which also operated a free school pursuant to the bequest of its rector who had died as the American Revolution began. 518:, and met with Robert E. Lee. Lay's efforts to negotiate an end to the war were unsuccessful, and moved his family to 375: 1113:
Whittaker's Churchman's Almanac, The Protestant Episcopal Almanac and Church Directory for the Year of our Lord 1880
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Whittaker's Churchman's Almanac, The Protestant Episcopal Almanac and Church Directory for the Year of our Lord 1880
728: 1276: 55: 820: 616:: "So he fed them according to the integrity of his heart; and guided them by the skillfulness of his hands. 427: 344: 332: 101: 455:, crossing the Mississippi River into Arkansas had become dangerous. Lay learned his family had returned to 605: 65: 36: 701: 548: 532: 519: 456: 320: 514:
under a flag of truce during the Confederacy's final months. Lay preached to Confederate troops near
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in the months after Polk's death, and also counseled General Hood. After the city fell, General
591: 527: 452: 312: 260: 572: 468: 459:, so he returned to Virginia and for several months visited the hospitals and prisons there. 436: 467:, he visited the troops defending the city and those in its hospitals. He assisted chaplain 1341: 1336: 609: 584: 515: 511: 487: 483: 407: 336: 300: 91: 8: 499: 355: 1125: 386:
In 1859, while attending the General Convention in Richmond during the controversy over
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The Church in the Nation: God's Pure and Apostolical, God's Authorized Representative
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in 1850 and 1859. Between those terms, in 1857, he received a Doctor of Divinity
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The Church in the Nation: Pure and Apostolical, God's Authorized Representative
564: 348: 1330: 1092: 559:, resumed their seats in the House of Bishops after several conferences with 503: 432: 415: 391: 340: 137: 507: 331:
Realizing that he had a call to ministry, Lay began theological studies at
856: 712:, then distinguished himself in World War II and later as a screenwriter. 571:, Bishop of Tennessee, and Leonidas Polk, Bishop of Louisiana, had died; 479: 224: 1172: 1126:"Letters to a Man Bewildered among Many Counselors, by H. C. Lay (1854)" 1248: 663: 580: 567:, Bishop of New York; helping to reunite the divided Episcopal church. 491: 475:
gave Lay permission to cross Union lines to visit his wife and return.
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The following spring, after marrying as discussed below, Lay moved to
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Although Lay had submitted his resignation as Missionary Bishop to
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and several others on October 23, 1859. Lay immediately moved to
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Lay began service on Maryland's Eastern Shore on April 1, 1869.
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Protestant Episcopal Church in the Confederate States of America
660:, was published by E.P. Dutton Co. in the year of Lay's death. 646:
Studies in the Church: being letters to an old-fashioned layman
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became an early Army aviator, and writer in response to the
283:(December 6, 1823 โ€“ September 17, 1885) was a bishop of the 543:
At the first General Convention after the war, held at the
371: 846:. New York: T. Whittaker, 2 and 3 Bible House. 218 pages. 426:
began, Fort Smith's military garrison surrendered to the
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merchant John Olmstead Lay and his wife Lucy Anna May of
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Colonial Churches in the Original Colony of Virginia
1274: 1372:19th-century Anglican bishops in the United States 638:Letters to a Man Bewildered Among Many Counsellors 307:, although his parents were members of the city's 1328: 1165: 777:, Volume 1 (Williams & Wilkins, 1915) p. 600 644:. In 1872, W. Wells Gardner in London published 285:Episcopal Church in the United States of America 1118: 478:Lay traveled by trains and boats north through 563:, Presiding Bishop and Bishop of Vermont; and 303:, Henry Champlin Lay was baptized in historic 1022: 1020: 849: 774:History of Talbot County, Maryland, 1661โ€“1861 1367:People of Virginia in the American Civil War 1362:People of Arkansas in the American Civil War 1048:. trinitycathedraleaston.com. Archived from 857:"Our Story | Christ Church Little Rock" 785: 783: 443:to attend the first General Council of the 1017: 977: 825:, (Southern Churchman Company 1908) p. 161 502:. He even managed to visit Union Generals 270: 43: 1347:Religious leaders from Richmond, Virginia 1217: 1193: 1146: 952: 1275:Kirsten Marie Frese (December 1, 1999). 780: 662: 1211: 1187: 743: 721: 1329: 1140: 700:Lay married Eliza Withers Atkinson of 656:was published in 1881. His last book, 538: 234:John Olmstead Lay & Lucy Anna May 792: 619: 1302: 671: 631: 612:, inscribed with the last verse of 406:), Lay decided to make his base in 382:Arkansas and Confederate episcopate 13: 388:John Brown's raid on Harpers Ferry 14: 1393: 326: 1310:"Henry C. Lay Papers, 1842-1929" 1294: 419:keep pigs, a chicken and a cow. 1268: 1252:. September 26, 1885. p. 2 1236: 1106: 1073: 1064: 1029: 1008: 999: 943: 934: 925: 916: 907: 898: 889: 880: 871: 1197:Studies in the Church, letters 837: 828: 814: 765: 1: 1382:Episcopal bishops of Arkansas 985:"History | Saint Luke's" 715: 343:and assigned to the historic 333:Virginia Theological Seminary 290: 1352:People from Easton, Maryland 7: 1377:Episcopal bishops of Easton 987:. saintlukes.diocesewnc.org 771:Samuel Alexander Harrison, 606:Episcopal Diocese of Easton 10: 1398: 1357:American Episcopal priests 731:. explore.lib.virginia.edu 702:Lunenburg County, Virginia 583:, Bishop of Virginia; and 533:Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 520:Lincolnton, North Carolina 457:Lunenburg County, Virginia 358:to serve as rector of the 1150:Tracts for missionary use 695: 642:Tracts for Missionary Use 266: 254: 246: 238: 230: 220: 210: 195: 174: 148: 143: 130: 117: 112: 97: 87: 79: 71: 61: 51: 42: 35: 20: 931:Harrison at pp. 601-602. 834:Harrison at pp. 600-601. 751:"Old Homes of Dinwiddie" 557:Bishop of North Carolina 1277:"Spring Hill Cemetery" 668: 592:Thomas Church Brownell 360:Church of the Nativity 323:for nearly two years. 313:University of Virginia 261:University of Virginia 242:Eliza Withers Atkinson 1175:. anglicanhistory.org 1128:. anglicanhistory.org 800:"Old Donation Church" 666: 654:Studies in the Church 573:Richard Hooker Wilmer 469:Charles Todd Quintard 1244:"A Great Man Buried" 1173:"Henry Champlin Lay" 1087:. October 20, 1877. 859:. christchurchlr.org 802:. 1bob9.blogspot.com 682:Spring Hill Cemetery 610:Pine Bluff, Arkansas 585:William Mercer Green 337:Alexandria, Virginia 301:Petersburg, Virginia 200:Spring Hill Cemetery 92:William Forbes Adams 1005:Gribbin, pp. 18-19. 539:Post-War episcopate 356:Huntsville, Alabama 317:William H. Broadnax 30:D.D., LL.D., S.T.D. 1312:. www2.lib.unc.edu 1218:Lay, H.C. (1885). 1194:Lay, H.C. (1881). 1147:Lay, H.C. (1860). 1085:The New York Times 1070:Harrison at p. 603 1035:Harrison at p. 602 965:. February 5, 2009 669: 650:Project Canterbury 601:Lambeth Conference 561:John Henry Hopkins 551:, Lay, along with 545:Church of St. Luke 424:American Civil War 368:General Convention 281:Henry Champlin Lay 178:September 17, 1885 102:Bishop of Arkansas 26:Henry Champlin Lay 22:The Right Reverend 1052:on April 16, 2015 1014:Gribbin pp. 20-22 949:Gribbin pp. 18-19 940:Gribbin pp. 16-18 922:Gribbin pp. 13-15 913:Gribbin pp. 12-14 904:Gribbin pp. 10-12 877:Gribbin, pp. 6-7. 678:Trinity Cathedral 620:Easton episcopate 569:James Hervey Otey 412:Savannah, Georgia 364:Nicholas H. Cobbs 305:St. John's Church 278: 277: 125:Nicholas H. 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Davis 553:Thomas Atkinson 541: 528:Clement C. Clay 473:William Sherman 396:Stephen Elliott 384: 329: 319:at Kingston in 309:Monument Church 293: 202: 183: 179: 170: 160: 154: 152: 135: 122: 31: 28: 27: 24: 23: 12: 11: 5: 1395: 1385: 1384: 1379: 1374: 1369: 1364: 1359: 1354: 1349: 1344: 1339: 1324: 1323: 1301: 1289:Newspapers.com 1267: 1262:Newspapers.com 1235: 1224:. E. P. 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Index

Bishop of Easton

Episcopal Church
Easton
William Forbes Adams
Bishop of Arkansas
Nicholas H. Cobbs
William Meade
Richmond
Virginia
Baltimore
Maryland
Spring Hill Cemetery
Easton, Maryland
American
Anglican
Alma mater
University of Virginia
Henry Champlin Lay's signature
Episcopal Church in the United States of America
Richmond
Petersburg, Virginia
St. John's Church
Monument Church
University of Virginia
William H. Broadnax
Dinwiddie County
Virginia Theological Seminary
Alexandria, Virginia
William Meade

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