Episcopal Diocese of the Virgin Islands

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Episcopal Diocese of the Virgin Islands

Dioecesis Virginum Insularum

EDVI
Province II
Deaneries3
Headquarters2313 Commandant Gade (Garden Street) Charlotte Amalie, St. Thomas USVI
Statistics
Congregations13 (2022)
Schools4
Members1,989 (2022)
Information
DenominationEpiscopal Church
Established1919
CathedralCathedral Church of All Saints
LanguageEnglish, Virgin Islands Creole, Spanish(minority)
Current leadership
Bishop Advisor to the Virgin Islands DioceseRafael Morales Maldonado
Website
edotvi.org

The Episcopal Diocese of the Virgin Islands is a

Charlotte Amalie. The diocese currently comprises 14 churches. There is a functioning parish school on St. Thomas All Saints Cathedral School there was an academic campus on St. Croix, St. Dunstan's Episcopal High School. St. Dunstan's closed in the 1990s. There is also the St. Georges School located on the parish property of St. Georges Episcopal Church in Road Town, Tortola in the British Virgin Islands, which also opened the St. Georges School (Secondary Division) in Palestina Estate near to the St. Paul's Episcopal Church in Sea Cow's Bay, Tortola in the British Virgin Islands. There is also the St. Mary's School located on the parish property of the St. Mary's Episcopal Church in Valley, Virgin Gorda
in the British Virgin Islands.

History

In 1917 when the

Bishop of Antigua
who was part of the Diocese of
Barbados. On the transfer of the U.S. Virgin Islands from Danish to American Sovereignty, the Bishop of Antigua, on 30 April 1919 transferred the ecclesiastical jurisdiction of the Churches of the Anglican Communion in those islands to the Protestant Episcopal Church in the United States of America. The House of Bishops, assembled at Winston-Salem, North Carolina, did on 7 November 1947 erect the Anglican Churches in the Virgin Islands to the status of the Missionary District, to be known as the Missionary District of the Virgin Islands. The Presiding Bishop appointed the Bishop of Puerto Rico as bishop-in-charge of the new mission district. By a Deed of Relinquishment the Archbishop of the West Indies on 24 November 1963 transferred ecclesiastical jurisdiction of the Anglican Churches in the British Virgin Islands to the Protestant Episcopal Church of the United States of America. In 1962 Cedric Mills was appointed Bishop of the Virgin Islands by the House of Bishops and he arrived in 1963 and assumed jurisdiction over all Anglican and Episcopal churches in the wider Virgin Islands.[1] In 1971 the diocese elected its own bishop for the first time. Edward Mason Turner, rector of St. Paul's in Frederiksted, was elected bishop in November 1971. He was consecrated bishop in May 1972.[2]

Bishops of the Diocese

The Bishops of the Diocese are:

Deaneries

In accordance with the usage in the ECUSA, the diocese is divided into three deaneries each headed by a regional dean and named as follows:

  • 1. St. Thomas-St. John Deanery;
  • 2. St. Croix Deanery; and
  • 3. Virgin Islands (British) Deanery.

See also

References

  1. ^ "Episcopal Diocese Of The Virgin Islands - History". Archived from the original on 2011-02-25. Retrieved 2011-04-17.
  2. ^ The Virgin Islands Daily News, "Father Turner Elected Anglican Bishop of V.I.", Nov. 20, 1971

External links