Samuel Nevill
Samuel Tarratt Nevill (13 May 1837 – 29 October 1921),
Life
A
In 1871 Nevill accepted the
He served as Primate of New Zealand from 1904 until 1919 (acting Primate since 1902),[7] being twice called to attend the Lambeth Conference.[8] With family money he founded Selwyn College, Otago in 1893.
Dr Nevill died at
Nevill married first, at Heavitree, Devon, in 1863, Mary Susannah Cook Penny (a relative of the Viscounts Marchwood), who died in 1905. In 1906, he married second Rosalind Fynes-Clinton (died 1972), daughter of Rev Canon Geoffrey Fynes-Clinton (1847–1934), a distant cousin of the Dukes of Newcastle; he had no children by either marriage,[10][11] but acted as the adoptive father of his brother Edmund Berrey Nevill's son, Edmund Robert Nevill (1862-1933), following his brother's untimely death in 1875.[12][13]
See also
- Archbishop of New Zealand
- St Paul's Cathedral, Dunedin
References
- ISBN 0-7136-3457-X
- ^ Dictionary of New Zealand Biography: Samuel Tarratt Nevill
- ^ "Nevill, Samuel Tarratt (NVL862ST)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
- ^ a b Mennell, Philip (1892). . The Dictionary of Australasian Biography. London: Hutchinson & Co – via Wikisource.
- ^ Genuki
- ^ Malden Richard (ed) (1920). Crockford's Clerical Directory for 1920 (51st edn). London: The Field Press. p. 1091.
- ^ The Times, Thursday, Oct 09, 1919; pg. 9; Issue 42226; col G Imperial and Foreign News Items
- ^ www.anglicancommunion.org
- ^ www.stpauls.net.nz
- ^ Burke's Peerage & Baronetage (2003 edn)
- ^ www.stpeterscaversham.org.nz
- ^ Pringle, Michael (26 June 2019). "Edmund Berrey Nevill: too short a life". Retrieved 11 July 2023.
- ^ Matriculation Register of Lincoln College, Oxford: entry for Edmund Robert Nevill (matriculated 1883). Accessed 11 July 2023 via College archive website.