Episcopal Diocese of North Dakota

Diocese of North Dakota
Location
Ecclesiastical province Province VI
Statistics
Congregations 19
Members 7,495 (2014)
Information
Rite Episcopal
Cathedral Gethsemane Cathedral, Fargo
Current leadership
Bishop Michael G. Smith
Map

Location of the Diocese of North Dakota
Website
www.ndepiscopal.org

The Episcopal Diocese of North Dakota is the diocese of the Episcopal Church in the United States of America with jurisdiction over the state of North Dakota plus Clay County, Minnesota. It has 22 congregations in North Dakota and one in Moorhead, Minnesota. It is in Province VI and its cathedral, Gethsemane Episcopal Cathedral, is in Fargo, as are the diocesan offices.[1]

Michael G. Smith is the current bishop. He is an enrolled member of the Potawatomi Nation of Oklahoma and is a graduate of Seabury-Western Theological Seminary.[2]

List of bishops

The bishops of the diocese have been:[3]

  1. William D. Walker, 1883–1896
  2. Samuel Cook Edsall, 1899–1901
  3. Cameron D. Mann, 1902–1913
  4. John Poyntz Tyler, 1914–1931
  5. Frederick B. Bartlett, 1931–1935
  6. Douglass H. Atwill, 1937–1951
  7. Richard R. Emery, 1951–1964
  8. George T. Masuda, 1965–1979
  9. Harold A. Hopkins, Jr., 1980–1988
  10. Andrew H. Fairfield, 1989–2003
  11. Michael G. Smith, 2004-present

Congregations

All Saint’s, Minot
All Saint’s, Valley City
Church of the Advent, Devils Lake
Church of the Cross, Selfridge
Church of the Good Shepherd, Lakota
Gethsemane Cathedral, Fargo
Grace Church, Jamestown
St. Gabriel’s Camp, Solen
St. George’s, Bismarck
St. James’, Cannon Ball
St. John the Divine Episcopal Church (Moorhead, Minnesota)
St. John’s, Dickinson
St. Luke’s, Fort Yates
Sts. Mary and Mark, Oakes
St. Michaels and All Angel’s, Cartwright
St. Paul’s, Grand Forks
St. Paul’s, White Shield
St. Peter’s, Walhalla
St. Peter’s, Williston
St. Stephen’s, Fargo
St. Sylvan’s, Dunseith
St. Thomas, Fort Totten

See also

References

  1. Episcopal Church online directory
  2. Episcopal Diocese of North Dakota bishop's page
  3. Episcopal Church Annual, 2004, Harrisburg, Pennsylvania: Morehouse Publishing, p. 300

Further reading

External links

Coordinates: 46°49′34″N 96°49′07″W / 46.82611°N 96.81861°W / 46.82611; -96.81861


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