Thomas F. Gailor
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Thomas Frank Gailor (September 17, 1856 – October 3, 1935) was the third bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Tennessee in the Episcopal Church and served from 1898 to 1935.


Career

Gailor was enrolled in the preparatory department of, then graduated Bachelor of Arts from, Racine College in Wisconsin. Bishop Charles Todd Quintard of Tennessee was an ardent supporter of Racine and its brilliant Rector, the Reverend James DeKoven (1831-1879). Racine was modeled on both the College of St. James's in Maryland (founded 1842) and St. Peter's College, Radley, UK (founded 1847). Both had reputations as outstanding schools. St. James's and Racine were inspired by the scholarly philosophy and practice of William Augustus Muhlenberg (1796-1877), founder of two model schools on Long Island in 1828 and 1836. Muhlenberg is considered by some as the father of the Church school movement in America, an energy which gave rise to some of the elite college preparatory schools in the United States. Gailor taught at the University of the South in Sewanee, Tennessee and went on to serve as Vice-Chancellor (President) of the institution; then, after his election to the episcopate, served as the eighth Chancellor of the University (June 23, 1908, until his death). In 1916 Gailor was elected president of the House of Bishops, and at the 1919 General Convention he was elected president of the National Council of the Episcopal Church. He served in this position until 1925, when the Episcopal Church's first elected presiding bishop began his six-year term. In 1921 he received an honorary degree in Doctor of Laws from Oglethorpe University. On June 25, 1924, he offered the invocation at the opening of the second day of the
1924 Democratic National Convention The 1924 Democratic National Convention, held at the Madison Square Garden in New York City from June 24 to July 9, 1924, was the longest continuously running convention in United States political history. It took a record 103 ballots to nominate ...
. He died in Sewanee on October 3, 1935.


Family

In 1923, his daughter, Ellen Douglas Gailor, married Richard Folsom Cleveland, son of former President Grover Cleveland."Maryanne Rachel Fink is Bride" (listing bridegroom as great-grandson of President Cleveland and Bishop Gailor), ''New York Times'', June 22, 1980.


See also

* Episcopal Diocese of West Tennessee *
Episcopal Diocese of East Tennessee The Episcopal Diocese of East Tennessee is the diocese of the Episcopal Church that geographically coincides with the political region known as the Grand Division of East Tennessee. The geographic range of the Diocese of East Tennessee was ori ...
* Succession of Bishops of The Episcopal Church (U.S.) *
St. Mary's Episcopal Cathedral in Memphis St. Mary's Episcopal Cathedral, designed by Memphis architect Bayard Snowden Cairns, located near downtown Memphis, Tennessee, is the cathedral church of the Episcopal Diocese of West Tennessee and the former cathedral of the old statewide Episc ...


References


Sources


"Thomas Frank Gailor," ''Tennessee Encyclopedia of History and Culture''

Bibliographic directory
from
Project Canterbury Project Canterbury (sometimes abbreviated as PC) is an online archive of material related to the history of Anglicanism. It was founded by Richard Mammana, Jr. in 1999 with a grant from Episcopal Church Presiding Bishop Frank T. Griswold, and is ho ...
* William Stevens Perry,
Thomas Frank Gailor
" ''The Episcopate in America'' (Christian Literature Company, 1895), p. 357. {{DEFAULTSORT:Gailor, Thomas F. Heads of universities and colleges in the United States 1856 births 1935 deaths People from Jackson, Mississippi People from Tennessee Racine College alumni Episcopal bishops of Tennessee