Barry, Alfred
BARRY, ALFRED: Church of England, suffragan
bishop in West London; b. at London Jan. 15,
1826. He was educated at King’s College, London, and Trinity College, Cambridge (B.A., 1848),
where he was elected fellow in 1849. He
was subwarden of Trinity College, Glenalmond,
in 1849-54, headmaster of Leeds Grammar School
in 1854-62, principal of Cheltenham College in
1862-68, and principal of King’s College, London,
in 1868-83. Having been ordained deacon in 1850
and priest in 1853, he was canon of Worcester in
1871-81 and of Westminster in 1881-84, in addition
to being chaplain to the queen in 1875-84. In
1884 he was consecrated bishop of Sydney and
primate of Australia, but resigned in 1889, and
until 1891 was suffragan bishop in the diocese of
Rochester. He was then appointed canon of
Windsor, and was rector of St. James’s, Piccadilly,
from 1895 to 1900. He was consecrated suffragan
bishop in West London in 1897. In addition
to numerous volumes of sermons, he has written
Introduction to the Old Testament (London, 1850);
The Atonement of Christ (1871); What is Natural
Theology? (Boyle Lectures for 1876); The Manifold
Witness for Christ (Boyle Lectures for 1877-78);
Teacher’s Prayer Book (1882); First Words
in Australia (1884); Parables of the Old Testament
(1889); Christianity and Socialism (1891); Light
of Science on the Faith (Bampton Lectures for 1892);
England’s Message to Indus (1894); Ecclesiastical
Expansion of England (Hulsean Lectures for 1894-95);
The Position of the Laity (1903); and The
Christian Sunday (1904).