Pigou, Francis
PIGOU, pi-gū´, FRANCIS: Church of England; b. at Baden-Baden, Germany,
of English parentage, Jan. 8, 1832. He was educated at Trinity College, Dublin (B.A.,
1853), and was ordered deacon in 1855 and priested in the following year. He was
curate of Stoke Talmage, Oxfordshire (1855–56), chaplain of Marbœuf Chapel, Paris
(1856–58), curate of Vere Street Chapel, London (1858), and of St. Philip's, Regent
Street, and St. Mary's, Kensington (1858–60), incumbent of St. Philip's (1860–1869),
and served as vicar of Doncaster (1869–1875), being also rural dean of Doncaster
after 1870; he was vicar of Halifax (1875–88), where he was likewise rural dean,
and became dean of Chicester, a dignity which he held three years. Since 1891 he
has been dean of Bristol, and was appointed a chaplain-in-ordinary to the queen
in 1890. He is widely and favorably known as a missioner, and has held missions
not only throughout England, but also in the United States, which he visited in
1885. His writings include Faith and Practice (sermons; London, 1865);
Early Communion Addresses (1877); Addresses to District Visitors and Sunday
School Teachers (1880); Addresses delivered on various Occasions (1883);
Manual of Confirmation (1888); Phases of my Life (1898); Odds and
Ends (1903); and The Acts of the Holy Ghost. Thirty-two Years of Experience
of Conducting Parochial Missions (1908).