Although previously considered for other bishoprics, it was not until 29 November 1868 that he was officially nominated for a prelacy. He was appointed
Titular Archbishop of
Anazarbus and
Apostolic Delegate for Scotland on 3 December 1868. He was
consecrated at the church of
Sant'Andrea della Valle,
Rome on 31 January 1869. The principal
consecrator was Cardinal
Karl-August von Reisach, Archbishop Emeritus of Munich and Freising, and the principal co-consecrators were
Henry Edward Manning, Archbishop of Westminster and
Frédéric-François-Xavier Ghislain de Mérode, Titular Archbishop of Melitene. Archbishop Eyre was appointed the
Apostolic Administrator of the
Western District of Scotland on 16 April 1869. He travelled to
Glasgow in March 1869, charged with organising the re-establishment of Roman Catholic hierarchy in Scotland. After attending the
First Vatican Council (1869–70), he returned to
Scotland in a mission to build schools and to unite the Scottish catholic community, bitterly divided between Scottish and Irish Catholics. In 1874, he opened St Peter's Seminary at Bearsden (subsequently removed to Cardross under the same name). Despite some resistance among Scottish Catholics, the
Scottish hierarchy was restored by
Pope Leo XIII on 15 March 1878. The Western District was divided into the Archdiocese of Glasgow, the
Diocese of Argyll and the Isles and the
Diocese of Galloway; with Charles Petre Eyre appointed as the first Roman Catholic archbishop of Glasgow since the
Scottish Reformation. The
Notre Dame Training College began teaching in January 1895. In 1897
Notre Dame High School in Glasgow was opened as a private secondary and
Montessori school, He died at his home at 6 Bowmant Gardens in Glasgow on 27 March 1902, aged 84. He was buried in his seminary at Bearsden; now the site of the new
Bearsden Academy building. His body was later moved to
St Andrew's Cathedral, Glasgow. Archbishop Eyre left a number of religious and historical works, including works on Scottish saints, the medieval church of Glasgow, and
St Cuthbert. ==Notes==