However, Otey soon left Tennessee, having accepted a position as President of Warrenton Academy in
North Carolina. While in Warrenton, Otey was baptized and confirmed in
The Episcopal Church by bishop Ravenscroft. He became a
deacon in 1825 and priest in 1827. Otey then returned to
Franklin and organized Tennessee's first Episcopal church there in the
Masonic Lodge. His later-famous pupils included
Matthew F. Maury, future Confederate General
Braxton Bragg, and
Thomas Bragg. Otey also established several other churches and on July 1, 1829, established the
Episcopal Diocese of Tennessee at
Nashville. Otey was elected the missionary diocese's first
bishop in June 1833 and was consecrated at Christ Church,
Philadelphia, the following January. Following his election, Otey also took charge of the Diocese of
Mississippi and was missionary bishop for
Arkansas and the
Indian Territory (now
Oklahoma). He traveled for months at a time across the extensive region, establishing new churches and preaching the
Gospel. Fervently interested in Christian education, Otey helped organize schools at
Ashwood,
Jackson and
Columbia, Tennessee, the later with the Rev.
Leonidas Polk, future Bishop of Louisiana and Confederate general. Bishop Otey's 30-year dream for a "Literary and Theological Seminary" for the region were realized when the
University of the South at
Sewanee, in southeastern Tennessee, was established in 1857. Otey lived at "Mercer Hall" in Columbia from 1835 to 1852, when he relocated to
Memphis, Tennessee, where in 1863 he died. He had opposed coercion as the Civil War began, and declined to attend the organizational meetings of the Confederate Episcopal Church. After the Civil War, he was re-buried at
St. John's Church at
Ashwood in Maury County. ==References==