Prior to 1845, the Anglican Church in New Brunswick was part of the responsibility of the Bishop of Nova Scotia. This proved unsatisfactory because of the large territory involved, and the need for a Bishop dedicated to New Brunswick had been expressed by
William Colebrooke,
Lieutenant Governor of New Brunswick, and by
John Inglis,
Bishop of Nova Scotia, among others. In 1836, when a general meeting of the New Brunswick clergy met to establish a Church Society, New Brunswick had 80 parishes, of which only 28 had resident clergymen, and 43 had church buildings. In the early 1840s some of New Brunswick's leading citizens, including
Ward Chipman, Jr., the province's
Chief Justice, and
Solicitor General George Frederick Street, undertook to raise funds to endow a separate bishopric of New Brunswick. They were successful in raising £2,150. Meanwhile, the Colonial Bishoprics Fund was established in England with the goal of endowing new
bishoprics in the British Colonies. The Colonial Bishoprics Fund was administered by
William Howley,
Archbishop of Canterbury, and the other English bishops. In 1843 they decided to give £20,000 to endow a separate bishopric in New Brunswick, which would be the
Episcopal See of Fredericton. In October 1844, Howley wrote to Medley offering him the position, with an income of approximately £900 a year, and Medley accepted. He was the first Tractarian to be appointed bishop in the Church of England. Howley did not state who had recommended him for the position, but it is probable that the recommendation had come from Medley's friends and fellow Tractarians
John Taylor Coleridge and William Ewart Gladstone, who were treasurers of the Colonial Bishoprics Fund. Medley was consecrated as the first Bishop of Fredericton by Howley himself at
Lambeth Palace on 4 May 1845. He was enthroned in Fredericton on 11 June 1845. Medley's Anglo-Catholic views made him an object of suspicion to some in New Brunswick, where the American tradition of
Congregationalist polity, in which each church congregation was self-governing, was also influential. He did, however, have supporters within the clergy and although his own opinions were strongly held, his encouragement of coexistence between
high and
low church Anglicans gradually gained him acceptance. Soon after his arrival, he began visiting all parts of the diocese, building and consecrating churches, training and ordaining priests, and
confirming parishioners.
Church building Medley arrived in Canada with plans drawn by the young Exeter architect Frank Wills for a cathedral to be based on
St. Mary's Church in
Snettisham, Norfolk. He had been granted £1,500 toward the cost of construction by the Exeter Diocesan Architecture Society, and the population of the new diocese pledged a further £4,500. A lot on the
Saint John River was donated, as was the building stone, and the cornerstone of
Christ Church Cathedral was laid on October 15, 1845. In 1848 and 1851 the Bishop visited England and raised more funds to allow the construction to continue. The design was completed by architect
William Butterfield after Wills left New Brunswick in 1848 to set up a practice in New York City. The cathedral, which was consecrated on 31 August 1853, has been described as "the largest and most carefully ecclesiological church of the North American revival". To have a suitable church in which to preach during the construction of the cathedral, Medley built
St. Anne's Chapel, which Frank Mills designed. It was begun in May 1846 and consecrated in March 1847. Medley was dissatisfied with the architectural style of New Brunswick's wooden parish churches. He obtained from the Ecclesiological Society (as the Cambridge Camden Society was known after 1845) a wooden model to be used as a pattern for building wooden churches. He was assisted in his church building program by his son Edward, who had studied architecture with Butterfield in England before becoming a clergyman.
Church governance Beginning in August 1845, the Bishop went on annual visitation tours to all parts of the diocese. In 1847 he began to hold Triennial Visitations of the Clergy, at which province's parish priests gathered in Fredericton. He divided the diocese into seven
deaneries whose
rural deans were elected by the clergy and confirmed by the bishop. In 1852 Medley proposed to form a
diocesan synod, but this was strongly opposed by the New Brunswick clergy. However, in 1866 the synod was set up as a voluntary organisation consisting of clergy, laity and bishop. Its annual meetings began in 1868, and it was officially incorporated in 1871 by the
Legislative Assembly of New Brunswick. In 1874 the Fredericton Synod began sending delegates to the synod of the Ecclesiastical Province of Canada. Medley attended two of the three
Lambeth Conferences that were held during his lifetime. At the second conference in 1878 he was asked by the Archbishop of Canterbury for his opinion of the
Public Worship Act, which prohibited
ritualism in the Church of England, and spoke strongly against the Act. Medley was accompanied at the third conference in 1888 by his son Charles. He and the other bishops attending the conference received honorary
LL.D. degrees from Cambridge University and
Doctor of Divinity degrees from
Durham University. In 1879, Medley was elected
Metropolitan of Canada (the bishop first-among-equals in the eastern half of all Canada) and held that position until his death.
Last years In 1879 he requested a
coadjutor bishop to assist him with his duties. His request was granted and he nominated
Tully Kingdon, who was consecrated in the role by Medley himself on 10 July 1881 in Fredericton. Medley's son Charles died in 1889. Charles had been his father's chaplain and the secretary of the Diocesan Synod, as well as rector in Sussex. Medley preached his final sermon at Saint Paul's Church in
Saint John, New Brunswick in July 1892 and died in Fredericton on 9 September 1892. He was buried on 13 September beneath the Cathedral's east window. ==References==