He was educated at
St Alban's Hall, Oxford (united with
Merton College, Oxford in 1881) where he graduated
B.A. in 1859 and
M.A. in 1862. He was ordained deacon in 1860 and priest in 1861. In 1891 he was awarded the honorary degree of
Doctor of Divinity at Oxford. Walsh began his ecclesiastical career with a curacy at
Horsell from 1860 to 1863 and was curate of
Upper Chelsea from 1863 to 1865. For a period from 1865 to 1870 he was Secretary of the
Church Mission Society for
Kent,
Surrey and
Sussex. This was followed by a three-year period as Superintendent of Missionaries and Clerical Secretary of the London Diocesan Home Mission, a role that he undertook again from 1886 to 1890. He was perpetual curate of St. Andrew's
Watford from 1873 until 1878 and chaplain in
Rome from 1878 to 1879. Walsh became
Vicar of St Matthew
Newington from 1879 to 1886.
Mauritius He became mission chaplain to the
Bishop of London (Dr.
Frederick Temple) from 1898 to 1891. Temple also made him a
Prebendary of Wedland in
St Paul's Cathedral from 1889 to 1891. He was consecrated Lord Bishop of Mauritius in
Westminster Abbey on 2 February 1891. Just over a year later, one of the worst
cyclones ever to hit Mauritius occurred on 29 April 1892 and devastated
Port Louis. The Anglican Cathedral of St James was one of the few buildings that remained standing and was used as a hospital.
Dover Walsh returned to England from Mauritius in 1897 to take up his appointment as
Canon and
Archdeacon of Canterbury and Assistant Bishop to Dr.
Frederick Temple, who had become
Archbishop of Canterbury in the previous year. In 1898 Walsh became Suffragan Bishop of Dover and in 1901 he was appointed chaplain to the
Lord Warden of the Cinque Ports. Walsh published the
Progress of the Church in London During the last 50 Years (1887); this was updated in 1908 and re-titled
Progress of the Church in London; from the Accession of Queen Victoria to 1908. In 1910 his ecclesiastical jubilee was celebrated in the Library of Canterbury Cathedral where Archbishop
Randall Davidson praised him for his 50 years of unremitting public work. He was presented with a
triptych watercolour picture of the Cathedral by the artist,
Alexander Wallace Rimington. Walsh was himself an amateur artist and Vice-President of the East Kent Art Society. In 1913 he officiated and led prayers at the opening ceremony of
The King's Hall,
Herne Bay, Kent. On 23 April 1914 he enthroned
John Watts Ditchfield as
Bishop of Chelmsford, amid an atmosphere of fear that militant
suffragettes might burn down
Chelmsford Cathedral. In the event, that did not happen. ==Memorial==