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#Robert Frampton# (1680-1690) was Dean in 1673. He refused to take the oath of allegiance and supremacy after the accession of William III., and was deprived of his office. #Edward Fowler# (1691-1714). #Richard Willis# (1714-1721) was translated to Salisbury in 1721, and thence to Winchester in 1725. #Joseph Wilcocks# (1721-1731). He was translated to Rochester, which see he held, together with the Deanery of Westminster. #Elias Sydall# (1731-1733). Translated from St. David's. He was also Dean of Canterbury. #Martin Benson# (1734-1752). #William Johnson# (1752-1759) was translated to Worcester in 1759. #William Warburton# (1759-1779). The well-known editor of Pope's works. #James Yorke# (1779-1781). When Dean of Lincoln was appointed Bishop of St. David's, then translated to Gloucester in 1779, and in 1781 from thence to Ely. #Samuel Hallifax# (1781-1789). In 1789 he was translated to St. Asaph's, a curious reversal of the usual order of episcopal promotion. #Richard Beadon# (1789-1802) was Master of Jesus College, Cambridge, in 1781, but resigned on being made Bishop of Gloucester. Was translated to Bath and Wells in 1802. #G. J. Huntingford# (1802-1815). He was translated to Hereford in 1815. #Henry Ryder# (1815-1824). Was Dean of Wells, previously Canon of Windsor. He was made Bishop of Gloucester in 1815 and was translated to Lichfield in 1824. #Christopher Bethell# (1824-1830). Formerly Dean of Chichester. Was Bishop of Exeter for one year, 1830-1831, and was then translated to Bangor. #James Henry Monk# (1830-1856). Dean of Peterborough in 1822. Consecrated Bishop of Gloucester 1830, and from 1836, when the sees of Gloucester and Bristol were united, was Bishop till his death in 1856. #Charles Baring# (1856-1861). Translated to Durham in 1861. [Illustration: MONUMENT TO MRS. MORLEY. _H. C. Oakden, Photo._] #William Thomson# (1861-1862). Became Archbishop of York in 1862. #Charles John Ellicott# (1863-). One of the ablest of modern divines. He was chairman for eleven years of the New Testament Revision Committee. He has published commentaries on various epistles; also works on "Scripture and its Interpretation," "Modern Scepticism"; also a commentary for English Readers on the Old and also on the New Testament. The sees of Gloucester and Bristol were separated in 1897, and the separation took effect as from January 1st, 1898. THE CITY OF GLOUCESTER
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