- Simeon Arthur Huston
Simeon Arthur Huston (
December 10 ,1876 –December 11 ,1963 ) was thebishop of theEpiscopal Diocese of Olympia from 1925 to 1947. During hisepiscopate bankersforeclosed on thecathedral church of thediocese , but he led a successful effort to pay off the indebtedness.Biography
Bishop Huston was born in
Cincinnati, Ohio , the younger son of Simeon Atchley Huston (1845 – 1883) and the former Matilda Bogen (1848 – 1927). His mother was a daughter of Peter Bogen, a prominent pork-packer in Cincinnati, and a younger sister of Louise Bogen, the wife of General Godfrey Weitzel. His father was a partner in the Bogen pork-packing firm; after his father's early death, his mother becamepostmaster of the Cincinnatisuburb of Hartwell.In 1900 Huston received a B.A. degree and membership in the
Phi Beta Kappa Society fromKenyon College inGambier, Ohio . Remaining in Gambier, he next attended Bexley Theological Seminary from which he graduated in 1903.Ordained a
deacon in 1903 and apriest in 1904, Huston served ascurate at Trinity Church inColumbus, Ohio , from 1903 to 1907 and at St. Paul's Cathedral inDetroit, Michigan , from 1907 to 1913.From 1913 to 1919 Huston was rector of St. Mark's Church in
Cheyenne, Wyoming , where he also served as president of the Wyoming State Board of Education from 1917 to 1919. In 1919 he was called to Christ Church inBaltimore, Maryland , and while in Baltimore, he studied atJohns Hopkins University in 1920 and 1921. Between 1921 and 1925 he was rector of St. Mark's Church inSan Antonio, Texas .On
February 3 ,1925 , Huston was electedbishop of Olympia and was consecrated onMay 15 . His consecrators were* The Right Reverend George H. Kinsolving, Bishop of Texas
* The Right Reverend William T. Capers, Bishop of West Texas
* The Right Reverend William Bertrand Stevens, Bishop of Los AngelesIn 1926 plans were drawn up for building St. Mark's Cathedral in Seattle, Washington, and construction commenced in 1928. However, the
Great Depression that began in 1929 caused pledges to dry up, and at the time of the cathedral's dedication onApril 25 ,1931 , the congregation still owed $250,000 to the Mercantile-Commerce Bank & Trust Co. of St. Louis, which had provided thefinancing . In May 1940 the bank foreclosed and began charging rent of $500 per month. A year later, the rent not having been paid, the bank took possession of the cathedral.In 1944 Bishop Huston traveled to St. Louis to negotiate with the
banker s. Between 1944 and 1947 fundraising, including a 1945 Civic Banquet, hosted by Emil Sick andDave Beck , that netted $85,000, led to all indebtedness being paid off. OnMarch 30 ,1947 ,Palm Sunday , themortgage was "burned" before thealtar ; the St. Louis bankers had contributed the last $5,000 of the debt. In June 1947 Bishop Huston retired to
Winslow on Bainbridge Island. He is buried at
Lake View Cemetery in Seattle.Bishop Huston was the recipient of two
honorary degree s, a D.D. degree fromKenyon College in 1925 and an LL.D. from the College of Puget Sound in 1931. TheHuston Camp and Conference Center inGold Bar, Washington was named for him.On
October 4 ,1911 , Bishop Huston had married Dorothea Josephine Brotherton (1885 – 1968) of Detroit. Her father was Wilber Brotherton (1858 – 1949), the manager of Detroit operations for the Jerome B. Rice Seed Company, and her mother was Belle Brotherton (1857 – 1934), a leader in thewomen's suffrage movement. Bishop Huston and his wife were the parents of four children, three of whom survived to adulthood.Their first child was Wilber B. Huston, who won the 1929 Edisonscholarship contest and went on to have a long career withNASA .External links
* [http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,795291,00.html "Cathedral for Rent," "Time", May 12, 1941]
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