- Simon Wilton Phipps
Simon Wilton Phipps MC (1921-2001) was
Bishop of Lincoln between 1974 and 1987.He was born on 6 July 1921, the son of Captain William Duncan Phipps R.N. and Pamela Ross, and was educated at Eton and
Trinity College, Cambridge .In 1940, he was commissioned into the
Coldstream Guards . He fought both in North Africa, where he was wounded, and in Italy. On 19 April 1945, in the Allied advance to theRiver Po , he was again wounded during a reconnaissance mission and was subsequently awarded theMilitary Cross .Following the war, having read History at Trinity, he studied for the priesthood at
Westcott House . A talented writer of lyrics, he was President ofFootlights in 1949.In 1953, after a short spell as a curate in
Huddersfield , Phipps was appointed Chaplain at Trinity. That appointment was followed by ten years at Coventry as an Industrial Chaplain, during which time he lived in a small council flat on a new housing estate. The modesty of his surroundings did not prevent him from entertaining his long-time friend, Princess Margaret, "to the great interest of his neighbours" [Edward H. Patey, "Cathedral and Industry", in "Simon Phipps: A Portrait"] . His time in Coventry is generally thought to have formed one of the personally happiest periods of his ministry.In 1968 Phipps was appointed as Suffragan
Bishop of Horsham , before being translated to Lincoln in 1974, where he served as Bishop until 1987.Phipps died in January 2001. In 1973, he had married Mary Welch, who died in 2000. They had no children. On his death, "
The Times " recorded that Phipps had combined gentleness, tranquility and sweetness of character with deep psychological insight and considerable strength of purpose.ources
* [http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2001/02/07/db02.xml | Daily Telegraph obituary]
* Caroline Gilmour and Patricia Wyndham, "Simon Phipps: A Portrait" (Continuum, 2003)
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