- George Algernon West
infobox bishopbiog
name = The Rt. Rev. George Algernon West
religion =Church of England
See =Rangoon
Title =Lord Bishop of Rangoon
Period = 1935 – 1954
consecration =27 January 1935
Predecessor =Norman Henry Tubbs
Successor =Victor George Shearburn
post =
bishops =
ordination = 1920
date of birth =17 December 1893
place of birth =County Durham
date of death =25 May 1980
place of death =George Algernon West, MM (
17 December 1893 –25 May 1980 ) was a British Anglicanmissionary who spent many years inBurma , first as a missionary for theSociety for Propagation of the Gospel and then as theLord Bishop of Rangoon . In the latter position he served for nineteen years, and gradually became active involved with theMoral Re-Armament movement. After retiring from Burma in 1954 he became Assistant Bishop ofDurham .Cite newspaper The Times |articlename=The Right Rev George West |author= |section=Obituaries |day_of_week=Wednesday |date=28 May |page_number=16 |issue=60636 |column=G ]Early life and career
George Algernon West was born on
17 December 1893 , the son of the Reverend George West and Marion West. His father, also named George Algernon, despite being a staunch supporter ofKeir Hardie and of his Labour Party, sent the young George toSt. Bees Grammar School inCumberland , the only public school in Cumberland andWestmorland . There from 1907 to 1913, West "gained high repute" as abatsman , and playedcricket and football for the county side. He was part of the 1911-1912 XV which played eleven, won ten and lost only one match.cite book | last=Special Committee| title=The Story of St. Bees.| pages=68 ] Also in that team was John L.I. Hawkesworth, who later became a corps commander in Eighth Army during theSecond World War . Out of the twelve men who comprised the 1908 Cricket XI, seven would later give their lives in theGreat War . After finishing at St. Bees he went toLincoln College, Oxford as a historyexhibitioner , where he studied until the outbreak of theFirst World War . Interrupting his studies, he joined Sir Ralph Paget'sRed Cross relief unit inSerbia , and was present when theSerbian Army was forced to retreat intoAlbania .Afterwards he returned home to Britain and joined the
Royal Garrison Artillery (theBritish Army 's heavy guns). Promoted fromBombardier toCorporal , in 1918 he was awarded theMilitary Medal for service in France. Towards the end of the war, West was sent back to England to take an Officer's Training Course. He was commissioned, but the Armistice came into force before he could return to the front. Having been demobilised, he returned to Oxford to continue his studies, and decided to read for Orders in 1919. DuringAdvent the following year he was ordained as a Priest of theChurch of England on19 December by theBishop of Durham ,Hensley Henson . [Cite newspaper The Times |articlename=Advent Ordinations |author= |section=Official Appointments and Notices |day_of_week=Monday |date=20 December |page_number=19 |issue=42958 |column=D ]In 1921 West went to
Burma , then part of theIndian Empire , to join theSociety for the Propagation of the Gospel in Foreign Parts (SPG) at its St. Peter's Mission atToungoo in the south. He spent five years with theKaren people on the UpperSalween River . His experiences in Burma redefined the rôle of missionaries, and made him a popular figure with the Karenni. His work became known through his publication of a quarterly newsletter, "Mountain Men", and later through his writing of three books on the Karenni; "Jungle Folk" (1933), "Jungle Friends" (1937) and "Jungle Witnesses" (1948). The work he did in Burma, latterly at Kappali, recommended him to the position of Bishop of Rangoon. On5 April 1923 he married Helen Margaret Scott-Moncrieff, the daughter of a senior army officer. Unfortunately, two years later she died.Bishop of Rangoon
On
4 December 1934 the Right Reverend Norman Henry Tubbs received news that he was to be superseded by West as Bishop of Rangoon. [Cite newspaper The Times |articlename=Ecclesiastical News |author= |section=Official Appointments and Notices |day_of_week=Tuesday |date=4 December |page_number=16 |issue=46928 |column=D ] He was elected Bishop of Rangoon after the Church of England in India had been given autonomy, and was now the Church of India, Burma and Ceylon, and was therefore answerable to the MetropolitanBishop of Calcutta who was technically the head of the Church of Burma. While Bishop he travelled all over his diocese, as he had while a missionary, and continued to pay especial attention to the affairs of the Karenni.Upon reaching Rangoon to assume the bishopric, he wrote;
He continued to voyage back and forth to England, being particularly involved with the Rangoon Diocesan Association. Seemingly unaffected by the outbreak of the Second World War, while travelling on
9 June 1941 West was involved in a serious motor car accident which left him unconscious for three weeks. [Cite newspaper The Times |articlename=Ecclesiastical News |author= |section=Official Appointments and Notices |day_of_week=Friday |date=18 July |page_number=7 |issue=48981 |column=C ] Having recovered, he left for India to recuperate [Cite newspaper The Times |articlename=Ecclesiastical News |author= |section=Official Appointments and Notices |day_of_week=Thursday |date=14 August |page_number=7 |issue=49004 |column=C ] and was therefore absent when the Japanese declared war and invaded Burma.With his Diocese overrun by the
Imperial Japanese Army , West went to theUnited States . There, he became a leading member ofthe Oxford Group , a movement devoted to an "ideology of democracy", which later became theMoral Re-Armament (MRA) movement. For a two-month period in 1942 West became the Bishop of theEpiscopal Diocese of Atlanta . While in America he wrote a book called "The World that Works" (1944) devoted to the MRA ideals. While in the United States, he married Grace Hay inTryon, North Carolina in April 1943. Soon after, fully recovered from his injuries, he returned toIndia to do what he could. [Cite newspaper The Times |articlename=Ecclesiastical News |author= |section=Official Appointments and Notices |day_of_week=Tuesday |date=7 September |page_number=7 |issue=49644 |column=C ] With the eventual defeat of the Japanese in Burma, West was one of the first British civilian allowed back into the country, flying in to Rangoon on9 July 1945 to find the city in a parlous state and discovered that hisCathedral , St. Paul's, had been fitted out as a distillery by the Japanese occupiers.After the war
West devoted his energy to help rebuild his diocese. While working with the MRA he had come into contact with several Buddhists who would assist his understanding of dealing with them in Burma, helping to lower barriers which existed between them and Christians. Under his leadership the hosts of churches which had been destroyed or damaged were rebuilt or repaired. In June 1948 he underwent an operation for
throat cancer which affected his speaking. While recovering Karenni separatists marched on Rangoon, reaching a point only nine miles away from the city in January, 1949. It was partly thanks to the efforts of West, whom the Karenni respected and admired, that after a siege of one hundred and twelve days the Karen withdrew. [cite book |title=A Land Without Evil |last=Rogers |pages=p.99 ] West resigned the bishopric of Rangoon in 1949 but later withdrew his resignation, [Cite newspaper The Times |articlename=Ecclesiastical News |author= |section=Official Appointments and Notices |day_of_week=Monday |date=14 February |page_number=6 |issue=51305 |column=C ] and returned to Britain in time for that year's annual meeting of the Rangoon Diocesan Association.He continued in his position as Bishop of Rangoon for another five years, commuting between England and Burma, attending to the needs of the Burmese under his care and also tended to the many services of remembrance to remember the men of XIV Army in the
Burma campaign . In 1954 he resigned as Bishop, and had no active rôle with the church until 1965, when he became for three years the AssistantBishop of Durham . Having finally retired at the age of 74, he retired toDurham , where he died on25 May 1980 A brother,
Lieutenant-Colonel Maurice Lethbridge West, was killed on8 June 1944 while commanding the 1/8th Battalion of theLancashire Fusiliers at theBattle of Kohima . [cite web |url=http://www.lancs-fusiliers.co.uk/LFs%20killed%20in%20Burma/lfs%20killed%20in%20Burma.htm |title=A list of Lancashire Fusilier Casualties |accessdate=2008-03-08 |format=HTML |work= ]Published works
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