Durham St. Nicholas Parish
Reference: EP/Du.SN Catalogue Title: Durham St. Nicholas Parish Area: Catalogue Category: Ecclesiastical Parish Records Description: 02 Clergy
Covering Dates: 1698 - 2007
Catalogue Index
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- Durham St. Nicholas Parish
- Clergy (Ref: EP/Du.SN 2/)
- Confirmations (Ref: EP/Du.SN 2/section 01)
- Registers of services and preachers (Ref: EP/Du.SN 2/section 02)
- Preachers' books (Ref: EP/Du.SN 2/)
- Registers of services (Ref: EP/Du.SN 2/)
- Parish boundaries (Ref: EP/Du.SN 2/section 03)
- Benefice (Ref: EP/Du.SN 2/section 04)
- Benefice income (Ref: EP/Du.SN 2/section 05)
- Glebe (Ref: EP/Du.SN 2/section 06)
- Individual clergy (Ref: EP/Du.SN 2/section 07)
- Appointments (Ref: EP/Du.SN 2/)
- Licences to the curacy (Ref: EP/Du.SN 2/)
- Ministry (Ref: EP/Du.SN 2/)
- Sketches made by Rt. Rev. A.R. Tucker on his journeys in East Africa (Ref: EP/Du.SN 2/198-307)
- Subscribers to his project (Ref: EP/Du.SN 2/198)
- Set II : 'Journey to Uganda and back by Southern Route 1890 & 1891' (Ref: EP/Du.SN 2/199-226)
- Set III : Sketches on the way to Mochi and back,1892 (Ref: EP/Du.SN 2/227-248)
- Set IV 'Sketches in and about Zanzibar, Mombasa, Frere Town' (Ref: EP/Du.SN 2/249-261)
- Set V : 'Journey to Uganda by Northern Route 1892' (Ref: EP/Du.SN 2/262-272)
- Set VI (Ref: EP/Du.SN 2/273-291)
- Set VII (Ref: EP/Du.SN 2/292-297)
- Set VIII (Ref: EP/Du.SN 2/298-307)
- Photographs (Ref: EP/Du.SN 2/section 08)
- Parochial statistics (Ref: EP/Du.SN 2/section 09)
- Church membership (Ref: EP/Du.SN 2/section 10)
- Christian education (Ref: EP/Du.SN 2/section 11)
- Correspondence (Ref: EP/Du.SN 2/section 12)
- Vicars' discretionary fund (Ref: EP/Du.SN 2/section 13)
- Orders of service (Ref: EP/Du.SN 2/section 14)
- Miscellaneous (Ref: EP/Du.SN 2/section 15)
- Durham Deanery Chapter (Ref: EP/Du.SN 2/section 16)
Catalogue Contents
2/28-45
Ref: EP/Du.SN 2/282/1, 27, 308, 322, 335/1
Ref: EP/Du.SN 2/12/2, 25-26
Ref: EP/Du.SN 2/22/316-317
Ref: EP/Du.SN 2/3162/324
Ref: EP/Du.SN 2/3242/8, 46-112
Ref: EP/Du.SN 2/82/3-4, 115-197, 325-326
Ref: EP/Du.SN 2/32/11-14, 321, 328, 330-331, 501
Ref: EP/Du.SN 2/11323
Ref: EP/Du.SN 2/3235, 6-7, 15-23
Ref: EP/Du.SN 2/5Alfred Robert Tucker was born on 1 April 1849, the second son of Edward Tucker, artist, of Miln Close, Windermere. His early life was spent in the Lake District. He was educated as an artist and first exhibited at the Royal Academy in 1874. During his fifteen-year career as an artist, he was also engaged in Christian work and decided finally that he should devote his life to the latter.
He went up to Oxford in 1879, in 1881 became a member of Christ Church, and graduated in 1882. After being ordained in 1882, he became curate of St. Andrew the Less, Clifton, and in 1885, curate of St. Nicholas, Durham. In 1890, he wrote to the Church Missionary Society offering his services in the missionary field and was appointed bishop of Eastern Equatorial Africa. He was consecrated at St. Mary's, Lambeth, on 25 April 1890 and the same night left London for Zanzibar leaving behind his wife and son. He travelled to Uganda on foot taking the same route as the first bishop of Eastern Equatorial Africa, James Hannington, who was martyred on 21 October 1885 near Lake Victoria Nyanza.
In 1891, bishop Tucker returned to England. While here, he raised money to persuade the British East Africa Company to maintain its presence in Uganda, especially as the King of the Baganda, Mwanga, had recently entered into a treaty with the company. The Church Missionary Society's Gleaners' Union subscribed ยฃ8,000 at one meeting and ยฃ8,000 more was subscribed within a week. With this money, the company continued its activities for a further year; in 1892 Sir Gerald Herbert Portal was sent to report on the situation in Uganda. As a result of his recommendations, Uganda became a British Protectorate in 1894.
In 1899, the see of Eastern Equatorial Africa was divided. What later became known as Kenya Colony (1920) and what was then part of German East Africa, later Tanganyika Territory (1920), became the diocese of Mombasa and Tucker became bishop of Uganda.
Tucker was particularly concerned with the suppression of the slave trade: the native Ugandans traded slaves with the Arabs, who entered the country through Zanzibar, in return for guns, ammunition and cloth.
Bishop Tucker remarked that when he first went out in 1891 there were 200 Christians in Uganda; in 1901 there were over 30,000. In addition, there were then over 700 churches and 2000 native teachers. When he retired in 1911, there were over 100,000 Anglican Christians, hundreds of churches and schools and a regular synod of British and African clergy.
Bishop Tucker travelled, according to his own account, 15 to 16,000 miles in his diocese and had crossed Lake Victoria Nyanza half a dozen times. He brought back many pictures of the wonderful scenery of Uganda, some of which decorated his house in Durham. These included a picture of Entebbe, a view from the lower slopes of Recensori of a distant hill across the Semliki river, a view of the cathedral of Mengo, the King's Lake at Mengo and the Ripon Falls at the source of the Nile.
In 1908 he published two volumes of reminiscences, Eighteen Years in Uganda and East Africa, illustrated by his own sketches.
On his return to England, bishop Tucker was appointed a canon of Durham Cathedral. He died on 15 June 1914 while attending a conference on 'faith and order' at Westminster.
Bishop Tucker was buried in Durham Cathedral on 19 June 1914.
On 27 October 1893, Bishop Tucker left Freretown for England to be on hand when Sir Gerald Portal's report was to be discussed. By July 1894, he was back in Mombasa. The sketches following reflect his journey back from England and 'journey to Uganda'.
Ref: EP/Du.SN 2/2982/318-320
Ref: EP/Du.SN 2/3182/232
Ref: EP/Du.SN 2/3322/233-234
Ref: EP/Du.SN 2/3332/309-311
Ref: EP/Du.SN 2/3092/113-114
Ref: EP/Du.SN 2/113-1142/314
Ref: EP/Du.SN 2/3142/327
Ref: EP/Du.SN 2/3272/24, 312
Ref: EP/Du.SN 2/242/315
Ref: EP/Du.SN 2/315