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BISHOP
JAMES DEWOLF PERRY PAPERS
1835-1961
MSG# 29
BIOGRAPHICAL NOTE
James
DeWolf Perry was born on 3 October 1871 in Germantown, Pennsylvania, the
second son and third child of five of the Rev. James DeWolf Perry II,
rector of Calvary Church in that city. His distinguished family hailed
originally from Rhode Island, where his ancestors had founded the town of
Bristol; among his better known antecedents were his
great-great-uncles the Commodores Oliver Hazard Perry, who
gained fame on Lake Erie during the War of 1812, and Matthew Galbraith
Perry, who opened Japan to U.S. trade in 1854, as well as a U.S. Senator
from Rhode Island, 1821-1825, the Hon. James DeWolf.
Perry
aimed for the ministry from his earliest years. Following his graduation
from the Germantown Academy in 1887, he earned his A.B. from the
University of Pennsylvania in 1891 and another from Harvard in 1892. He
then took his bachelor's of divinity from the Episcopal Theological
Seminary in Cambridge in 1895. In that year he was ordained a deacon by
Bishop William Lawrence and in 1896 he was ordained a priest. From 1895
to 1897 he served as curate at Christ Church, Springfield, Massachusetts,
whence he received a call to Christ Church, Fitchburg. In 1904 he removed
to St. Paul's in New Haven, an important parish closely associated with
Yale University. In that post he found notable opportunities for
displaying his formidable administrative talents. In 1908 he married Miss Edith Dean Weir, a respected artist who was the daughter of the
director of the Yale Art School. Mrs. Perry accompanied the Bishop on many
of his travels and survived him by eight years. She died 1955. Together
they had three children: James DeWolf Perry IV, clergyman, and John,
medical doctor, and a daughter Beatrice who died in her childhood.
On
21 September 1910, Perry was elected Episcopal Bishop of Rhode Island,
perhaps at 39 the youngest bishop in the U.S. until that time. He was
consecrated on 6 January 1911 and held that post until his retirement in
1946. Although throughout his life he remained an indefatigable worker for
international peace, he was not a pacifist. He participated in the
military training efforts of 1916, as earlier he had been chaplain of the
6th Massachusetts Infantry from 1898 to 1904. During World War I, he
served as chief of Red Cross chaplains in France, all denominations, from
August 1918 to February 1919, at the assimilated rank of major, where he
was known to the press as "the Bishop in Boots" and where he was
later awarded the French Legion of Honor in 1934.
The
early 1920s were occupied chiefly by diocesan concerns, but one of them in
particular brought him into the national arena. The arrest in 1919 of
Newport naval chaplain Samuel Neal Kent, on charges of immorality stemming
from homosexual solicitation among the sailors, was attended by gross
misconduct on the parts of the investigating officers. Following Kent's
acquittal in Newport, Perry led a movement to extract an apology from
Secretary of the Navy Josephus Daniels. On Navy orders, the Justice
Department declared Kent a fugitive, despite Perry's guarantee of his
availability, and tried him again in Federal Court in Providence, where he
was once again acquitted. Indignation swelled, and Perry, with the aid of
Bishop Rhinelander and many others, most notably John Rathom of the
Providence Journal, sought official redress. When a Court of Inquiry
selected by the Navy was convened in New York, the Bishop fought hard in
correspondence, in court, and in the press against both Daniels and the
Assistant Secretary of the Navy Franklin D. Roosevelt. His efforts won a
Senate investigation into the Navy's methods of obtaining evidence, which
firmly censured Roosevelt's practice of using a flying squad of "blue
shirts,'' young sailors to whom he permitted far too many liberties in
their procedures for gathering evidence. The Kent case and related naval
prosecutions created an enormous scandal at the time.
Perry's
lifelong commitment to the ideal of Christian unity brought him to the
Universal Conference on Life and Work in Stockholm in 1925 and to the
World Conference on Faith and Order in Lausanne, 1927, where he was
chairman of the executive committee. He had also attended the Lambeth
Conference in 1920 and had been serving on the Board of Missions and in
the Departments of Religious Education and Christian Social Service in the
Episcopal National Council since its formation in 1919. He had an interest
in, but self-admittedly little knowledge of, the subject of church
music. He served on the Commission on Church Music. He also
served on the
governing commission of the Chaplain Corps to the armed forces, acting as sponsor for the establishment of the Church Army in the United
States.
On
26 March 1930, at the age of 58 Bishop Perry was chosen by the House of Bishops to be
Presiding Bishop of the church. His
election seems to have been something of a compromise, but one which was
satisfactory to everyone. In the sometimes spirited disputes between the
high and low church clergymen, and between the traditional and
"modernist" parties within the church, Perry was perceived as a
moderate who, by his calm intelligence and universal good will, seemed to
transcend all of the party lines. Evidently, with the failure of any
faction to elect their own spokesmen, Perry was chosen as the man most
likely to heal the wounds caused by the disputes and controversies of the
preceding decade. He was indeed, in most matters, unfailingly conciliatory
and quite above destructive controversy, although at the same time he
inclined personally towards the conservative and Anglo-Catholic
persuasions in matters of vestments, ceremony, and doctrine. Apparently he
believed quite humanely that wherever the essentials of the Christian
creed were subscribed to, different churches and denominations might
readily work in unqualified concert, without any of them having therefore
to sacrifice their individual preferences in the forms of worship and
other "matters of indifference." Accordingly, it must have given
him great pleasure, in light of his strong will towards American
unification with the historic episcopacy of the Church of England, to be
recognized as the sixth‑ranking prelate in the Anglican Communion at
the Lambeth Conference of 1930. Whilst there, he was chosen to deliver the
farewell sermon in Westminster Abbey, where he pled eloquently for church
unity, and to lay the cornerstone of St. Andrew's Cathedral in Aberdeen,
both in August 1930.
One
controversy into which the Bishop was unwillingly drawn grew out of the
Pope's encyclical. Pius XI had issued an invitation to all the Protestant
denominations to re-enter the Roman fold, where all would be
forgiven. On 10 January 1932, preaching in St. John the Divine in New York
City, Perry replied to it in very gracious and kindly terms, but the
substance of his sermon was to refuse the papal invitation. Speaking for
his whole communion, he argued that the Episcopal Church could recognize
only Christ as infallible head of the Catholic church, and that the Pope's
claim to that role would be an insurmountable obstacle to any real union.
In the course of his remarks, he quoted from recognized Protestant
translations of the Fathers several passages to the effect that the Bishop
of Rome was but a man as other men. Predictably, the Catholic press
responded, usually courteously, sometimes scurrilously and mockingly, and
Perry was many times accused by correspondents who were using the Roman
Catholic translations of the same patristic writers, of having
deliberately distorted his quotations in order to subvert truth and sow
error. Wisely and characteristically, Perry never replied to them, but the
presence in his papers of many press clippings of their complaints
testified to his concern.
Bishop
Perry was particularly occupied with the missionary interests of the
church, especially with their financial plight during the Depression. He
had reorganized the National Council to the effect of considerable
savings, but he found himself very much exercised by the dwindling capital
of the mission effort, which forced the abandonment of many mission
stations. For much of his career he took care to foster and encourage the
efforts of church organization among blacks and the new immigrant
minorities, and native peoples. In 1931 he made a journey to South Dakota to convene the
Niobara Meeting among the Indians. The plight of the dispossessed
Assyrians seems also to have been a constant concern to him. Following the
widely circulated report of the Laymen's Foreign Mission Inquiry, which
severely censured the missionary efforts of many churches, Bishop and Mrs.
Perry made a personal journey to the orient in order to investigate the
allegations among the mission stations of his own church. They traveled
for five months throughout the Hawaiian Islands, the Philippines, China,
and Japan, and upon their return Perry pronounced a firm condemnation of
the inaccuracies of the Inquiry's report, at least in respect of the
Episcopal missions. While in Japan, the Bishop met the Emperor Hirohito in
Tokyo and seems to have been won by his reception by the Japanese church;
for several years afterwards he defended publicly the innocent good
intentions and irenism of Japan against "malicious rumors,"
despite the obvious aggressions of the Japanese in Manchuria and China at
the time.
The
Bishop made several other journeys of importance. He visited
England again in 1936 and in 1942, the second time for the consecration as
Archbishop of Canterbury of his friend William Temple. He attended further
sessions of the Universal Conference on Life and Work in Oxford and the
World Conference on Faith and order in Edinburgh, both in 1937, and in May
1938 he sat with the World Council of Churches in Utrecht. In his capacity
as overseer of the American Episcopal churches on the continent, he
returned from a European tour in February 1939 with the opinion that,
given the religious loyalty of the mass of Europeans generally, a new war
was most unlikely to occur. Meanwhile, he had political interests as well;
his position in December 1937 on a committee to draft a new statement of
principles for the Republican Party seems, however, to have been an
uncharacteristically active role in politics.
Perry
took an important part in the deliberations and judgments of all of the
triennial General Conventions of the church during his tenure. In
addition, he was personally affected by them as well. At the convention of
1931, having served already for a little over a year, he was
re-elected to a six year term as Presiding Bishop. At the
Conventions of 1934 and 1937 he organized and effected much
important business, especially concerning birth control, the marriage and
divorce canons, and the status and role of the Presiding Bishop, and
indeed in recognition of that fact he was to be seen on the cover of Time
magazine's issue of 15 October 1934; but at the latter Convention he seems
to have requested that he not be renominated for the principal position.
He was drafted into nomination, however, and acquiesced, but then,
probably because of widespread doubts about Perry's health, Bishop Tucker
was elected to succeed him. Perry's health did indeed seem to decline
thereafter; in October 1946, only ten months after the celebration of the
thirty-fifth anniversary of his consecration, Bishop Perry retired.
On 20 March 1947, while he and Mrs. Perry were vacationing in Summerville,
South Carolina, the Bishop suffered a heart attack and died at the age of
75. As in his lifetime he had received a large number of awards and
honorary doctorate degrees, so in 1956 a memorial cross was dedicated to
his memory in the Washington Cathedral in Washington, D.C.
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