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Keith Lynn Ackerman SSC (born August 3, 1946) is an American Anglican bishop. Consecrated as a bishop for the Diocese of Quincy in the Episcopal Church, he is currently bishop vicar of the Anglican Diocese of Quincy of the Anglican Church in North America and assisting bishop of the Diocese of Fort Worth.
Keith L. Ackerman was bishop from June 24, 1994 until his resignation on November 1, 2008. He is a member of Forward in Faith , the Society of King Charles the Martyr , the Confraternity of the Blessed Sacrament , the Guild of All Souls , the Society of Mary , and the Society of Our Lady of Walsingham.
On June 12, 2009, Morales was elected bishop of the ACNA Diocese of Quincy in succession to Keith Ackerman. For an election, 22 votes were needed in the clergy order and 33 in the lay order. On the first ballot Morales received 18 clergy votes and 48 lay votes. On the second ballot he received 23 clergy votes and 51 lay votes. [3]
Keith Ackerman: 1994 VIII Quincy: Retired 2010. Richard W. Lipka: 1995 CEC – MDAS (suffr.) - II All Saints: Charles Dorrington: 1996 I RE Western Canada and Alaska – RE Mid-America (asst.) Daniel Morse: 1996 I RE Central States: Retired. Robert Duncan: 1996 VII Pittsburgh: Archbishop, Anglican Church in North America, 2009–2014. Retired ...
On November 7, 2008, the 131st Synod of the Diocese of Quincy voted to leave the Episcopal Church and instead join the Anglican Province of the Southern Cone. As Keith Ackerman's resignation as bishop took effect on November 1, Edward den Blaauwen of Moline, Illinois was appointed to preside over the synod. [2]
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Each diocese has a bishop and sometimes suffragan or assistant bishops. ... Keith Ackerman. 1983 56 8649 4273 ... Quincy, Illinois: Juan Alberto Morales: 1877 32
Tom Bonomi, of Quincy, knew immediately what the mysterious quarry ruins were: a cabin built in the 1930s and a post-war social club in the 1950s.