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The Episcopal Diocese of Upper South Carolina (EDUSC) is a diocese in the Episcopal Church. Originally part of the Diocese of South Carolina, it became independent on October 10–11, 1922 following nearly two years of planning. [1] The see city is Columbia. Its cathedral is Trinity Cathedral.
The Episcopal Diocese of South Carolina (EDOSC), known as The Episcopal Church in South Carolina from January 2013 until September 2019, is a diocese of the Episcopal Church. The diocese covers an area of 24 counties in the eastern part of the U.S. state of South Carolina .
In the twentieth and twenty-first centuries, churches and dioceses began to disaffiliate from the Episcopal Church over matters of Christian doctrine, morality, and polity. [11] [12] In 2012 the Episcopal Diocese of South Carolina disaffiliated from the Episcopal Church. [13] [14] Five years later it aligned with the Anglican Church in North ...
The Episcopal Diocese of South Carolina was established in 1785 as one of the nine original dioceses of the Episcopal Church in the United States. The diocese originally covered the entire state of South Carolina, but the western part of the state became the Episcopal Diocese of Upper South Carolina in 1922.
South Carolina (Coadjutor), I Upper South Carolina: 316 William T. Manning: 84 148 171: 1921 X New York [N 12] 317 Fred Ingley: 84 286 128: 1921 IV Colorado: 318 Theophilus Momolu Gardiner: 84 170 244: 1921 Missionary, Liberia [N 11] (Suffragan) 319 John Dominique LaMothe: 84 243 233: 1921 Missionary, Honolulu (Hawaii) 320 John C. Ward: 84 128 ...
William Andrew Waldo (born July 17, 1953) is a retired bishop in the Episcopal Church. He served as the eighth bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Upper South Carolina from 2010 to 2022. Biography
On October 1, 1994, Henderson was elected on the sixth ballot as the seventh Bishop of Upper South Carolina, during a diocesan convention. He was consecrated on February 3, 1995, by presiding Bishop Edmond L. Browning, in Trinity Cathedral. [3] He addressed his first diocesan convention as bishop of the diocese that same day. [4]
The Episcopal Church (TEC) is governed by a General Convention and consists of 96 dioceses in the United States proper, plus ten dioceses in other countries or outlying U.S. territories, the diocese of Convocation of Episcopal Churches in Europe, and a diocese for Armed Services and Federal Ministries, for a total of 108 dioceses.