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Hoare, Augustus Reginald
Persona · 1871-1920

English by birth, the Rev. Augustus Reginald Hoare went to Alaska during the Klondike gold rush of 1898. He began working as a missionary for the Rt. Rev. Peter T. Rowe in 1902 and was ordained to the diaconate. In 1903 he was ordained to the priesthood and, by 1904, was simultaneously directing four missionary stations in Alaska due to a shortage of missionaries in the area. He assumed rectorship of the Point Hope Mission in Alaska in 1907, but left ten years later as a result of illness. After a period of convalescence in California, he returned in 1920 only to be murdered by the man whom he had taken on as an assistant.

Jones, Everett Holland
Persona · 1902-1995

Everett Holland Jones was born on June 9, 1902, in San Antonio, Texas. After studying journalism at the University of Texas, from where he received a BA in 1922, Jones pursued studies in theology at Virginia Theological Seminary (VTS). In 1926, he was ordained a deacon at the same church in which he had been baptized and confirmed, St. Mark’s Church in San Antonio. He would become the rector there in 1938 and serve until his ordination as Bishop of West Texas in 1943.

Deeply committed to the well-being of his native town of San Antonio, Jones established the first chapter of Alcoholics Anonymous in San Antonio in 1945. In 1967, he and others founded San Antonio’s Ecumenical Center for Religion and Health (now called the Ecumenical Center for Education, Counseling, and Health). Jones described the Center’s purpose: “It is to bring together the best resources of religion (in all its varied expressions) and of medical science (including psychology and psychiatry) for the healing and fullest development of persons. The goal is what the Bible calls wholeness of life. We seek to help the forces of religion and medicine to understand each other and to work together as a team.” Jones’ vision became a successful community resource that has since expanded and serves the community in a variety of ways through education, counseling, health, and pastoral services.

A writer from his college days, Jones wrote a weekly newspaper column that ran in many Texas newspapers from 1959 to 1984. The column, A Bishop Looks at Life, which he also called the “sermonettes,” were his “...effort to look on life around [him] and comment upon it from a Christian perspective.” Sixty of these sermonettes were published in 1967 by the Anglican Press in a book also entitled A Bishop Looks at Life. Jones authored two other books as well: Getting Life Into Perspective (1983) and Finding God (1943).

Jones retired from the church in 1969, although he remained active as a speaker and writer as well as continuing to work with Alcoholics Anonymous and the Ecumenical Center. He died on November 18, 1995 at the age of 93.

Fitts, Frederic Whitney
Persona · 1872-1945

Frederic Whitney Fitts was born in Lowell, Massachusetts on April 11, 1872. He graduated in 1893 from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and earned his B.D. from the Episcopal Theological School, Cambridge, in 1901 before completing his education with a degree from Harvard University in 1902.

From 1902 to 1907, Fitts served as an associate priest of St. Stephen’s Church, Boston, and as an associate rector of St. John’s Church in nearby Roxbury. Both parishes, which served primarily poor and minority communities, were among the leading Anglo-Catholic congregations of the otherwise low and broad churches in the Diocese of Massachusetts at that time.

He became rector of St. John’s Church in 1908, a position he held for 37 years, where he was known for his instructional classes. He mentored Massey Shepherd, who was an assistant at St. John’s Church in the early 1940s. Fitts was a lecturer of interest on Church symbolism; well-known for using the Sarum ritual and scheme of liturgical colors, which was rarely practiced in the United States; and he maintained a close relationship with the Order of St. John the Evangelist in Cambridge.

Frederic Fitts died in 1945.