Frederick Richards Wynne (19 June 1827 – 2 November 1896) [1] was the 6th [2] Bishop of Killaloe and Clonfert. [3]
Educated at Trinity College Dublin, he was ordained in 1850. [4] After a curacy in Carnteel he held incumbencies at St Mary, Kilkenny and St Mathias, Dublin. A Canon Residentiary at both of Dublin's cathedrals ( Christ Church and St Patrick's) [5] he was also Professor of Pastoral Theology at Trinity College Dublin. In 1893 he became the Bishop of Killaloe and Clonfert, [6] a post he held until his sudden death. [7] He had become a Doctor of Divinity (DD).[ citation needed]
His son Henry Vynne also became a priest, and was Vicar of the parish church in Yapton, Sussex. A daughter married another priest, the rev. W. H. Harper; while his third daughter Florence Anne Wynne married in 1902 the architect and architectural historian Philip Mainwaring Johnston. [8]
Frederick Richards Wynne (19 June 1827 – 2 November 1896) [1] was the 6th [2] Bishop of Killaloe and Clonfert. [3]
Educated at Trinity College Dublin, he was ordained in 1850. [4] After a curacy in Carnteel he held incumbencies at St Mary, Kilkenny and St Mathias, Dublin. A Canon Residentiary at both of Dublin's cathedrals ( Christ Church and St Patrick's) [5] he was also Professor of Pastoral Theology at Trinity College Dublin. In 1893 he became the Bishop of Killaloe and Clonfert, [6] a post he held until his sudden death. [7] He had become a Doctor of Divinity (DD).[ citation needed]
His son Henry Vynne also became a priest, and was Vicar of the parish church in Yapton, Sussex. A daughter married another priest, the rev. W. H. Harper; while his third daughter Florence Anne Wynne married in 1902 the architect and architectural historian Philip Mainwaring Johnston. [8]