Home / Full timeline / Barbara Harris, a fifty-eight-year-old Black American, elected as the first female bishop of the Episcopal Church.
Barbara Harris, a fifty-eight-year-old Black American, elected as the first female bishop of the Episcopal Church.
1989 (Jan 24)
The Episcopal Church approved the election of Barbara Harris, a fifty-eight-year-old Black American, as the first female bishop in the "two-thousand-year tradition of apostolic succession, a line of bishops dating from Jesus and his apostles.” Harris was assigned to the post of suffragan, or assistant bishop, in the Diocese of Boston. Harris was first ordained an Episcopal priest in 1980, four years after the Church first approved women as priests. She had studied theology through correspondence courses and with tutors. Prior to her elevation to the bishopric, Harris was also the head of the Episcopal Church Publishing Company.
References:
- • Hornsby, Alton. Chronology of African-American History: Significant Events and People from 1619 to the Present. Detroit: Gale Research, 1995.