b. 1832-11-04
d. 1924-02-19
Garrett was born
4 November, 1832, in Ballymot, Ireland, and graduated with a B.A. from the Divinity School at Trinity
College, Dublin, in
1855. Garrett and Letitia Hope, his wife, moved to England in
1855, where he was ordained as an Anglican deacon and then as a priest in
1859. Recruited by
George Hills to engage with missionary work amongst settlers in
British Columbia, he traveled to
Victoria in
1860 expecting a clergy position to be open for him but finding it already filled.
Instead, Garrett engaged in what
was perhaps the first sustained Protestant schooling initiative for Indigenous peoples
in
Victoria, and became involved with the “Indian Improvement Committee,” which was committed
to the
better[ing] the conditions on the Lekwungen reserve across the harbour from Fort Victoria.
Garrett, and his close associate on the committee,
William Duncan, occasionally came in conflict with the white settlers of
Victoria who—with pessimistic views regarding the future of Indigenous populations—saw the
“philanthropic” efforts of the missionaries as “a waste of time and effort.” During
Victoria's devastating smallpox epidemic in
1862, Garrett and a “pox-marked” assistant established a hospital for Indigenous people
who contracted the disease; however, Garrett remarked that he and his assistant
were little more than grave diggers, placing beneath the sod an average of four a
day.
Later in the
1860s, Garrett engaged in missionary activities in newly-settled territories and growing
communities around
Cowichan Bay,
Williams Creek, and
Nanaimo. At the very end of the
1860s, Garrett immigrated to
San Francisco, California, then to Omaha, Nebraska, and finally to Dallas, Texas, where he was
consecrated as the First Missionary Bishop of Northern Texas in
1874. From
17 April, 1923, until his death on
19 February, 1924, Garrett was the 14th Presiding Bishop of the Episcopal Church in the United States.
- 1. Garrett, Alexander Charles, An Episcopal Dictionary of the Church.
- 2. Fonds - Alexander Garret Fonds, Memory BC.
- 3. Alexander Charles Garrett, Victoria Harbour History.
- 4. Sean Carleton, Colonialism, Capitalism, and the Rise of State Schooling in British Columbia, 1849–1900, PhD diss., Trent University, 2016, 165, 135.
- 5. Robin Fisher,Contact and Conflict: Indian-European Relations in British Columbia, 1774-1890, (Vancouver: UBC Press, 1992), 142–143. To the missionaries, so Fisher argues, Indigenous peoples very definitely had a future; although it was seen in terms of them ceasing to be
‘Indians’ and closely imitating the whites.
- 6. Alexander Charles Garrett, Reminiscences 1832-1924, unpublished manuscript (British Columbia Archives), 26. Quoted in Elaine
Moore et al., A. C. Garrett, Missionaries and Misery, The Spirit of Pestilence.
- 7. Fonds - Alexander Garret Fonds, Memory BC.
- 8. Garrett, Alexander Charles, An Episcopal Dictionary of the Church.
- 9. Ibid.