The Rt Revd Folliott Herbert Walker Cornewall |
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Bishop of Worcester | |
Folliott Herbert Walker Cornewall by William Owen
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Province | Canterbury |
Diocese | Worcester |
Appointed | 1808 |
Predecessor | Richard Hurd |
Successor | Robert James Carr |
Orders | |
Ordination | 1777 |
Personal details | |
Born | 1754 |
Died | 5 September 1831 |
Nationality | English |
Denomination | Church of England |
Parents | Frederick Cornewall and Mary Cornewall (née Herbert) |
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Folliott Herbert Walker Cornewall (1754–1831) was an English bishop of three sees.
He was the second surviving son of Frederick Cornewall of Delbury (1706–1788), captain in the royal navy, by Mary, daughter of Francis Herbert of Ludlow, first cousin of the first Earl of Powis. Charles Cornewall was his granduncle. His brother Frederick (d. 1783) was M.P. for Ludlow in 1780. He was educated for the church, in which, having studied at Eton College and graduated B.A. at St. John's College, Cambridge, in 1777, he took orders.
He proceeded M.A. in 1780, and the same year, through the interest of his second cousin, Charles Wolfran Cornwall, speaker of the House of Commons, he obtained the post of Speaker's Chaplain. He was preferred to a canonry at Windsor in 1784 and appointed master of Wigston's Hospital, Leicester, in 1790, dean of Canterbury in 1792, bishop of Bristol in 1797. He exchanged this see to become bishop of Hereford in 1803, and in 1808 he was translated to be bishop of Worcester.
He died on 5 September 1831 at Hartlebury, and was buried in the family vault at Delbury, Shropshire. Cornewall married Anne, eldest daughter of George Hamilton, canon of Windsor, by whom he had issue two sons and one daughter. He published 'A Sermon preached before the House of Commons on 30 Jan. 1782,' and also 'A Fast Sermon preached before the House of Lords in 1798.'