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Charles McIlvaine

Charles McIlvaine (January 18, 1799 – March 13, 1873) was an American preacher and Episcopal bishop whose dynamic ministry shaped the evangelical wing of the church in the 19th century, notably as Bishop of Ohio. Born in Burlington, New Jersey, to Joseph McIlvaine, a Scottish-descended U.S. Senator, and Maria Reed, he was raised in a prominent family with ties to Revolutionary War figures. Converted during a revival at the College of New Jersey (Princeton) in 1814, he graduated in 1816 and studied theology at Princeton Seminary (1817–1820), ordained as a deacon in 1820 and priest in 1823. His preaching career began at Christ Church in Georgetown, Washington, D.C., where he served from 1820 to 1825, also acting as Chaplain of the U.S. Senate in 1822. McIlvaine’s ministry expanded as he became Professor of Ethics at West Point (1825–1827), influencing cadets like Robert E. Lee, and later rector of St. Ann’s Church in Brooklyn (1827–1832). Elected Bishop of Ohio in 1832, he served until his death, overseeing the diocese and Kenyon College (1832–1840), where he championed evangelical theology against high-church trends, notably in his book Oxford Divinity (1841). A key diplomat during the Civil War, he persuaded Britain against Confederate recognition in 1862 under Lincoln’s directive. Married to Emily Coxe in 1822, with whom he had six children, he died at 74 in Florence, Italy, uniquely honored with a lying-in-state at Westminster Abbey before burial in Ohio, leaving a legacy of fervent preaching and ecclesiastical leadership.