Background
Gordon Smith was born in Kalamazoo, Michigan.
Gordon Smith was born in Kalamazoo, Michigan.
He was educated at Kalamazoo College and General Theological Seminary, and was ordained a deacon and a priest in 1931.
He was bishop of the Diocese of Iowa from 1950-1971. He was the first Bishop of Iowa who was canonically resident in the state when he was elected bishop. Early life and Ministry
His wife’s name was Florence and they raised six children.
As a priest, he served Grace Church in Albion, Michigan, from 1931-1935.
Grace Church in Ponca City, Oklahoma, from 1935 to 1943. And Saint Paul"s Church in Des Moines, Iowa, from 1943–1950.
Bishop of Iowa
Smith was elected the sixth Bishop of Iowa in 1950 at a Special Convention. He was consecrated on April 20 of the same year at Saint Paul’s in Des Moines by Bishops Henry Knox Sherrill, William Blair Roberts and Lewis B. Whittemore.
He was the 498th Episcopal bishop consecrated in the United States.
He served the diocese during a period of growth, and strengthened it financially. In 1951, the Iowa Canterbury Association was organized and increased the emphasis of providing pastoral ministry to college students across the state. Two years later, the diocese celebrated its centennial and a short history was written by the diocesan historiographer Millington F. Carpenter.
Celebrations in Cedar Rapids where carried nationwide by Columbia Broadcasting System Radio and from Trinity Cathedral in Davenport by World (also Wonders) Of Chiropractic-television In the 1960s, Smith was one of several bishops to serve as a Trustee of Shimer College, then located near the Iowa border in far northwestern Illinois.
The Diocese of Iowa grew during the episcopate of Bishop Smith. Foreign the first time, the number of priests equaled the number of congregations.
The number of communicants grew from 10,908 in 1950 to 13,451 in 1960. The number of confirmations grew from 654 in 1950 to over 1,000 by 1960.
By 1972, there were 14,522 communicants and 21,618 baptized people in the diocese.
Later life and death
After his retirement from the office of bishop, Smith moved to Seattle, Washington where he became the interim Dean of Saint Mark’s Cathedral. Funeral service were celebrated at Saint Francis Church in Palos Verdes Estates and the Cathedral Church of Saint Paul in Des Moines. He was buried in Resthaven Cemetery in West Des Moines.