Background
Nelson Wellesley Fogarty was born on 13 September 1871 in Canterbury, Kent, England, the son of John Evans Fogarty and his wife Mary Ann Mills.
Nelson Wellesley Fogarty was born on 13 September 1871 in Canterbury, Kent, England, the son of John Evans Fogarty and his wife Mary Ann Mills.
He was educated at The King"s School, Canterbury before entering Street Augustine"s Missionary College in 1890. (He was made an Honorary Fellow in 1924). He was made deacon by the Metropolitan bishop of Cape Town, William West Jones, on 21 September 1894, and licensed as assistant curate of Saint Saviour"s church, Claremont in Cape Town.
He moved to Oudtshoorn in 1895, being licensed as assistant curate of Saint Jude’s church, Oudtshoorn on 26 March 1895, and serving as acting chaplain to the Oudtshoorn Volunteer Rifles.
He was ordained priest by William West Jones in Saint George"s Cathedral, Cape Town, on 8 March 1896. In 1901 he took up an appointment in Basutoland (Lesotho), then part of the Diocese of Bloemfontein, as principal of Street Mary"s Training College, Thlotse Heights.
In 1904 he became Director of the Government Industrial School, Maseru. He served as a Canon of Bloemfontein Cathedral between 1912-1920.
Having served as a chaplain with the Union Defence Forces in German South West Africa during 1915, he was appointed as Archdeacon of Damaraland and Vicar-General for the Metropolitan of the Church of the Province of South Africa in South West Africa in 1916.
When the missionary Diocese of Damaraland was formed in 1924, he was chosen to be its first bishop, and consecrated as such in Saint George’s Cathedral, Cape Town on Quinquagesima Sunday, 2 March 1924 by the Archbishop of Cape Town, assisted by the Bishops of George, Bloemfontein, and Saint John's, Kaffraria, as well as the Coadjutor Bishop of Cape Town, and Bishop Gaul. During his episcopate Street George"s Cathedral in Windhoek was built. He died in Sea Point, Cape Town, on 8 April 1933.
Fogarty was "described as ‘a man of fine physique, more than average good looks and a forceful preacher’.
He was friendly and simple-hearted, yet of a forceful character, and often laboured single-handed in remote districts to further the work of the Church” (Boucher).