William Tyler was an American prelate of the Roman Catholic Church who served as the first Bishop of Hartford (1844–1849).
Background
One of eight children, Tyler was born in Derby, Vermont; his father was a farmer, and his mother was the sister of Daniel Barber and aunt of Virgil Horace Barber, both Protestant ministers who converted to the Catholic Church. The family moved to Claremont, New Hampshire, when William was a child.
Education
He completed his classical course at the academy founded by his cousin Virgil in Claremont, and became a member of the household of Bishop Benedict Joseph Fenwick, S. J. , in 1826 at Boston, Massachusetts, where he studied theology.
Career
Tyler was ordained to the priesthood by Fenwick on June 3, 1829. He then served as a curate at Holy Cross Cathedral and did missionary work in Aroostook County, Maine, before becoming vicar general of the Diocese of Boston.
On November 28, 1843, Tyler was appointed the first Bishop of the newly erected Diocese of Hartford by Pope Gregory XVI. He received his episcopal consecration on March 17, 1844 from Bishop Fenwick, with Bishops Richard Vincent Whelan and Andrew Byrne serving as co-consecrators, at Assumption Cathedral in Baltimore, Maryland. Upon Tyler's arrival in Hartford the following April, the diocese included the entire states of Connecticut and Rhode Island, containing nearly 10, 000 Catholics. Since there were only 600 Catholics in Hartford, he soon moved his residence to Providence, which had 2, 000 Catholics. He designated Sts. Peter and Paul Church as his cathedral.
Tyler recruited clergy from All Hallows College in Ireland, and received financial assistance from the Society for the Propagation of the Faith in Lyons, France, and the Leopoldine Society in Austria. His already poor health further weakened by consumption, he received Bernard O'Reilly as a coadjutor bishop and later died from rheumatic fever, aged 45.
Religion
He converted to Catholicism at age fifteen or sixteen.
Personality
In summary of his character, Bishop John Bernard Fitzpatrick of Boston confided to his diary that though Tyler was neither learned nor brilliant, he was a model for young priests because he was a firm, diligent man of sound prudence, who squandered no time from his duty.