Background
Tucker was born in 1849 and grew up in the Lake District in England.
Tucker was born in 1849 and grew up in the Lake District in England.
Following in the footsteps of his family, he became an artist, exhibiting at the Royal Academy. In 1879, Tucker became a mature student at Oxford University. This was unusual for an evangelical ordinand of his time, as by far the greater proportion of evangelical students went to Cambridge.
In 1882, he was ordained curate in Bristol, then at Street Nicholas" Church, Durham before being sent out in 1890 by the Church Mission Society to become the third bishop of Eastern Equatorial Africa.
He served in this position until 1899. That year, he became the Bishop of Uganda until 1908.
Tucker"s style was, notably for this era, one of working with the culture rather than trying to replace it with European attitudes. He argued for African churches to have autonomy, although he continually returned to England for more missionaries, possibly hoping for them to undertake support roles within the church structure rather than the leadership positions that they assumed.
His approach to the evangelization of Uganda had three phases: conversion of individual African mentor
Church planting. And finally, education. In 1911, Tucker returned to Durham where he spent his days as a canon of Durham Cathedral.
He died in 1914 and was buried outside the Cathedral, where a tall Celtic cross marks his grave.
The year before Tucker died, Uganda"s first theological college was formed. On his death, it was named In 1997, it became Uganda Christian University. In 2004, the University"s theology faculty was named "The Bishop Tucker School of Divinity and Theology.".