Background
William Bennett Bond was born on September 10, 1815 at Truro, England, to John Bond and Nanny Bennett.
William Bennett Bond was born on September 10, 1815 at Truro, England, to John Bond and Nanny Bennett.
William was educated at Calday Grange Grammar School and later somewhere in London.
At age 17, Bond left England to work in business at Saint John"s, Newfoundland. There, he met Mark Willoughby, a superintendent of the Newfoundland School Society, and joined his bible class. Under the direction of the Reverend Thomas Finch Hobday Bridge, Bond began to read for ordination.
In 1839, Bond moved to Lower Canada, and the next year was ordained deacon by the Bishop of Quebec, George Jehoshaphat Mountain.
His first post as deacon was as a mission to the Quebec countryside, purportedly founding eleven schools in the township of Hemmingford. In 1841, Bond was ordained priest in In 1842, Bond was appointed incumbent of a church in Lachine, and held at least four services a week, three on a Sunday.
In 1848, Bond travelled to, where he served as assistant minister at Street George"s church. The same year, he replaced Willoughby as a superintendent of the Newfoundland School Society.
In 1866, he became canon of Christ Church Cathedral,, and four years later the domestic chaplain to Ashton Oxenden, the Bishop of and Archdeacon of Hochetaga.
In 1872 he was appointed Dean of, a position he held until his consecration as bishop. His church of Saint George played host to the largest Sunday school in the city, and Bond"s founding of the Saint George"s Young Men’s Christian Association led to the creation of at least six new parishes. In 1878, the diocese of elected Bond as their third bishop, consecrated on January 25 the following year.
He immediately set about reorganizing the financial affairs of the diocese, which had been weakened by an economic downturn during the 1870s.
By 1900, Bond"s health was clearly declining, and in 1902, his coadjutor James Carmichael had to take over many of his duties. His death on October 9, 1906 cut short his primacy, causing him to be one of the shortest-serving primates of Canada.