Alfred Rose (bishop)
Alfred Carey Wollaston Rose was the sixth Bishop of Dover in the modern era, from 1935 to 1956.
The son of A. Rose, Vicar of Wilstead, Bedfordshire, he was educated at Marlborough, and Worcester College, Oxford. Rose began his ministry with a curacy at St Mary, Somers Town, London ; after which he served as a temporary RN Chaplain during World War I.
When peace returned, he became Sub-Warden of the Bishop's Hostel, Lincoln and then Warden, during which time he also served as Vicar of Haigh, Lancashire and a prebendary of Lincoln Cathedral. He then became Vicar of St Peter's Church, Brighton and Rural Dean of the city, and examining chaplain to Winfrid Burrows and George Bell, Bishops of Chichester and an Honorary Chaplain to the King before his ordination to the episcopate.
His appointment to become Bishop of Dover, a suffragan bishop in the Diocese of Canterbury, was announced on 16 November 1934 and he was consecrated a bishop by Cosmo Gordon Lang, Archbishop of Canterbury, at Canterbury Cathedral on the Feast of the Circumcision 1935. After serving in that role for 21 years — working with four archbishops and twice acting up as diocesan bishop —, he retired at the end of 1956, going first to briefly serve as chaplain of Palermo, Sicily. Throughout his retirement, he continued to serve the Church as an Assistant Bishop within the Diocese of Canterbury and as a Sub-Prelate of the Order of St John of Jerusalem. He died, aged 86, in Canterbury on Good Friday, 9 April 1971.
Rose married Lois née Garton in 1920 and they had four sons, one of whom, Clive Rose, was a diplomat who served as Permanent Representative to the North Atlantic Council.