Angus Dun, son of Henry W. and Sarah R. Dun, was born in New York City. His father was associated with a cousin, Robert G. Dun, in the credit-rating firm of R. G. Dun & Co.. He was born with deformed hands and feet, and spent most of his childhood shuttling from hospital to hospital. At the age of 11, he was paralyzed by polio. Complications led to the amputation of one of his legs. Despite his handicaps, he prepared for college at The Albany Academy in Albany, New York. He graduated from Yale University in 1914 with a BA degree. At Yale, he was a member of Elihu and was elected to Phi Beta Kappa. Religion had been a casual interest for him until when at Yale he came under the influence of Dr. Henry B. Wright, Professor of Theology. Although he had grown up in the Dutch Reformed Church, he joined the Episcopal Church and decided to become a priest. He graduated from Episcopal Theological School in Cambridge, Massachusetts, in 1917 with a S.T.B. degree. He was ordained a deacon May 17, 1917, and a priest November 20, 1917, by the Right Rev. William Lawrence, Bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Massachusetts. He was married to Catherine Whipple Pew, daughter of Brig. Gen. William A. and Alice Pew of Salem, Massachusetts, June 22, 1916, in Salem. They had two sons.
Vicar and professor
Soon after graduating from Episcopal Theological School, he became vicar at St. Andrew's Church in Ayer, Massachusetts, and of its mission in Forge Village. The nature of his work here was altered by the fact that the United States had declared war on Germany on April 6, 1917. Several miles from the church, of wood lots and fields were almost immediately transformed into a complete city for 10,000 men with barracks and training buildings, named Camp Devens. Construction, commenced on June 19 by the largest labor force ever assembled in the United States, raced at the rate of 10.4 new buildings every day. By September 4, the military base was ready and the first draft inductees arrived. On September 15, 1917, the Reverend Angus Dun and the Reverend Dr. Endicott Peabody, headmaster at Groton School, conducted the first services, sponsored by the Young Men's Christian Association, for the newly arrived men. In the course of the first year, over 60,000 inductees were processed. Rev. Dun's principal work was as a civilian chaplain to the service men; the parish assisted him as they could. During the war, union services of the Federated, Unitarian, and St. Andrew's parishes were held at the YMCA on West Main Street in Ayer. After what must been an exhausting year and a half as vicar, he left in the spring of 1919 to continue his studies at the Universities of Oxford and Edinburgh. From 1920 to 1940, he was an instructor, assistant professor, and professor of theology at Episcopal Theological School in Cambridge, Massachusetts. From 1940–1944, he was dean of the School. He was known for his very strong pacifist views. In a November 1922 sermon he stated, "The time may come when patriotism and Christ will stand face to face and men will have to choose which they will follow. If the Christian Church does not develop men with the courage to choose Christ, mankind will find no abiding peace and the church will lose its soul." He was also known for his distinctly Modernist beliefs. In January 1924, he co-signed a letter sent to alumni of the Episcopal Theological School proposing that the creeds be reconsidered-- "The Church is greater than the creeds. The central faith in God as He is found in Christ, upon which the Church is built, is not destroyed or diminished by doubts concerning the method of Christ's birth, of His return to God or His future judgement. The Church made the creeds. The creeds did not make the Church."
Bishop
On November 23, 1943, the Very Rev. Angus Dun was elected the fourth Bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Washington. He was consecrated at the Cathedral Church of St. Peter and St. Paul in Washington, D.C. on April 19, 1944, in a service led by 10 bishops, including the Archbishop of York. During the 18 years of his episcopate, Bishop Dun confirmed more than 31,000 people, ordained 105 deacons and 91 priests, and visited two and sometimes three parishes every Sunday. Most important, he was a strong proponent of the ecumenical movement. He served for 10 years on the Central Committee of World Council of Churches, founded in Amsterdam in 1948. He was named an Honorary Commander of the Order of the British Empire by Queen Elizabeth II in 1953. He retired from his position as Bishop on May 6, 1962, at the age of 70.
Death and tributes
The Right Rev. Angus Dun died August 12, 1971, in Washington, D.C. Funeral services were held at the Cathedral of St. Peter and St. Paul in Washington, D.C., where a delegation of eight bishops, including the Presiding Bishop of the Episcopal Church, the Most Rev. John E. Hines, led the clerical and lay mourners. His ashes were later interred in a niche in the wall of Bethlehem Chapel in the Cathedral. The carved inscription reads: ANGUS DUN BISHOP OF WASHINGTON 1944-1962 LEADER IN THE EPISCOPAL CHURCH AND FRIEND OF OTHER FAITHS STATESMAN IN THE ECUMENICAL MOVEMENT TEACHER AUTHOR AND ADMINISTRATOR HIS PROPHETIC VISION OF GOD'S WORD HIS INTEGRITY PERSONAL COURAGE AND AFFIRMATION OF LIFE GAVE COURAGE AND STRENGTH TO US ALL In an editorial about his life, The Washington Post wrote:
Books
He was the author of nine books, including "King's Cross: Meditations on the Seven Last Words," 1926; "Meanings of Unity," 1937; "Studies in Church Unity," 1938; "We Believe: A Simple Exposition of the Creeds," 1938; "Not By Bread Alone." 1942; "Prospecting for A United Church," 1948; and "The Saving Person," 1957.