Charles de Salis


Charles Fane de Salis was Bishop of Taunton from 1911 to 1930.

Early life

Born in Fringford, Oxfordshire on 18 or 19 March 1860 into an occasionally clerical family, he was educated at Eton and Exeter College, Oxford. William Foster was a great-grandfather; his names Charles and Fane were derived from his ancestor Charles, 1st Viscount Fane.

Ministry

Made deacon in 1883 and ordained priest in 1884, he was Curate at St. Michael's, Coventry, Vicar of Milverton, then East Brent and then Rector of Weston-super-Mare. In 1911, he became Archdeacon of Taunton and Bishop suffragan of Taunton immediately before his consecration as a bishop on St James's Day, by Randall Davidson, Archbishop of Canterbury, at St Paul's Cathedral. He additionally became a canon residentiary of Wells Cathedral in 1915, resigned his See and canonry in 1930, and became an Assistant Bishop of Bath and Wells in 1931. He retired as Archdeacon in 1938.
He died on 24 January 1942 and is commemorated in a memorial on the west wall of Wells Cathedral.

Marriage and family

De Salis married his second cousin, on 21 July 1896, Lady Mary Alice. They had two daughters and a son who died in 1991.