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LONG, GEORGE MERRICK (1875-1930), educationist and Anglican
bishop, |
was born at Carisbrook, Victoria, on 5 November 1875, the youngest child of
George Long. Both parents were English. He was educated at Maryborough grammar
school, on leaving school entered a bank, but when 19 years of age decided to
enter the Church of England ministry. He was accepted as a student for holy
orders by Bishop Goe
(q.v.) of Melbourne, and spent four months as assistant to Archdeacon Herring on
the Upper Murray. He entered Trinity College, university of Melbourne, at the
beginning of 1896 and graduated B.A. with honours in 1899. He was ordained
deacon in 1899, priest in 1900, and from 1899 was given charge of the parish of
Foster in South Gippsland, Victoria. It was a large parish which had suffered
much from recent bushfires in which both the church and vicarage had been burnt
to the ground. Long rallied his people, a new church and a vicarage were built,
and the influence of his ministry was felt for many years after he left. But
Long had been influenced too. He had lived with men who had wrenched a living
from a difficult soil, and he remembered all his days the courage, perseverance
and hard work that so often brought them little more than a bare living. In 1902
when Canon Hindley became archdeacon of Melbourne Long was asked to become his
assistant at Holy Trinity Church, Kew, a suburb of Melbourne. He had other
offers which seemed more important, but decided to go to Kew. Both men were
strong personalities; it might have been feared that they would have clashed,
but they worked perfectly together. Soon afterwards the question of establishing
a secondary school for boys was raised, and a start was made by establishing one
for those up to 12 years of age. It was soon realized that one was needed for
older boys, but great difficulty was found in obtaining a suitable headmaster.
At last the position was offered to Long who was advised by Archbishop
Clarke (q.v.) to accept it.
Trinity grammar school had about 50 boys when Long took charge. In a few
years the numbers rose to 300, and it continues to be one of the more important
schools of its kind in Australia. Long was an excellent headmaster. An old boy
of the school has summed up the attitude of his teaching in a few words, "To
resist the brute, to protect the weak, to work for the general good, to face the
light" (Martin Boyd, A Single Flame, p. 25). Long had many offers during
his stay at Kew from other churches and in 1910 was made a canon of St Paul's
cathedral, Melbourne. In 1911 it was suggested that he should apply for the
headmastership of Geelong grammar school, one of the six Victorian public
schools, but while he was considering this he received a telegram inviting him
to become bishop of Bathurst, in New South Wales. It meant a reduction in his
income, and much hard work and responsibility for a man still only 35 years of
age, but after taking advice he decided to accept the position.
Long was consecrated bishop of Bathurst on 30 November 1911 and began his
work with much energy. He showed that he had a strong business sense, and at
once set about placing the finances of the diocese on a more secure footing. He
found the work of the diocese being hampered by obsolete ordinances and
succeeded in having them revised, he encouraged the bush brotherhood which
worked in the outlying districts, he founded new schools and began the erection
of a new cathedral. His work was interrupted when in 1917 he went to France as a
chaplain, but in 1918 he was put in charge of a movement to organize vocational
and civil training for the Australian soldiers. He was given the position of
director of education in the A.I.F. with the rank of brigadier-general. He did
valuable work in this position, but his health broke "under a strain probably
heavier than that borne by any other great leader of the A.I.F., from which it
is said he never recovered". (C. E. W. Bean, Official History of Australia in
the War of 1914-1918, vol. VI, p. 1071). He returned to Australia in July
1919 and took up the work of his diocese again. He gave much thought to the
drafting of a new constitution for the Church of England in Australia, and with
the assistance of Sir John Peden the constitution was prepared and presented to
the convention held in 1926. Long managed the matter with great tact and
forbearance, and eventually the constitution was accepted by all the dioceses
except Sydney which asked for additional provisions. In 1927 a coadjutor bishop
of Bathurst was appointed and at the end of that year Long was elected bishop of
Newcastle. Bathurst vainly asked him to stay and the deputation which waited on
him included not only members of his own church but men of all the leading
denominations of the town. Long, however, felt that it was his duty to go to
Newcastle, and he was enthroned there on 2 May 1928. Newcastle, then a city of
about 100,000 inhabitants with a large industrial population, offered a great
field for a man of his abilities, and he soon made his influence felt. On one
occasion considerable support was given to the proposition that he should act as
mediator in a strike at the coal mines. He had been there less than two years
when in March 1930 he went to England to attend the Lambeth conference. On the
second day of the conference Long was taken ill and died on 9 July 1930 of
cerebral haemorrhage. He married in 1900 Alexandra, daughter of Alfred Joyce,
who survived him with three sons and three daughters. He was given the honorary
degree of LL.D. by Cambridge university in 1918 and by Manchester in 1919. He
was created C.B.E. in 1919.
Long was tall, dark and rugged-featured. An athlete in his youth, his obvious
sincerity enabled him to be a good influence as a student at the university, as
a bush parson, and as head of a large secondary school. His sympathies were with
the manual workers, but he did not interfere in politics. He was a good though
not great preacher, and he wrote little, his one excursion into controversy,
Papal Pretensions (1913), did not show him at his best. His real strength
lay in the fact that no one could come in contact with him without being the
better for it, and that he was a great organizer, hard-working, tactful, able,
and obviously seeking what was best for all concerned. Had he not died at the
comparatively early age of 54 there was no ecclesiastical office of his church
in Australia to which he would not have become entitled.
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