Member Directory,
1847 - 1922
Hughell Fosbroke
Dean, General Theological Seminary
Centurion, 1919–1957
David H. Greer and William T. Manning
Netherton, Worcestershire, England
White Plains, New York
Age forty-four
Century Memorial
Hughell E. W. Fosbroke was born in England, the son of a clergyman who, after lay work in the London slums, became a missionary to Indian tribes in North America. Fosbroke prepared at the Shattuck School in Minnesota, and entered Harvard with the Class of 1897; but after two years he went to study at Nashotah House, a seminary at Nashotah, Wisconsin, and took a Bachelor of Divinity degree there in 1901. From that time, he was a teacher all the rest of his life.
He was ordained a priest of the Episcopal Church, and became an instructor in Hebrew at Nashotah. In 1909 he was appointed professor of history and religion of Israel at the Cambridge Theological School; and in 1917 he became Dean of the General Theological Seminary in New York. This position he filled till he retired about ten years ago. He gave general satisfaction as Dean, and he punctuated his daily round by serving as deputy at ecclesiastical conventions and taking part in the never-ending discussions of conduct and belief that arise in church circles. He was a gentle and moderate person, however—wise rather than bellicose—so that he was able to tread these dangerous precincts without accumulating the ill will ordinarily associated with them.
He was eighty-two years old.
George W. Martin
1958 Century Association Yearbook