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The Rt. Rev. A. F. Winnington Ingram, Bishop of London, will arrive in Cambridge tomorrow morning at 7 o'clock to be the guest over night of Rev. E. Abbott, rector of St. James Episcopal Church, at 11 Dana street. In the morning Bishop Ingram will be taken about Cambridge in an automobile and shown the various points of interest. He will be entertained at lunch by President Eliot and will make a short speech in the chapel of the Episcopal Theological School on Brattle street at 5.30 o'clock. At eight o'clock he will deliver an address in Sanders Theatre on "Some Problems of Great Cities." This address will be open to all members of the University and to the public.
The object of Bishop Ingram's visit to this country was to attend the tercentary of the establishment of the Church of England in America. As Bishop of London, to which diocese he was appointed in 1901, thereby becoming in importance second only to the Archbishops of York and Canterbury, he is well known to the world, but to the London poor he is best known as Bishop of Stepney, an office which he held previous to his appointment to the bishopric of London. Graduated from Oxford in 1881, he became, three years later, a curate at St. Mary's, Shrewsbury, and subsequently head of the Oxford House in Bethnal Green, rector of Bethnal Green, rural dean of Spitalfields, canon of St. Paul's, Bishop of Stepney, and in 1901 Bishop of London.
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