Diocese of Newfoundland

The Anglican Diocese of Newfoundland was, from its creation in 1839 until 1879, the Diocese of Newfoundland and Bermuda, with the Cathedral of St. John the Baptist at St. John's, Newfoundland, and a chapel-of-ease named Trinity Church in the City of Hamilton in Pembroke Parish, Bermuda (not to be confused either with the Parish church for Pembroke Parish, St. John's, or with Holy Trinity Church, the parish church of Hamilton Parish).

[1] Newfoundland and Bermuda had both been parts of British North America until they were left out of the 1867 Confederation of Canada.

[2][3][4] In 1842, her jurisdiction was described as "Newfoundland, the Bermudas".

[5] In 1879 the Church of England in the British Overseas Territory of Bermuda (since 1978, an extra-provincial[6] diocese of the archbishop of Canterbury re-titled the Anglican Church of Bermuda) was created, but continued to be grouped with the Diocese of Newfoundland under the bishop of Newfoundland and Bermuda until 1919, when Newfoundland and Bermuda each received its own bishop.

The three dioceses jointly support Queen's College, other ministries and have many common interests.