[5] In 1895 he became Warden of Selwyn College in Dunedin, and in 1900, vicar of Tuapeka in Central Otago.
[5] He was canon of St Paul's Cathedral, Dunedin, and archdeacon successively of Queenstown and of Invercargill.
He became Bishop of Dunedin in 1920, holding the position until he retired owing to ill-health in 1934.
[2] His most successful match was against the touring New South Wales team in early 1890, when, batting in the middle order, he made 25 (Auckland's top score in the first innings) and 29.
This biographical article related to a New Zealand cricket person born in the 1850s is a stub.