In 1891 he accepted a position as an assistant curate from the vicar of Holy Trinity parish, Dalston in the north-east of London.[6] He married Mary Weir on 30 November 1893 at Christ Church Lancaster Gate, London.[2]
He engaged in dialogue with Bishop James Liston of the Roman Catholic Church and the ministers of the Presbyterian and non-episcopal Churches. Early in his episcopate in Auckland, he was appointed the first chairman of the Council of Christian Congregations.[2]
Before being appointed as the Bishop of Waiapu, he was a member of the governing body Christ's College, Christchurch. After his appointment as Bishop on Auckland in 1914, he became a member of the board of King's College, Auckland during the time the School moved from Remuera to its present location in Ōtāhuhu.[2] Averill House, which was founded in 1961, was named in his honour.
Associations with organisations
He supported the St John Ambulance Association and Brigade, the New Zealand Red Cross, serving as a vice-president of the Auckland Branch. He was the first honorary member of the Rotary Club of Auckland. He also supported the Bible in State Schools League of New Zealand, the New Zealand Society for the Protection of Women and Children, the Royal Society of St George and the Royal Empire Society.[2][3]
Alfred was married to Mary (née Weir, died 5 November 1951, at Timaru, aged 86).[12] Alfred's eldest son, Walter Averill, became a priest and served as Archdeacon of Timaru; a second son, Leslie Averill, served with the New Zealand Expeditionary Force towards the end of the First World War, and played a key role in the capture of Le Quesnoy in France. He later became a prominent medical administrator and community leader in Christchurch.[13] A third son, Wilfred Selwyn Weir Averill, trained as a barrister and solicitor, practising law in Hawkes Bay. He died of septicaemia in Auckland in 1938.
Notes
^"Most Rev. A. W. Averill Late Primate Of New Zealand". The Times. No. 53887. 8 July 1957. p. 10.
^ abcdefghijkArchbishop Averill (1945). Fifty Years In New Zealand. Whitcombe & Tombs.
^ abcdBlain, Michael. Blain Biographical Directory of Anglican clergy in the South Pacific — ordained before 1932 (2019) pp. 52–3 (Accessed at Project Canterbury, 25 June 2019)
^"Newly appointed Deacons in London". The Times. No. 32578. 25 December 1888. p. 10.
^Malden Richard (ed) (1920). Crockford's Clerical Directory for 1920 (51st edn). London: The Field Press. p. 51.