{{Use dmy dates|date=April 2022}} [[File:Lloyd Morrell (1907-1996) memorial, Chichester Cathedral, July 2015 01.jpg|thumb|Memorial, Chichester Cathedral]] '''James Herbert Lloyd Morrell''' (called '''Lloyd'''; 12 August 1907<ref>[http://catless.ncl.ac.uk/Obituary/1996/misc.html Birthdate]</ref>{{snd}}28 March 1996)<ref>[http://www.brainyhistory.com/events/1996/march_28_1996_173439.html Death date]</ref> was the seventh Bishop of Lewes.<ref>[http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/A2A/records.aspx?cat=179-amsp&cid=-1&Gsm=2008-06-18#-1 Material at The National Archives]</ref><ref>His episcopal signature was "+Lloyd Lewen", Blagdon-Gamlen, P. E. (1973) ''The Church Travellers Directory''. London: Church Literature Association; p. ii (foreword); (''quaere'' whether this is a mistaken transcription of the signature: Lewes is a Suffragan Bishopric, and the signature would be “+Lloyd Lewes”).</ref>

== Biography == Morrell was educated at Dulwich College and King's College London.<ref>''Who’s Who''. London, A & C Black, 1992 {{ISBN|0-7136-3514-2}}</ref> He was deaconed on Trinity Sunday 1931 (31&nbsp;May)<ref>{{Church Times | title = Trinity ordinations | archive = 1931_06_05_722 | issue = 3567 | date = 5 June 1931 | page = 722 | accessed = 16 October 2019 }}</ref> and priested the following Trinity Sunday (22&nbsp;May 1932) — both times by Arthur Winnington-Ingram, Bishop of London, at St&nbsp;Paul's Cathedral.<ref>{{Church Times | title = Trinity ordinations | archive = 1932_05_27_669 | issue = 3618 | date = 27 May 1932 | page = 669 | accessed = 16 October 2019 }}</ref> He began his career with curacies at St&nbsp;Alphage, Hendon and St&nbsp;Michael &amp; All&nbsp;Angels, Brighton after which he was chaplain to George Bell, Bishop of Chichester and then a Lecturer for ''The Church of England Moral Welfare Council''. From here he went to be Vicar of Roffey<ref name="Crockford">''Crockford's Clerical Directory 1975-76'' London: Oxford University Press, 1976 {{ISBN|0-19-200008-X}}</ref> and then Archdeacon of Lewes before appointment to the Episcopate in 1959,<ref>The Times, Friday, Aug 07, 1959; pg. 10; Issue 54533; col C ''Bishop Suffragan Of Lewes''</ref> serving eventually for eighteen years.<ref name="Crockford" /> He was consecrated a bishop on 30 November 1959, by Geoffrey Fisher, Archbishop of Canterbury, at Westminster Abbey.<ref>{{Church Times | title = New Bishops consecrated | archive = 1959_12_04_024 | issue = 5051 | date = 4 December 1959 | page = 24 | accessed = 16 October 2019 }}</ref>

==References== {{reflist}} {{s-start}} {{s-rel|en}} {{s-bef|before=Geoffrey Warde}} {{s-ttl|title=Bishop of Lewes|years=1959&ndash;1977}} {{s-aft|after=Peter Ball}} {{s-end}} {{Bishops of Lewes}} {{authority control}}

{{DEFAULTSORT:Morrell, Lloyd}} Category:1907 births Category:People educated at Dulwich College Category:Alumni of King's College London Category:Fellows of King's College London Category:Bishops of Lewes Category:Archdeacons of Lewes Category:1996 deaths Category:20th-century Church of England bishops

{{ChurchofEngland-bishop-stub}}