Launcelot Fleming


William Launcelot Scott Fleming was a British Anglican bishop. He was the Bishop of Portsmouth and later the Bishop of Norwich. He was also noted as a geologist and explorer.

Childhood

Fleming was born in Edinburgh, the youngest of four sons, and fifth of five children of Robert Alexander Fleming FRSE and Eleanor Mary, the daughter of the Rev William Lyall Holland, rector of Cornhill-on-Tweed. The family lived at 10 Chester Street in Edinburgh's West End. He was educated at Rugby School.

Early adult life

Fleming went up to Trinity Hall, Cambridge in 1925, graduating in geology in 1928, followed by two years as a Commonwealth Fund Fellow at Yale University. He studied for Holy Orders at Westcott House, Cambridge and was ordained deacon in 1933 and priest in 1934. His early years were spent as chaplain to successive Antarctic expeditions, for which he was awarded the Polar Medal in 1937.

Later life

Fleming pursued an academic career, acting as an examining chaplain to a number of bishops while retaining a base at Trinity Hall, eventually becoming its dean in 1937 and an honorary fellow in 1956. At the outbreak of World War II he became a chaplain in the Royal Naval Volunteer Reserve and served on the battleship. After the war, he returned to Cambridge as director of the Scott Polar Research Institute.
In 1965 he married Jane Agutter, a widow.
In 1971 he was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh. His proposers were Lord Balerno, Douglas Guthrie, Norman Feather and Anthony Elliot Ritchie.

Episcopate and parliament

In July 1949, Fleming's name was put forward for the position of Bishop of Portsmouth. Having been selected, he was ordained and consecrated a bishop on St Luke's day at Southwark Cathedral by Geoffrey Fisher, Archbishop of Canterbury, although he did not take his place in the House of Lords for another seven years.
In 1959 he was translated to the vacant Episcopal see of Norwich, becoming the first bishop to use the ancient throne in Norwich Cathedral for 400 years. Although he became a bishop without parochial experience or any great gift for preaching, his unassuming friendliness and humility won over both clergy and laity. Portsmouth became an exceptionally well-run diocese, with more than its share of young clergy and ordinands. Norwich, with 650 churches and a shortage of clergy, presented greater problems; he tackled them resolutely and imaginatively, developing rural group ministries and again attracting good clergy. He also played a significant part in planning the University of East Anglia. A remarkable rapport with young people led to his being made chairman of the Church of England Youth Council. Struck by a rare spinal disorder, which seriously affected both legs, he resigned the see in 1971.
An eternally enthusiastic man, in 1960 he realised a lifetime's ambition to ride on the footplate of a locomotive, and in 1965, at the comparatively advanced age of 58, he married Jane Agutter, the widow of Anthony Agutter and daughter of Henry Machen. It was a happy marriage which lasted for twenty-five years but produced no children.
In 1967, unusually for a bishop, Fleming piloted a bill through the House of Lords. Well informed on environmental and ecological issues, he constantly urged responsible stewardship of the world, and the need for international co-operation. He became vice-chairman of the parliamentary group for world government, and a member of the government Standing Advisory Committee on Environmental Pollution. At Windsor, he consolidated the reputation of St George's House. His influence on church policy would have been greater but for synodical government - off-the-cuff debate was not his forte.

Later career

On resigning his See, Fleming was appointed the Queen's domestic chaplain and Dean of Windsor, in which capacity he officiated at the funeral of the former Edward VIII. In 1976 he was awarded an honorary doctorate by the University of East Anglia for his work with young people. He retired to Dorset and died in Sherborne on 30 July 1990. He was cremated and his ashes were interred in the churchyard of All Saints' Church in Poyntington.

Publication

Foreword to William of Gloucester: Pioneer Prince, edited by Giles St. Aubyn