George Reindorp
{{Short description|British Anglican bishop}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=April 2025}}
{{Use British English|date=March 2017}}
{{Infobox Christian leader
| type = Bishop
| honorific_prefix = The Right Reverend
| name = George Reindorp
| honorific_suffix =
| title = Bishop of Salisbury
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| church = Church of England
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| diocese = Salisbury
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| elected =
| term = 1973–1981
| quashed =
| predecessor = Joseph Fison
| successor = John Baker
| opposed =
| other_post = Bishop of Guildford (1961–1973)
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| consecration = 1961
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| birth_date = {{Birth date|1911|12|11|df=y}}
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| death_date = {{Death date and age|1990|04|20|1911|12|11|df=y}}
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| nationality = British
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| parents =
| spouse = Alix Edington (died 1987)
Bridget Mullens (1988–1990)
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| alma_mater = Trinity College, Cambridge
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George Edmund Reindorp (11 December 1911The Times, 21 December 1911; pg. 1; Issue 39774; col A, Births – 20 April 1990) was an Anglican bishop. He was the 5th Bishop of Guildford in the Church of England and subsequently the 75th Bishop of Salisbury.The Times, 17 January 1961; pg. 7; Issue 54981; col C, New Bishop of Guildford Very Rev. G. E. ReindorpThe Times, 15 December 1972; pg. 16; Issue 58658; col E, "Dr Reindorp to be new Bishop of Salisbury"
Reindorp was educated at Felsted School"Who was Who", 1897-1990, London, A & C Black, 1991, {{ISBN|0-7136-3457-X}} and Trinity College, Cambridge. After a curacy in Kensington and wartime service in the Royal Naval Volunteer Reserve his ministry positions included the incumbency of St Stephen's with St John's, WestminsterThe Times, 12 June 1948; pg. 6; Issue 51096; col C, "Services To-Morrow St Stephen’s Rochester Row Westminster" and Provost of Southwark CathedralThe Times, 5 December 1957; pg. 12; Issue 54016; col D, "Provost of Southwark" before his consecration to the episcopate. On Lady Day 1961 (25 March) at Southwark Cathedral, he was consecrated a bishop by Geoffrey Fisher, Archbishop of Canterbury, to serve as Bishop of Guildford.{{Church Times | title = Southwark consecration | archive = 1961_03_30_001 | issue = 5120 | date = 30 March 1961 | page = 1 | accessed = 10 January 2019 }} In 1973, he was installed as the Bishop of Salisbury. One of his first actions was summarily to determine (without interview) the licences of eight clergy who were either divorced and remarried or married to a spouse who had been previously divorced.
Reindorp married a South African doctor qualified in surgery, Alix Edington, in South Africa following the end of the Second World War. The Reindorps gained a reputation as public speakers on the British lecture circuit. Their clerical and medical backgrounds earned the couple the nickname "Body and Soul". Reindorp had four children with Alix. Two of his sons, David and Julian, have been ordained in the Church of England. Reindorp's only daughter, Fiona, married Sir Richard Baskerville Mynors, Bt. Reindorp's youngest son, Richard, became a teacher in the East End of London before moving into the Civil Service. After the death of his first wife in 1987, Reindorp married Lady Bridget Mullens (30 March 1918 – 25 January 1991). The service was conducted by his eldest son, Julian.
A prolific authorHis publications included "What about You?", 1956; "No Common Task", 1957; "Putting it Over: ten points for preachers", 1961; "Over to You", 1964; "Preaching Through the Christian Year", 1973. "Who’s Who" (Ibid) and broadcaster[https://web.archive.org/web/20090205071156/http://ftvdb.bfi.org.uk/sift/title/720166 Details of 1973 series] he died in retirement three years after his first wife Alix. Reindorp has 10 surviving grandchildren, the eldest of whom, Nicola Reindorp, is the head of Oxfam International in the United States.
A biography of Reindorp was written but not published in full. Parts of his life were edited and published in a shortened form. This was privately circulated and focussed mainly on his time as a parish priest. He was mainly remembered for his sense of humour and sermons built around three key words, e.g. "launch", "nevertheless", "partners".
For many years in Guildford, Surrey, he had a school named after him. In 2003 Bishop Reindorp Secondary school was demolished and a new building built in its place, Christ's College, Guildford, as a "Christian college".
References
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{{Succession box| title=Provost of Southwark | years=1957–1961| before=Hugh Edward Ashdown | after=Ernest William Southcott}}
{{Succession box| title=Bishop of Guildford | years=1961–1973| before=Ivor Stanley Watkins | after=David Allan Brown}}
{{Succession box| title=Bishop of Salisbury | years=1973–1982| before=Joseph Fison | after=John Austin Baker}}
{{S-end}}
{{Portal|Christianity}}
{{Provosts and Deans of Southwark}}
{{Bishops of Guildford}}
{{Bishops of Salisbury}}
{{Authority control}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Reindorp, George Edmund}}
Category:People educated at Felsted School
Category:Alumni of Trinity College, Cambridge
Category:Royal Naval Volunteer Reserve personnel of World War II
Category:20th-century Church of England bishops
Category:Holders of a Lambeth degree