Peel was born in 1854, educated at Blackheath Proprietary School, and ordained in 1875. After a curacy in Trowbridge, he went out as a missionary to India, where he rose to be principal of Noble College Masulipatam. Appointment to the episcopate as the third bishop of Mombasa came in 1899 — he was consecrated a bishop on St Peter's Day (29 June) 1899 by Frederick Temple, Archbishop of Canterbury, at St Paul's Cathedral. In October 1899 and December 1909 he presented the prizes at the annual Commemoration Day of Monkton Combe School in Somerset, of which his father in law, the Revd R G Bryan, was Principal
After celebrating an ecumenical communion service with Methodists and Presbyterians in Kikuyu, and giving communion to non-Anglicans, he was accused of heresy by Bishop Frank Weston of Zanzibar in the Kikuyu controversy.
He died in post on 15 April 1916
he Rt Rev Richard Stanley Heywood (1867–1955) was an Anglican bishop in the first half of the 20th century
He was born on 27 October 1867, educated at Windlesham House School, Wellington College and Trinity College, Cambridge, and ordained in 1892.After a curacy in Walcot, Bath, he was Principal of the CMS Divinity School, Poona and then held a similar post in Bombay. In 1918 he became Bishop of Mombasa. He retired to Kenilworth in 1936 and was an Assistant Bishop of Coventry until 1952. He died on 16 December 1955.
Crabbe was born into an ecclesiastical family on 15 July 1883, educated at Trent College and Corpus Christi College, Cambridge and ordained in 1907
At Cambridge he excelled in athletics and was part of the London Athletic Club, in addition to the Cambridge Athletic Club. He finished second behind Bernard Blunden at the 1905 AAA Championships.
After a curacy at St George's, Newcastle-under-Lyme he was Chaplain to the Bishop of Sierra Leone. He then held Incumbencies at St Mary's Peckham,[8] and St Mary's, Sheffield. From 1924 to 1936 he was Rural Dean of Greenwich then Dulwich. In 1936 he became Bishop of Mombasa. He returned to England in 1953[9] and was an Assistant Bishop in the Diocese of Portsmouth until 1958. He died on 22 October 1964
He was a missionary of the Church Mission Society in the Diocese of Mombasa from 1930, working in the Highlands.He was appointed Archdeacon of Mombasa and a Canon (both 1945–1953)[6] and an Assistant Bishop of Mombasa: he was consecrated a bishop on St James's Day 1950 (25 July) by Geoffrey Fisher, Archbishop of Canterbury, at St Paul's Cathedral. He became diocesan Bishop of Mombasa in 1953[9] and — additionally — Archbishop of the Province of East Africa, from 1960 to 1970:[10] he was elected (by the House of Bishops of the province-to-be)[11] to serve as the first archbishop in April 1960[12] and installed by Geoffrey Fisher, Archbishop of Canterbury, at the new province's inauguration service on 3 August 1960 at Dar-es-Salaam.[
A prominent member of the Royal African Society, he retired in 1970 and died on 16 December 1987. He is buried in the cemetery at All Saints, Limuru.
Rt. Rev. Peter Mwang'ombe Mwakota was a Kenyan Anglican priest in the second half of the 20th century.
He was educated in Limuru and ordained in 1945. He was Archdeacon of Mombasa from 1955 until 1964 when he was appointed Bishop of Mombasa. On his appointment he was the first African and the 5th Anglican Bishop of the diocese of Mombasa that then covered the present diocese of Taita Taveta and Malindi. The diocese of Taita Taveta was created in 1992, and its first Bishop was the Rt. Rev. Emeritus Bishop Samson Mwaluda.
Crispus Nzano was a Kenyan Anglican bishop in the second half of the twentieth century: he became Coadjutor Bishop of Mombasa in 1980; and was subsequently its Diocesan until his retirement in 1993
He died 2008
Julius Robert Katoi Kalu is a Kenyan Anglican Bishop. He was consecrated and enthroned on January 2, 1994 and retired in 2018
Dena was born in Rabai. He was educated at the Teachers College in Kericho and the Nairobi International School of Theology. He was ordained in 1994 in Mombasa, and served at St. Augustine Mombasa. In 2003 he became a Canon at All Saints' Cathedral, Nairobi. He was consecrated Assistant Bishop of Bishop of Mombasa in 2005.He was Provincial Secretary to Archbishop Benjamin Nzimbi from 2006 to 2009. He was Chairman of the All Africa Conference of Churches.