Difference between revisions of "Nicholas Egorevich Mitropolsky"

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*[http://oca.org/parishes/oca-ak-kendvm OCA.org listing for Holy Assumption of the Virgin Mary Church in Kenai, Alaska]
 
*[http://oca.org/parishes/oca-ak-kendvm OCA.org listing for Holy Assumption of the Virgin Mary Church in Kenai, Alaska]
 
*[http://www.holy-trinity.org/history/1881/02.17.Nestor-Synod.html Report on the state of the Aleutian Diocese in 1880] Holy Trinity Cathedral, San Francisco site
 
*[http://www.holy-trinity.org/history/1881/02.17.Nestor-Synod.html Report on the state of the Aleutian Diocese in 1880] Holy Trinity Cathedral, San Francisco site
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*[http://dowoca.org/files/vision/winter1998.pdf 1903 report of Fr. Alexander Kukulevsky] From Diocese of the West newsletter, 1998
  
 
[[Category:Priests|Mitropolsky]]
 
[[Category:Priests|Mitropolsky]]

Revision as of 15:14, November 18, 2015

Nicholas Egorevich Mitropolsky (b Nov 1846, Kaluga, Kaluga Oblast, Russia - d 7 September 1921, Sonoma, California) was the brother of John (Mitropolsky) of the Aleutians and a priest in the Church of Russia.

Nicholas Egorevich Mitropolsky was born in Kaluga, Russia in 1846. He originally came to the United States in 1870, accompanying his brother, and settled down in San Francisco in order to help Bishop John. At first he served as a reader, then as a deacon, then was ordained to the priesthood. By 1881, he was serving at the Cathedral of St. Michael the Archangel in Sitka, Alaska, after which he became the priest Holy Assumption of the Virgin Mary Church (Kenai, Alaska) and served there from 1888-1892. Following this, he returned to San Francisco. In the journals of Fr. Alexander Kukulevsky dating back to 1903, Fr. Nicholas was already in poor health and did not take part in the day-to-day functions of the Church there.

Fr. Nicholas was married to a woman by the name of Maria Kashevaroff, and together they were the parents to many children, one of which, Fr. Nicholas N Mitropolsky, would become a priest as well. Fr. Nicholas fell asleep in the Lord in California in 1921.

Sources