Nigel Cornwall
Nigel Edmund Cornwall CBE, was an English clergyman in the Anglican Church. He held the position of Bishop of Borneo from 1949 until 1962.Cornwall was the son of Alan Cornwall, who was Archdeacon of Cheltenham from 1924 to 1932. He was educated at Marlborough College, where his older brother Alan, a county cricketer for Gloucestershire, was later to be a housemaster. He then studied history at Oriel College, Oxford, obtaining a third-class degree in 1926.
Cornwall worked in England for four years, first at Cuddesdon Theological College in 1926–1927, then as deacon in the Diocese of Durham also in 1927, as curate of St Columba's, Southwick, Sunderland in 1927–1930, and as a priest in Durham in 1928.Postings abroad
His first posting abroad came in 1931 when he was appointed chaplain to the Bishop of Colombo, Ceylon, a position he held until 1938. He briefly returned to England for a year, as curate of St Wilfred's, Brighton in 1938–1939. Thereafter came postings as a missionary priest of the Diocese of Masasi, Tanganyika in 1939–1949, during which time he also served as headmaster of St Joseph's College, Chidya in 1944–1949.
Cornwall was ordained and consecrated a bishop on All Saints' Day 1949 at Westminster Abbey by Geoffrey Fisher, Archbishop of Canterbury, as the first to hold his post : following the devastation of World War II, the Diocese of Labuan and the Bishopric of Sarawak were merged as the Diocese of Borneo. Cornwall served as bishop based in Kuching for thirteen years until 1962, when the diocese was again divided into the Diocese of Jesselton which included Labuan, and the Diocese of Kuching, which included Brunei.Return
Cornwall then returned to England, where he served as commissary to the Bishop of Kuching, as assistant bishop in the Diocese of Winchester, and as a canon residentiary of Winchester Cathedral from 1963 to 1973, when he retired.
Cornwall was appointed a CBE in 1955. He married Mary Dalton, daughter of the Reverend C. R. Dalton, in 1959. They had no children. Mary died in 1981.