The Rev. Canon Richard W. Davies, 1927-2020: An Appreciation
His life and ministry produced a lasting effect on life in western Pennsylvania, including the preservation of its colonial history and immigrant roots, and the establishment of a renowned program for the care of young people with special needs.
It was often said that Richard Davies had many loves in his life, “but only one woman!” as he would quickly interject whenever the subject come up. That woman, his wife of 68 years, Doris, would partner with him in serving his admitted first love, the Lord and His Church.
Newly ordained in 1955 by Bishop Austin Pardue, Richard was sent to St. Paul’s, Monongahela, which because of its small size provided a training ground that was typically afforded to young clergy of that period.
“The people knew that and honored that. They did a good job with Richard and kept him out of trouble. The place prospered,” said the late Rev. Charles Martin, an ordination classmate, speaking in Richard’s honor a few years ago.
Within a short time, Richard became rector of St. Peter’s, Brentwood. There, in 1958, he helped establish the St. Peter’s Child Development Center in response to several parishioners who were dealing with developmental delays in their children. At the time, the center was one of a few schools offering ministry and therapy for children with special needs. It eventually outgrew the St. Peter’s facility and evolved into TELI – The Early Learning Institute, which today provides pediatric care in the form of physical, occupational, speech, hearing, vision, and developmental therapy at multiple locations. The Early Learning Institute honored Richard with its Founder’s Award at its 50th anniversary celebration in 2009.
After a 25-year stint at St. Peter’s, Bishop Alden Hathaway tapped Richard to be his executive officer, a position known in the church as Canon to the Ordinary, and during those years he interacted with every parish and clergy member in the diocese.
By 1987, Richard had stepped away from diocesan work to become the associate rector of St. Paul’s, Mt. Lebanon, and soon took on the additional responsibilities of Vicar of Old St. Luke’s Church in Scott. This historic church presented a great challenge that would soon become another of Richard’s great loves. Tracing its roots to the 1760s – it’s the oldest Episcopal Church west of the Allegheny Mountains – the church stood empty for more than 60 years when Richard stepped in.
“How do you keep a church with no congregation going, and what do you do with it?” Richard once pondered in an interview for Mt. Lebanon Magazine. He answered his own question: “Be creative.”
That creativity sprang out of Richard’s newfound interest in history. The more he read about Old St. Luke’s connection to the French and Indian War, the American Revolution and the Whiskey Rebellion, the more consumed he became. He authored books and plays about the period. He started offering tours and lectures. He secured a Commonwealth Historic Site recognition. He undertook renovations of the building and its centuries-old graveyard. And, he brought the church back as a place of worship by hosting weddings, baptisms and other religious services on a regular basis. St. Paul’s, Mt. Lebanon, uses Old St. Luke’s as a satellite location in spring and autumn.
“He loved history, but he really loved the church and everything about this building,” said Norma Cappello, an Old St. Luke’s board member and its wedding coordinator. She remembers that he trusted and always expressed appreciation to those who worked to make the setting perfect for the bride and groom and their families. “He just wanted them to be happy,” she added.
Richard’s transformation of Old St. Luke’s earned him a place on the cover of Mt. Lebanon Magazine in May 2006, when it singled him out as a resident for whom “This Town Would Be Different Without.”
His love of history and culture extended beyond the roots of western Pennsylvania. He tapped deeply into his own Welsh ancestry, and for nearly 20 years served as secretary of the St. David’s Welsh Society of Pittsburgh. During his tenure, the group funded and oversaw the installation of a Welsh nationality classroom in the University of Pittsburgh’s Cathedral of Learning. The room was dedicated in 2008. Consistent with Richard’s faith and interests, the classroom is modeled after a church built in the late 1800s in Cardiff.
“He loved everything Welsh,” said the Rev. Sandy Ritchie in recalling how Richard would attend Welsh hymn-singing events. That recollection brought up what she calls her fondest memory of him. “He sat at the bedside of a dying woman whose family was not able to be present, and he sang hymns to her, just ever so softy.”
After serving more than 50 years as a priest, Richard Davies began contemplating retirement. “This time for real,” Richard would say on more than one occasion. Each attempt was short lived. In the late 2000s, he became part of “Team Clergy” in Mt. Lebanon when the parish entered an interim period between rectors.
“He and the late Rev. John Thomas called themselves ‘Frick and Frack’ and they were quite a team,” said the Rev. Nano Chalfant-Walker. “Richard was wise and very funny. He was a tremendous help to me when I later served there as interim.”
Richard Davies finally did retire from active ministry in 2010, but maintained his interest and involvement in all that he made possible over the years. Then-provisional Bishop Ken Price honored him on the occasion: “Richard stands as an example of how ordained ministry is lived out over a lifetime.”
In addition to his wife, Doris, he is survived by their daughter, Glynis, and her husband, Robert Carlson; son David, and his wife, Nancy; two grandchildren, and a great granddaughter.
Richard’s love for Doris goes back to when they were youngsters at St. Stephen’s Episcopal Church in Wilkinsburg. He was an altar server, and as luck would have it, he needed to wait behind a stained glass partition before services began.
“There was a small hole in the glass where you could see clearly into the congregation,” he said, telling a story he loved to tell. “I would position myself so that I could peer through and see the most beautiful girl in the world. That was Doris.”
That hole remains today, as does Richard’s saintly legacy. May he rest in peace and rise in glory. Amen.
Condolences may be sent to:
300 Madison Ave Apt 309
Pittsburgh, PA 15243-1087
You can read the obituary posted in the Pittsburgh Post Gazette here.