OUR HISTORY
Welcome to the history section of the website. Here you will find materials that give a quick overview of major developments from the colonial period to the present, as well as more in-depth examinations of particular times, places and figures.
In this diocese, we strive to tell the story of our church as faithfully and as fully as we can. This means a willingness to explore and bring to light hitherto neglected areas of our past. Since 2006, this has meant paying attention to our racial history, to tracing the impact of slavery and segregation and the struggle to dismantle racism. It has meant lifting up the stories of the Black Episcopal Church and its leaders, such as the Ven. Odell Greenleaf Harris; the Rev. Thomas White Cain, in whose memory All Saints’, Warrenton was built; and the Rt. Rev. Henry Beard Delany.
It has also meant paying attention to the women of the Episcopal Church, whose stories have too often been overlooked. Among the documents posted here, you will find the stories of Sarah Hunter, who spearheaded the building of St. Agnes Hospital on the grounds of St. Augustine’s University, and of Bertha Richards, who oversaw the Bishop Tuttle Training School, an early school of social work in the South, also located at St. Augustine’s, erected and funded by the National Women’s Auxiliary.
To encourage the telling of our history, we have occasionally held special programs at our annual conventions, and since 2012, we have regularly held annual “History Days” throughout the diocese. Papers and programs from these occasions are posted here, and we are always adding new material.
We hope you will find these offerings useful in broadening and deepening your understanding of our diocesan heritage.
-The Rev. N. Brooks Graebner, Historiographer
HISTORIOGRAPHER & ARCHIVIST

The Rev. Brooks Graebner, Ph.D.
Historiographer

The Rev. Brooks Graebner, Ph.D.
Historiographer
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Brooks’ interest in church history began as an undergraduate at the University of Virginia. He continued his studies at Duke, earning his Ph.D. in 1984. While at Duke, he served as organist at St. Luke’s, Durham, joined the Episcopal Church, and entered the ordination process. From 1986 to 1990, he served as assistant to the rector at St. Peter’s, Charlotte, and from 1990 to 2017, as rector of St. Matthew’s, Hillsborough. Retired from full-time parish ministry, he and his wife, Chris, now live in Burlington. Brooks has taught church history in the deacon formation program since 1987; he was first appointed diocesan historiographer in 2007.

Lynn Hoke
Archivist
Lynn Hoke
Archivist
919-600-5306
EMAIL
A native of Oklahoma, Lynn majored in English at SMU and earned a M.A. in Soviet Studies from Harvard. Before moving to Raleigh in 2004, she helped raise two sons, played in a team tennis league, researched history for various Episcopal Church congregations, produced an 8-hour history documentary for the city of Amarillo, learned about archives “on the job” at several places and gained a wealth of knowledge about The Episcopal Church while on the bishop’s staff at the Diocese of New York.
Since beginning archival processing here in 2007, Lynn has also collaborated closely with our historiographer, the Rev. Brooks Graebner. They respond to various research requests and host annual diocesan History Days to highlight people or institutions from a particular historical era. They also offer history-focused exhibits at our diocesan conventions. Lynn particularly likes working with church members and clergy to promote “history keeper” teams around this diocese. She enjoys reading, quilting, watching PBS, gathering with family, being with friends and participating actively at Church of the Good Shepherd, Raleigh.
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