Susan Elizabeth Moxley was Anglican Bishop of Nova Scotia and Prince Edward Island, Canada. from 2007 to 2014.
Educated at the University of Western Ontario, she rose to become a professor at Dalhousie University. Ordained in 1985, she served at Hatchet Lake (Halifax), Terence Bay and St. Mark’s, Halifax. Elected suffragan bishop of Nova Scotia and PEI, in 2003 she became its diocesan in 2007. Ms. Moxley graduated from the University of Western Ontario (BA MA) and the University of Michigan (MA PhD) Atlantic School of Theology (MDiv).
Moxley is a part of Darlaston in the West Midlands. It was first developed during the early part of the 19th century when a handful of terraced houses were built to accommodate locals working in factories and mines and the area was created in 1845 out of land from Darlaston, Bilston and Wednesbury.
Moxley has been the subject of local headlines numerous times.
In May 1999, a semi-detached council house on Hughes Road was severely damaged when a disused mineshaft below the property collapsed causing the majority of the structure to collapse with it. As a result of the damage and weakened structure, the attached property also had to be demolished.
In January 2002, Walsall Council announces plans to demolish the 127-home estate around Harrowby Road (known as the Bradley Lodge estate when it was built by Bilston Council in the 1930s) due to mining subsidence, which already forced more than half of the estate's residents to move. By February 2004, just 20 families remained on the estate and the first properties were demolished. After July 2007 there was one resident still on the estate, who finally moved out in September 2013 more than a decade after the redevelopment of the estate was first planned, and more than six years after his last neighbour moved out.
Moxley is a word which has several meanings: