- Samuel Hammond (minister)
Samuel Hammond, D.D. (died
10 December 1665,Hackney ), was a Church of England minister, and later a nonconformist.Biography
Hammond is said to have been a ‘butcher's son of
York ’,cite web | last =Bayne | first =Ronald | title =Hammond, Samuel, D.D. (d 1665), nonconformist divine| work =Dictionary of National Biography Vol. XXIV | publisher =Smith, Elder & Co. | date =1890 | url =http://www.oxforddnb.com/templates/olddnb.jsp?articleid=12162 | accessdate = 2008-06-08 ] although the "Oxford Dictionary of National Biography" notes no butchers of his surname on the lists of freemen of that city.cite web | last =Sheils | first =William Joseph | title =Hammond, Samuel (d. 1665), clergyman and ejected minister| work =Oxford Dictionary of National Biography | url =http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/articleHL/12162 | accessdate = 2008-06-08 ]When at
King's College, Cambridge , he wasservitor to Dr. Samuel Collins (1576–1651), professor of divinity at Cambridge, and by the Earl of Manchester's interest obtained a fellowship in Magdalene College. He created a great impression in the university by his preaching in St. Giles's Church, and obtained many pupils and followers. SirArthur Hesilrigge took him into the north of England as his chaplain, and he settled for some time as minister inBishopwearmouth , but moved from there to Newcastle. An order of the common council, dated 5 November 1652, appointed him as preacher at St. Nicholas Church, Newcastle, on Sunday and lecturer on Thursday, at a salary of £100.While at Newcastle Hammond was concerned in the examination and exposure of an impostor named Thomas Ramsay. This man's frauds were exposed in a tract entitled "A False Jew: or a Wonderful Discovery of a Scot, baptized at London for a Christian, circumcised at Rome to act a Jew, rebaptized at Hexham for a Believer, but found out at Newcastle to be a Cheat". The dedicatory epistles are signed by Tho. Weld, Sam. Hammond, Cuth. Sidenham, and Wil. Durant. The tract contains a second title-page and pagination, which is the "Declaration and Confession" published by the impostor under the name of Joseph ben Israel. The Baptist minister of
Hexham , Thomas Tillam, supposed himself unfairly treated in this pamphlet, and replied to it by"‘Banners of Love displayed …; or an Answer to a Narrative stuffed with Untruths, by four Newcastle Gentlemen". Hammond also helped to write a tract attacking theQuakers , entitled "The Perfect Pharise, under Monkish Holines, opposing the Fundamental Principles of the Doctrine of the Gospel, … manifesting himself in the Generation of men called Quakers". Hammond's name comes third among five Newcastle ministers who sign this tract. An introductory epistle ‘to the Reader’ by Hammond appears in a book called "God's Judgements upon Drunkards, Swearers, and Sabbath-Breakers".At the Restoration he was ejected from his charge at Newcastle, and retired to
Hamburg as minister to the society of merchants there. Lord-Chancellor Hyde objected to renew the charter of the society of merchants, which was nearly expired, if they retained Hammond, and he was compelled to leave. He went first toStockholm , where a merchant named Cutler befriended him. The historian Edmund Calamy mentions with praise a letter from Stockholm as having ‘something of the spirit and style of the martyrs,’ though it was apparently never printed. Hammond then proceeded toDanzig , and finally toLondon , taking up his abode inHackney . He died on 10 December 1665.References
Notes
*DNB
External links
*worldcat id|lccn-nr94-41716
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