- John Stoughton
John Stoughton (
November 18 ,1807 -October 24 ,1897 ), EnglishNonconformist divine, was born atNorwich .His father was an Episcopalian, his mother a member of the
Religious Society of Friends . Stoughton was educated atNorwich Grammar School , and, after an interval of legal study, atHighbury Congregational College . In 1833 he became minister at Windsor, in 1843 atKensington ; in 1856 he was elected chairman of theCongregational Union . From 1872 to 1884 he was professor of historical theology inNew College, Hampstead . He died atEaling on the 24th of October 1897.Stoughton was no controversialist, but did a good deal of sound Fact|date=February 2007 historical work which was published in:
*"Church and State 1660-1663" (London, 1862)
*"Ecclesiastical History of England 1640-1660" (4 vols, London, 1867-1870)
*"Religion in England under Queen Anne and the Georges" (2 vols, 1878)
*"Religion in England from 1800 to 1880" (2 vols, 1884)He contributed an account of Nonconformist modes of celebrating theLord's Supper to the ritual commission of 1870, arranged a conference on co-operation betweenAnglicans and dissenters (presided over by Archbishop Tait) in 1876, was one of Dean Stanley's lecturers inWestminster Abbey and a pall-bearer at his funeral. He was elected to theAthenaeum Club in 1874 on the nomination ofMatthew Arnold .Besides the books already mentioned he wrote a number of more popular works, among which "Homes and Haunts of Luther" (1875), "The Italian Reformers" (1881), and "The Spanish Reformers" (1883) are conspicuous. His "Recollections of a Long Life" (1894) furnish interesting autobiographical material.----
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