Thomas Adam
{{For|Thomas Adam (MP)|Derbyshire (UK Parliament constituency)}}
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Thomas Adam (25 February 1701 – 31 March 1784) was a Church of England clergyman and religious writer.
Biography
He was born at Leeds, West Yorkshire on 25 February 1701: his father Henry Adam was a solicitor and town clerk of the Leeds Corporation, his mother Elizabeth, daughter of Jasper Blythman. They had six children, of whom Thomas was the third.{{cite web | last =Grosart | first =A. B. | title =Adam, Thomas (1701–1784), divine| work = Dictionary of National Biography Vol. I | publisher =Smith, Elder & Co. | year =1885 | url =http://www.oxforddnb.com/templates/olddnb.jsp?articleid=106 | accessdate = 2009-06-28}} {{DNBfirst|wstitle=Adam, Thomas}}{{acad|id=ADN720T|name=Adam, Thomas}}
Adam received his first education at Leeds Grammar School, then under Thomas Barnard; later he was transferred to Queen Elizabeth Grammar School, Wakefield. He matriculated at Christ's College, Cambridge in 1720, where he was for two years. He then moved to Hart Hall, Oxford, through the influence of Richard Newton. He took the degree of B.A., but took no further degree on account of certain scruples in Newton's book on "Pluralities". In 1724 he was presented, through the interest of an uncle, to the living of Winteringham, in the Lincolnshire (now North Lincolnshire). He was then under age ecclesiastically, and it was held for a year for him. Here he remained for 58 years, never wishing to change. His income rarely exceeded £200 per annum.
Works
Adam experienced an evangelical conversion around 1748.{{cite ODNB|id=106|first=D. Bruce|last=Hindmarsh|title=Adam, Thomas}} He published:
- Practical Lectures on the Church Catechism (1753, nine or ten editions), which influenced William Romaine.
- Evangelical Sermons
- Paraphrase and Annotations on the First Eleven Chapters of St. Paul's Epistle to the Romans.
- Paraphrase and Annotations on the Four Gospels (posthumously published and reprinted, 1837).
Adam's Posthumous Works (1786) were edited by James Stillingfleet (1741–1826), with his close clerical associates Joseph Milner and William Richardson of York.Isabel Rivers, William Law and Religious Revival: The Reception of A Serious Call, Huntington Library Quarterly Vol. 71, No. 4 (December 2008), pp. 633–649, at p. 639 note 30. Published by: University of Pennsylvania Press {{JSTOR|10.1525/hlq.2008.71.4.633}}{{cite ODNB|id=18792|first=D. Bruce|last=Hindmarsh|title=Milner, Joseph}} A selection of diary entries from these Posthumous Works, entitled Private Thoughts on Religion, is now the best-known work by Adam. Coleridge's annotated copy of this short volume from 1795 is in the British Library. Reginald Heber, Thomas Chalmers, and John Stuart Mill, and others have found it interesting.
Family
Adam married in 1730 Susan Cooke, daughter of James Cooke (died 1727), vicar of Roxby cum Risby nearby. She died in 1760. They had one daughter only, who died young.{{CCEd |type=person |id=87492 |name=Adam, Thomas |year1=1697 |year2=1727 |accessed=16 May 2020}}
Notes
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External links
{{wikiquote}}
- By Thomas Adam:
- [https://books.google.com/books?id=_zgPAAAAIAAJ Private thoughts on religion], 1824 edition with essay by Daniel Wilson
- [https://books.google.com/books?id=e-oOAAAAIAAJ The Works of the Rev. Thomas Adam, volume I], 1822 edition
- [https://books.google.com/books?id=AuoOAAAAIAAJ The Works of the Rev. Thomas Adam, volume III], 1822 edition
- [https://books.google.com/books?id=IE0EAAAAQAAJ An exposition of the four Gospels, volume II], 1827 edition
=Attribution=
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Category:18th-century English Anglican priests
Category:People educated at Leeds Grammar School
Category:People educated at Queen Elizabeth Grammar School, Wakefield