Tripti Joshi (Editor)

George Hamond

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Name
  
George Hamond


Books
  
The Case for Family Worship: An Answer to the Question, Upon What Scripture Grounds and Reasons May Family Worship Be Established and Enforced?

George Hamond (1620–1705) was an English ejected nonconformist minister.

Contents

Life

Hamond was educated at Exeter College, Oxford, and graduated M.A. He studied also (perhaps previously) at Trinity College, Dublin, where he attracted the notice of Archbishop James Ussher. His first known charge was the vicarage of Totnes, Devon, from which William Adams had been dispossessed during the Commonwealth. In 1660 he was admitted to the rectory of St. Peter's and vicarage of Trinity, Dorchester.

Hamond was ejected by the Uniformity Act of 1662, his successor being appointed on 30 June 1663. After the Royal Declaration of Indulgence of 1672, a Presbyterian meeting-house was built at Taunton, and Hamond was associated with George Newton as its minister. He also kept a boarding-school, to which several persons of rank sent their sons. The Taunton meeting-house was wrecked after Monmouth's rebellion (1685), and Hamond left London. Here he became colleague to Richard Steel at Armourers' Hall, Coleman Street, and on Steel's death (16 November 1692) sole pastor. In 1699 he succeeded William Bates as one of the Tuesday lecturers at Salters' Hall, and died in October 1705. His congregation was probably already extinct.

Works

Hamond published:

  • A Good Minister, 1693, a funeral sermon for Richard Steel, praised by Charles Bulkley.
  • A Discourse of Family Worship, 1694.
  • Also a sermon in The Morning Exercise at Cripplegate, vol. vi. (1690); and prefaces, appearing after his death, to Discourse of Angels, 1701, and Modest Enquiry into . . . Guardian Angel, 1702, both by Richard Sanders.

    References

    George Hamond Wikipedia