Tripti Joshi (Editor)

John Trenchard (writer)

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Name
  
John Trenchard

Died
  
December 1723

Role
  
Writer

Education
  
Trinity College, Dublin

Books
  
Cato's Letters, The English libertarian heritage

People also search for
  
Thomas Gordon, Walter Moyle, Ronald Hamowy, Rosemary Gallagher

John Trenchard (1662 – 17 December 1723) was an English writer and Commonwealthman.

Contents

Life

He belonged to the same Dorset family as the Secretary of State Sir John Trenchard. He was educated at Trinity College, Dublin, and became a lawyer. From 1722 until his death Trenchard was also a member of Parliament for Taunton.

John Trenchard died on 17 December 1723.

Works

As he inherited considerable wealth, Trenchard was able to devote the greater part of his life to writing on political subjects, his approach being that of a Whig and an opponent of the High Church party. With Walter Moyle he wrote An Argument, Shewing that a Standing Army is Inconsistent with a Free Government (1697) and A Short History of Standing Armies in England (1698 and 1731). He developed anticlerical lines of argument in The Natural History of Superstition (1709), and The Independent Whig, a weekly periodical published in 1720–21 with Thomas Gordon. From 1720 to 1723, Trenchard, again with Thomas Gordon, wrote a series of 144 weekly essays entitled Cato's Letters, condemning corruption and lack of morality within the British political system and warning against tyranny. The essays were published as Essays on Liberty, Civil and Religious, first in the London Journal and then in the British Journal. These essays became a cornerstone of the Commonwealthmen tradition.

References

John Trenchard (writer) Wikipedia