John Carter (priest)

John Carter was an Anglican priest.[1]

Carter was born in Luton and educated at Trinity College, Cambridge.[2] He was ordained on 19 September 1630. He was Rector of Settrington from 1641 to 1646; and Archdeacon of Chester from 1660[3] until his death.[4] A plaque on the wall of Settrington church details his death to be 28 February in either 1666, or 1667.[5][6]

Between 1644 and 1662, Carter was ejected (dispossed) from his living at Settrington; he was re-instated around the time of the Reformation.[5]

References

  1. ^ "Catalogue of the Harleian Manuscripts in the British Museum" p522: London; King George; 1808
  2. ^ "Carter, Lewis (CRTR623J)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
  3. ^ "History of the city of Chester, from its foundation to the present time : with an account of its antiquities, curiosities, local customs, and peculiar immunities; and a concise political history" Hemingway, J Chester' J. Fletcher; 1831 p326
  4. ^ Horn, Joyce M.; Smith, David M.; Mussett, Patrick (2004), Fasti Ecclesiae Anglicanae 1541–1857, vol. 11, pp. 45–47
  5. ^ a b Lawrence, N. A. H. (1985). Fasti parochiales. Vol. 5, Deanery of Buckrose. Leeds: Yorkshire Archaeological Society. p. 45. OCLC 181823463.
  6. ^ Dugdale, William (1917). Clay, John William (ed.). Dugdale's Visitation of Yorkshire, with additions volume III. Exeter: W. Pollard & Co. p. 441. OCLC 1042984708.