Edmund Calamy IV
Rev. Edmund Calamy IV B.D. (c. 1697 in London – 1755) was an English dissenting minister, the eldest son of the historian Edmund Calamy (1671–1732) by his first wife, Mary Watts. He was known as "a gentleman remarkable for his humanity, and ever employed in works of beneficence and charity."[1]
Career
After passing through Westminster School, Calamy, with Oxford and Cambridge being closed to Dissenters, entered the Edinburgh University in 1714. He graduated M.A. on 15 June 1717, eight years after the University had awarded its first-ever DD to his father.[2] From Edinburgh he went to Leiden University, where he entered 29 September 1717. For some time he assisted his father at Westminster, but in 1726 he was chosen to succeed Clark Oldisworth, as assistant to the pastor of the presbyterian congregation in Crosby Square, Benjamin Grosvenor. He was a member of the presbyterian board (1739–48), and a trustee of Dr. Williams's Foundations from 1740 till his death. In 1749 Grosvenor resigned his charge, owing to advancing years, and simultaneously Calamy retired from the ministry. He died on 13 June 1755, and was buried on 17 June in the chancel of St Mary Aldermanbury. Three years later his library was sold at the Exeter Exchange.[3][4]
Family
His son Edmund (b. 18 May 1743 - d. 12 May 1816), who entered Warrington Academy in 1761 as a divinity student, removed to Cambridge in 1763, and became a barrister of Lincoln's Inn. He was a member of the presbyterian board, and a Williams' trustee (1784–1812). Thomas Emlyn of London, barrister (grandson of Thomas Emlyn, whose unitarian views E. Calamy, D.D., had controverted), by will dated 20 July 1796 left lands at Syddan, County Meath, to ‘Edmond Calamy, Esq., senior.’ In 1812 the barrister left London and died four years later at Alphington, near Exeter, aged seventy-three.
Grandchildren
The oldest grandson of Edmund Calamy IV, also called Edmund, died 27 August 1850, aged seventy. His younger grandson, Michael, the last of the direct Calamy line, lived a very secluded life at Exeter, in a house filled with the family books and papers. He was educated for the ministry at Wymondley College, and under John Jervis at Lympstone, and was always called reverend, but it is not known that he ever was ordained or held any charge. Occasionally he preached for the unitarians, at Exeter and Topsham. He is the author of hymn 93 in the supplement (1823) to Andrew Kippis's collection. He died unmarried, at Baring Crescent, Exeter, on 3 January 1876, aged eighty-five.[5]
References
- Dictionary of National Biography. London: Smith, Elder & Co. 1885–1900. .
Notes
- London Magazine: Or, Gentleman's Monthly Intelligencer, Volume 24; C. Ackers, 1755, p. 301
- Edinburgh University Gallery of Benefactors
- List of Catalogues of English Book Sales 1676–1900 now in the British Museum; (London 1915); p. 067.
- "The Proprietor of Dr. Calamy's". The Public Advertiser. 8 July 1758. p. 1. Retrieved 16 April 2017 – via Newspapers.com.
- Freedom After Ejection, p.228, edited by Alexander Gordon, M.A, Manchester University Press, 1917.
- Attribution