John Waugh (bishop)

John Waugh (1656–1734) was an English clergyman, bishop of Carlisle from 1723.

John Waugh

Life

He was born in Appleby,[1] and entered The Queen's College, Oxford in 1679. He became a Fellow there in 1688, and a Proctor in 1695. He was rector of St. Peter's, Cornhill in 1704, and subsequently became a royal chaplain, canon of Lincoln in 1718, and dean of Gloucester in 1720.[2] He was promoted as bishop of Carlisle in 1723. He died on 29 October 1734, at the London residence in Queen's Square, and was buried in St. Peter's, Cornhill.

His son John Waugh became Dean of Worcester in 1751.[3]

gollark: There is apparently lobbying by TurboTax which FORCES the government to not be helpful wrt. taxes.
gollark: There seems to be a lot of arguing over having the federal government do or not do things to them based on ~zero actual evidence and lots of emotional appeals.
gollark: Oh, and the way you have to manually "file" taxes sounds bad.
gollark: Also whatever America is doing with guns.
gollark: Well, to clarify, I find many of the things the *federal government* does bee. Such as basically everything involving the NSA and its border control.

References

  • John Richard Magrath, The Queen's college vol. 2 (1921). p. 116.
  • Mark Noble, James Granger, A biographical history of England vol. 3, p. 90.
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