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  • Sept. 1, 1797
  • Page 70
  • OBITUARY.
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The Freemasons' Magazine, Sept. 1, 1797: Page 70

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Page 70

Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Obituary.

OBITUARY .

LATELY , at Clapham , Surrey , in his 73 d year , the Rev . Henry Venn , M . A . well known as the author of ' The Complete Duty of Man , ' and other religious publications . He was descended from ancestors who were clergymen , in a direct lirievfrom the time ofthe Reformation . _ The

sufferings of one of them , on account of his loyal attachment to the king during the civil wars , are particularly recorded in Walker's ' Sufferings of the Clergy . ' His father was rector of St . Antholin ' s , in London , a person of some note in his day , as a preacher , a man of learning , and a zealous friend to the church ,

in the cause of which he suffered much obloquy from the opposition , which , in conjunction with Bp . Gibson , he made to Dr . Bundle ' s advancement to a bishoprick , on account of a conversation in which the doctor had expressed sentiments of a deistical tendency respecting one of the principal histories of the . pid Testament . After his death , which took place in 1740 , a volume of his sermons and tracts was published

by his widow , the daughter of Mr . Ashton , who was executed for his adherence to the Jacobite cause , being detected in a plot with Lord Preston and others . Mr . Henry Venn was born at Barnes , in 1725 , and received his education partly under Dr . Pitman , at Market street , and partly under Mr .

Catcott , of Bristol ,- the author of an Hutchinsonian treatise on the Deluge . In 1742 lie was admitted of Jesus-col--lege , and proceeded to the degree of B . A . in 1745 and to that of M . A . in 1749 . There being no vacancy of a fellowship in his own college , the fellows of Queen ' s unanimously elected

him to one in their society ; of which lie continued a fellow till his marriage , 1757 , to a daughter of Dr . Bishop , of Ipswich , author of eight sermons preached at Lady Mover's lecture , in 1724 , and long celebrated at Cambridge for an excellent act which he kept for his doctor's degree . Dr . Bishop's memory was so retentive , that , after walking with a friend from Temple-bar to St . Paul's , he repeated to him , in their

exact order , the names of all the signs which then hung over almost every house . When Mr . V . married , he was settled at Clapham , in Surrey , to the curacy of which place he had been elected by the inhabitants . Here he contracted an intimate friendship with two characters of uncommon worth

, the late John Thornton , Esq . of that place , and Sir John Barnard , memoirs of whose life he afterwards published . In gratitude to the gentlemen of Clapham , from whom he had received many favours , and by whom he was highly respected , he published and dedicated to them a volume of sermons upon his

resigning the curacy of that parish , in 17 59 , upon his promotion to the vicarage of Huddersfield , in Yorkshire . In the very populous place in which he was now settled he laboured with unwearied assiduity , being constant , in season and out of season , in doing good to the souls committed to his charge and his memory will long be cherished with affection and veneration in that parish . His zeal , however , carried

him beyond his strength . By his earnest and frequent preaching he had , in ten years , materially injured his constitution ; and brought on a cough and spitting of blood , which rendered him incapable of officiating any longer in so extensive a sphere , He therefore accepted , in 1770 , the rectory of-Yelling ,

in Huntingdonshire , a Crown living , which was offered to him by ihe Lord Chief Baron Smythe , a friend of his , then one of the commissioners of the great seal . While he remained at Huddersfield he published ' The Complete Duty of Man' ( a book which has gone through seven large editions , including

those printed in America and Ireland ) , and ' An Essay on the Prophecies of Zacharias , ' besides several single sermons . He continued residing at Yelling till -December last , when his increasing infirmities compelled him to remo > e to Clapham , where the tender assiduities of hit children , and of numerous friends who loved him with extreme affection , contributed to sooth the languor of sickness and age .

“The Freemasons' Magazine: 1797-09-01, Page 70” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 29 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fmm/issues/fmm_01091797/page/70/.
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Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
Untitled Article 2
LONDON: Article 2
TO CORRESPONDENTS, &c. Article 3
BIOGRAPHICAL NOTICE OF MR. WILLIAM WHITE. Article 4
ADDENDA TO THE MEMOIR OF MR. THOMAS HULL, Article 5
ON THE PECULIAR EXCELLENCIES OF HANDEL'S MUSIC. Article 6
HISTORY OF THE SCIENCES FOR 1797. Article 7
CURSORY REMARKS ON SHAKSPEARE'S MEASURE FOR MEASURE. Article 10
THE COLLECTOR. Article 12
THE LIFE AND ADVENTURES OF PETER PORCUPINE; Article 18
A BRIEF SYSTEM OF CONCHOLOGY. Article 22
DESCRIPTION OF THE PEAK OF TENERIFFE. Article 26
ACCOUNT OF A REMARKABLE SLEEP-WALKER. Article 30
THE FREEMASONS' REPOSITORY. Article 34
OPINIONS CONCERNING MASONRY. WITH THE CHARACTER OP A TRUE FREEMASON. Article 36
A CHARGE Article 37
A VINDICATION OF MASONRY. Article 40
MASONIC INTELLIGENCE. Article 41
GRAND LODGE OF SCOTLAND. Article 41
REVIEW OP NEW PUBLICATIONS. Article 42
POETRY. Article 50
REPORT OF THE PROCEEDINGS OF THE BRITISH PARLIAMENT. Article 54
HOUSE OF COMMONS. Article 57
MONTHLY CHRONICLE. Article 62
OBITUARY. Article 70
LIST OF BANKRUPTS. Article 73
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Obituary.

OBITUARY .

LATELY , at Clapham , Surrey , in his 73 d year , the Rev . Henry Venn , M . A . well known as the author of ' The Complete Duty of Man , ' and other religious publications . He was descended from ancestors who were clergymen , in a direct lirievfrom the time ofthe Reformation . _ The

sufferings of one of them , on account of his loyal attachment to the king during the civil wars , are particularly recorded in Walker's ' Sufferings of the Clergy . ' His father was rector of St . Antholin ' s , in London , a person of some note in his day , as a preacher , a man of learning , and a zealous friend to the church ,

in the cause of which he suffered much obloquy from the opposition , which , in conjunction with Bp . Gibson , he made to Dr . Bundle ' s advancement to a bishoprick , on account of a conversation in which the doctor had expressed sentiments of a deistical tendency respecting one of the principal histories of the . pid Testament . After his death , which took place in 1740 , a volume of his sermons and tracts was published

by his widow , the daughter of Mr . Ashton , who was executed for his adherence to the Jacobite cause , being detected in a plot with Lord Preston and others . Mr . Henry Venn was born at Barnes , in 1725 , and received his education partly under Dr . Pitman , at Market street , and partly under Mr .

Catcott , of Bristol ,- the author of an Hutchinsonian treatise on the Deluge . In 1742 lie was admitted of Jesus-col--lege , and proceeded to the degree of B . A . in 1745 and to that of M . A . in 1749 . There being no vacancy of a fellowship in his own college , the fellows of Queen ' s unanimously elected

him to one in their society ; of which lie continued a fellow till his marriage , 1757 , to a daughter of Dr . Bishop , of Ipswich , author of eight sermons preached at Lady Mover's lecture , in 1724 , and long celebrated at Cambridge for an excellent act which he kept for his doctor's degree . Dr . Bishop's memory was so retentive , that , after walking with a friend from Temple-bar to St . Paul's , he repeated to him , in their

exact order , the names of all the signs which then hung over almost every house . When Mr . V . married , he was settled at Clapham , in Surrey , to the curacy of which place he had been elected by the inhabitants . Here he contracted an intimate friendship with two characters of uncommon worth

, the late John Thornton , Esq . of that place , and Sir John Barnard , memoirs of whose life he afterwards published . In gratitude to the gentlemen of Clapham , from whom he had received many favours , and by whom he was highly respected , he published and dedicated to them a volume of sermons upon his

resigning the curacy of that parish , in 17 59 , upon his promotion to the vicarage of Huddersfield , in Yorkshire . In the very populous place in which he was now settled he laboured with unwearied assiduity , being constant , in season and out of season , in doing good to the souls committed to his charge and his memory will long be cherished with affection and veneration in that parish . His zeal , however , carried

him beyond his strength . By his earnest and frequent preaching he had , in ten years , materially injured his constitution ; and brought on a cough and spitting of blood , which rendered him incapable of officiating any longer in so extensive a sphere , He therefore accepted , in 1770 , the rectory of-Yelling ,

in Huntingdonshire , a Crown living , which was offered to him by ihe Lord Chief Baron Smythe , a friend of his , then one of the commissioners of the great seal . While he remained at Huddersfield he published ' The Complete Duty of Man' ( a book which has gone through seven large editions , including

those printed in America and Ireland ) , and ' An Essay on the Prophecies of Zacharias , ' besides several single sermons . He continued residing at Yelling till -December last , when his increasing infirmities compelled him to remo > e to Clapham , where the tender assiduities of hit children , and of numerous friends who loved him with extreme affection , contributed to sooth the languor of sickness and age .

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