Honorific-Prefix: | Right Reverend |
Zachary Pearce | |
Bishop Of: | Bishop of Rochester |
Enthroned: | 1756 |
Ended: | 1774 |
Predecessor: | Joseph Wilcocks |
Successor: | John Thomas |
Other Post: | Bishop of Bangor, Dean of Westminster |
Birth Date: | 8 September 1690 |
Death Date: | 29 June 1774 |
Nationality: | English/British |
Religion: | Church of England |
Alma Mater: | Trinity College, Cambridge |
Zachary Pearce, sometimes known as Zachariah (8 September 1690 – 29 June 1774), was an English Bishop of Bangor and Bishop of Rochester. He was a controversialist and a notable early critical writer defending John Milton,[1] attacking Richard Bentley's 1732 edition of Paradise Lost the following year.
Pearce was born the son of Thomas or John Pearce, a distiller, in 1690 in the parish of St Giles, High Holborn. He first attended Great Ealing School[2] and then Westminster School. He graduated BA from Trinity College, Cambridge in 1713/4 and MA in 1717.
He was Fellow of Trinity College, Cambridge (1716–1720) [3] and chaplain to the Lord Chancellor, Thomas Parker, 1st Earl of Macclesfield.Parker became his patron, to whom Pearce dedicated an edition of the De oratore of Cicero. He became rector of Stapleford Abbotts, Essex (1719–1722) and St Batholemew, Royal Exchange (1720–1724) He was vicar of St Martin-in-the-Fields, London, in 1726.[4] He was then Dean of Winchester in 1739, Bishop of Bangor in 1748, and Bishop of Rochester in 1756. In 1761 he turned down the position of bishop of London.[3] He was Dean of Westminster (1756–1768).
He was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society in June 1720.[5] Towards the end of Isaac Newton's life, Pearce assisted him on chronology[6]
There is a monument to Pearce in the Church of St Peter and St Paul, Bromley.[7] He had married Mary, daughter of Benjamin Adams, a distiller, of Holborn.
The Miracles of Jesus Vindicated (1729) was written against Thomas Woolston. A Reply to the Letter to Dr. Waterland was against Conyers Middleton, defending Daniel Waterland; Pearce engaged in this controversy as a former student of William Wake.[8]
Other works were:
He also published sermons; he preached at the funeral of Sir Hans Sloane.[9]