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William Blackmore (minister) : ウィキペディア英語版
William Blackmore (minister)

William Blackmore (died 1684) was an English ejected minister.
==Life==
Blackmore came of an Essex family, and was the second son of William Blackmore of London, a member of the Fishmongers' Company, whose elder son, Sir John Blackmore, knight, was in the confidence of Oliver Cromwell, and became governor of St. Helena after the Restoration. William was educated at Merchant Taylors' School and Lincoln College, Oxford, and graduated M.A. there, although he is not mentioned by Anthony Wood.〔E. C. Vernon, 'Blackmore, William (1616–1684)', Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004; online edn, Jan 2008 (accessed 7 Feb 2011 ).〕
Having been ordained deacon he was appointed in December 1645 to the rectory of Pentlow, Essex, sequestered from Edward Alston. On 1 September 1646 his resignation of Pentloe was accepted by the committee for plundered ministers, and he moved to London, and became curate to Thomas Coleman ('Rabbi' Coleman, who died March 1647) at St. Peter's, Cornhill. He was ordained presbyter by the Fourth London Classis on 20 April 1647, but did not take the covenant, and was duly presented to the rectory of St. Peter's by the corporation of London on 13 May 1656, after the death in 1655 of William Fairfax, D.D., sequestered in August 1643.
On 1 December 1646 the London presbyterians published a defence of their system, ''Jus Divinum Regiminis Ecclesiastici; or the Divine Right of Church Government'' of which Blackmore wrote the part relating to ordination. William Maxwell Hetherington (''History of the Westminster Assembly'' p. 288) describes the book as 'the most complete and able defence of presbyterian church government that has yet appeared.' In 1648 Blackmore was one of the scribes to the London provincial assembly. He signed (probably on 20 January 1649) the presbyterian remonstrance to Oliver Cromwell on the meditated death of the king. He was one of the thirteen clergy arrested on a charge of complicity in Christopher Love's plot in 1651; having been freed through the influence of his brother Sir John, he rendered assistance to Love during his trial.
In 1662 Blackmore seceded with the nonconformists, and retired to Essex, where he lived on his ample means and gathered a small congregation. In April 1672 he was licensed as "a presbyterian teacher in his own house" in Hornchurch, near Romford. He died at Hare Street, a hamlet within a mile of Romford, in 1684, and was buried at Romford on 18 July.

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