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Presbyterians and ‘Partial Conformity’ in the Restoration Church of England

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  06 February 2009

Extract

In the early eighteenth century, the legacy of conflict among English Protestants found an outlet in the controversy over ‘occasional conformity’. During the years 1702–4, Tory backbenchers in the House of Commons introduced a series of bills designed to strengthen the Corporation and Test Acts (1661, 1673), which had required all officials of local government and holders of Crown appointments to adhere to the established Church of England. Since the passage of these legal tests, Protestant Nonconformists seeking office had circumvented their intent by taking communion in an Anglican parish as seldom as once a year, while attending meetings of their fellow dissenters for worship. So long as they procured a certificate of conformity from the minister, they were eligible for government positions, and dissenters had gained control of several parliamentary boroughs.

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Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1992

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References

1 Geoffrey, Holmes, Religion and Party in Late Stuart England, London 1975, 1518. A weakened version of the Occasional Conformity Bill passed in 1711.Google Scholar

2 CSPD 1682, 608–9.

3 Hill, Christopher, ‘Occasional Conformity’, in R. B. Knox (ed.), Reformation, Conformity and Dissent: essays in honour of Geoffrey Nuttall, London 1977, 199. The Independent Henry Jacob advocated occasional communion in 1616.Google Scholar

4 The Occasional Conformity Bill Proceedings, 1703, in G. M. Trevelyan (ed.), Select Documents for Queen Anne's Reign, 1702–1707, Cambridge 1929, 39–40.

5 The Compton Census of 1676: a critical edition, ed. Anne Whiteman (Records of Social and Economic History, new series x, 1986), p. xxxvii n. 71.

6 Ibid. 7.

7 Ibid. pp. xxxviii–ix, 26.

8 ‘Right from the beginning English Presbyterianism exhibited features which distinguished it sharply from the system established north of the Border’: Bolam, C. G., Goring, J., Short, H. L., and Roger, Thomas, The English Presbyterians, Boston–London 1968, 20. The use of inverted commas here and elsewhere is to underline the fact that these followers of Calvin did not adhere to a separate church government made up of synods and presbyteries. The Scottish polity was rejected by parliament in the 1640s and made little impact in England at large. Despite this, at the Restoration, ‘Presbyterian’ began to be used to designate Nonconformist clergy who could not be classified as ‘Congregational’ or ‘Baptist’. For the purposes of this article, congregations associated with such a minister will also be identified as Presbyterian.Google Scholar

9 Morrill, J., ‘The Stuarts’, in Kenneth O. Morgan (ed.), The Oxford History of Britain, New York 1988, 393.Google Scholar For the view that the Restoration led almost directly to the gulf between church and chapel, see Beddard, R. A., ‘The Restoration Church’, in J. R. Jones (ed.), The Restored Monarchy, 1660–1688, London 1979, 166.Google Scholar An exception to the view that the Restoration marked a watershed in religious history is voiced by Ronald, Hutton, The Restoration, Cambridge 1986, 288.Google Scholar

10 The requirements laid down by parliament and the Nonconformist response to them are well summarised by John Spurr, ‘The Church of England, Comprehension and the Toleration Act of 1689’, EHR civ (1989), 927–46 at pp. 929–32, 940.

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12 The ‘Act to retain the Queen's subjects in obedience’, 35 Eliz. 1 c. 1 (1593), already provided a penalty for illegal conventicling: Elton, G. R., The Tudor Constitution, Cambridge 1972, 447–50.Google Scholar The Act of Uniformity (1662), the Conventicle Acts (1664, 1670), and the Five Mile Act (1665), along with the Corporation Act (1661), have come to be known (inaccurately) as the ‘Clarendon Code’: Hutton, , Restoration, 235–6.Google Scholar

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15 Turner, G. Lyon, Original Records of Early Nonconformity, London 19111914, i. 33. For Postlethwaite and Crouch, see Matthews, Calamy Revised. Further information on the group is contained in J. Ramsbottom, ‘Puritan Dissenters and English Churches, 1630–1690’, unpubl. PhD diss., Yale 1987, 232–3.Google Scholar

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17 The most recent study of these successive proposals is found in Spurr, ‘Church of England’, passim. As late as 1688, Archbishop Sancroft urged consideration of changes in the Church's ‘constitution’ which might ‘bring in the honest & moderate dissenters, especially of the laity, to join in Communion with us’. Quoted in Spurr, ‘Church of England’, 938. Edmund Calamy estimated that ‘two–thirds of the Dissenters’, meaning the clergy, would have conformed to the Established Church if parliament had adopted the Prayer Book as revised by Convocation in 1689: Ernest, Payne, ‘Toleration and Establishment: I’, in G. Nuttall and O. Chadwick (eds), From Uniformity to Unity, London 1962, 260.Google Scholar

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20 Richardson, R. C., Puritanism in North–west England: a study of the diocese of Chester to 1642, Manchester 1972.Google Scholar Richardson observes (p. 179) that conventicles indicate the Puritan laity's capacity ‘to organize their own devotional life’ but asserts that ‘complete and deliberate separatism was rare’; Murray, Tolmie, The Triumph of the Saints: the separate Churches of London, 1616–1649, Cambridge 1977, 28.Google Scholar

21 For a detailed examination of these attitudes as they developed before the Civil War, see Collinson, ‘The English Conventicle’, esp. 245–52. As he notes, the small groups gathered by Puritan ministers during the Interregnum did not necessarily separate from the parish after the Restoration.

22 PRO, SP 29, 126/109, 15 July 1665; Lambeth Palace Library, Tenison MS 639, fos. 342–5. For other examples in Somerset, see Ramsbottom, ‘Puritan Dissenters’, 162–4, 168.Google Scholar

23 John, Corbet, A Discourse of the Religion of England, London 1677, 33–4.Google Scholar

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25 Quoted in Thomas, ‘Comprehension and Indulgence’, 205.

26 Quoted in Hill, ‘Occasional Conformity’, 215; Watts, M. R., The Dissenters, Oxford 1978, 248.Google Scholar

27 Quoted in Hill, ‘Occasional Conformity’, 217.

28 DWL, Baxter Letters, iii. 221–2V.

29 Baxter to Henry Osland, 29 June 1670, ibid. i. 25.

30 Ibid. ii. 210 (1673?).

31 Edmund, Calamy, A Continuation of the account of the ministers… who were ejected, London 1727, ii. 827.Google Scholar

32 Rel. Baxt. pt iii, 92; DWL Baxter Letters, iv. 232. In 1672, Baldwin was conducting a licensed Presbyterian meeting in the town: Bate, F., Declaration of Indulgence, 1672, Liverpool 1908, appendix vii, pp. liv–lv.Google Scholar

33 DWL, Baxter Letters, iv. 232.

34 Compton Census, ed. Whiteman, p. xxxvix.

35 English Historical Documents, VIII. 1660–1714, ed. A. Browning, Oxford 1958, 416; DWL, Baxter Letters, iv. 232.

36 Ibid. i. 25.

37 A conspicuous exception is the Presbyterian assembly at Coley chapel, membership in which ‘required a decision to associate with like–minded neighbors’. Several lists of members, in addition to a register–book, survive among the papers of the minister, Oliver Heywood. Yet, as Dr Sheils observes, the subsequent relationship of this covenanted group with the local parish church foreshadows the phenomenon of ‘occasional conformity’: Sheils, W.J., ‘Oliver Heywood and his congregation’, in Sheils and Wood, , Voluntary Religion, 267–8, 275–6.Google Scholar

38 Devon Record Office, PR 519, Complaints against the clergy, Blackawton.

39 The parish living was worth £700 per annum and included three churches. Dr Crouder, who succeeded the ejected minister in 1662, was a pluralist who failed to provide for the cure. ‘The Parish went to law with him, and he was at length turned out’: Calamy, , A Continuation of the account, ii. 895.Google Scholar

40 HWR.O 2638: 795, 61, 31 Oct. 1695.

41 Matthews, , Calamy Revised, 179.Google Scholar

42 HWRO, 2513: 794.011, fo. 237V; 2059: 759.02; 2289: 807, 12 (vi), 1690.

43 ‘Churchwardens’ Presentments, 1664–1768', ed. L. Lascelles and E. Guise–Berrow, Worcestershire Recusant xii (1968), 20.

44 HWRO, 2058:807, fos 13–13V; Bate, , Declaration, app. vii, p. v;Google ScholarMore, R., Abel Redivivus, London 1675, 71.Google Scholar

45 Kenyon, , Stuart Constitution, 408. Given these circumstances, it is difficult to agree with the judgment that ‘ the action of taking out licences made the Presbyterians ipso facto schismatics’: Bolam and Goring, ‘Cataclysm’, 8990.Google Scholar

46 Turner, , Original Records, i. p. xii.Google Scholar

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48 R. A. Beddard, ‘Vincent Alsop and the emancipation of Restoration dissent’, this JOURNAL xxiv (1973), 171, 182. TheTothill Street congregation under Alsop held monthly communion until 1682, when it was forced into hiding to avoid prosecution. In the smaller gatherings, communion was given fortnightly and the time of meeting was varied, a practice which, in Beddard's words, ‘facilitated the spread of occasional conformity’ at Anglican services. I am inclined to agree with this conclusion, though not with the imputation of separatism.

49 Matthews, , Calamy Revised, 179. After being driven out of Sedgley to another village, he preached privately at his house and then brought his hearers to the local church.Google Scholar

50 CSPD 1683, 425.

51 Matthews, , Calamy Revised, 468; CSPD 1683, 431. Sir William Portman specifically mentioned his ‘hopes of discovering that the Presbyterians at their meetings took a sacramental oath to be true to and defend their religion’.Google Scholar

52 Somerset Record Office, QS Rolls 103/26.

53 Rel. Baxt. pt iii, 207.

54 Lichfield Joint Record Office, B/V/1/68, 16 Oct. 1663.

55 Bowden was one of the Nonconformists found to be holding conventicles in Somerset in 1669: Matthews, , Calamy Revised, 62, 91;Google ScholarBate, , Declaration, app. vii. See also [White Kennett], Some Remarks on the Life, Death and Burial of Mr. Henry Cornish, London 1699, cited in Bishop Fell and Nonconformity, ed. Mary Clapinson (Oxfordshire Record Society, li, 1980), p. xvi.Google Scholar

56 ‘Churchwardens’ Presentments', Worcestershire Recusant xv (1970), 30–1. Ward was licensed in 1672 to keep a Congregational meeting at Eckington, near Pershore: Matthews, , Calamy Revised, 509;Google ScholarTurner, , Original Records, i. 525.Google Scholar

57 Staffordshire Record Office, QS/S, Epiphany 1670/1, no. 23.

58 Devon Record Office QS 74, 36/3.

59 Collyer to Francis Cooke, 2 Jan. 1670/1, Devon Record office, Basket A. 2467.

60 In addition to Budock and Mabe, both in Cornwall, Tregoss preached at Great Torrington, Devon: Matthews, , Calamy Revised, 491.Google Scholar

61 Five parishioners of Drayton also followed this habit: Bishop Fell and Nonconformity, Visitation Documents from the Oxford Diocese, 1682–1683, ed. Mary Clapinson (Oxfordshire Record Society, lii, 1980), 1–2, 14.

62 Bennett, G. V., ‘Conflict in the Church’, in G. Holmes (ed.), Britain After the Glorious Revolution, London 1969, 163.Google Scholar By 1715–1718, there were 1,238 Presbyterian, Independent and Baptist meetings recorded in the Evans list; the proportion that were Presbyterian meetings was about the same as in 1672: Watts, Michael R., The Dissenters, Oxford 1978, 248, 285.Google Scholar

63 Toleration Not to be Abused, 27–8.

64 Examples for 1690 are taken from the reports of the Common Fund, Presbyterian and Congregationalist, printed in Alexander, Gordon, Freedom After Ejection, 94–8;Google ScholarCumberland, A. G., ‘Protestant Nonconformity in the Black Country, 1662–1851’, unpubl. MA diss., Birmingham 1951, 30–1.Google Scholar

65 Broughton, B. to Edward, Verson, 24 Apr. 1664, SP 29, 97–31;Google ScholarMatthews, , Calamy Revised, 231; DWL, Lyon Turner MS 89.12 (extracts from the Act Book of Stafford Deanery).Google Scholar

68 Edward, Pearse, The Conformist's Fourth Plea for the Nonconformists, London 1683, 61–2.Google Scholar

67 DWL, Lyon Turner MS 89. 12, 26 Jan. 1665/6.

68 Anthony, Fletcher, ‘The enforcement of the Conventicle Acts, 1664–1679’, in W. J. Sheils (ed.), Persecution and Toleration (Studies in Church History xxi), London 1984, 235–46;Google ScholarTim, Harris, London Crowds in the Reign of Charles II, Cambridge 1987, 70–2, summarises the evidence for the capital. Ecclesiastical and civil prosecution of dissent in several other counties is discussed in Ramsbottom, ‘English Churches and Puritan Dissenters’, 81–92.Google Scholar

69 ‘A Late Surrey Chronicler’, ed. Hilary Jenkinson, Surrey Archaeological Collections xxvii (1914), 8–10. It is not surprising to learn that the minister at this conventicle, John Farroll (Farwell), regularly attended the Church of England himself: Matthews, , Calamy Revised, 192.Google Scholar

70 Palmer, S., The Nonconformists'Memorial, 1802, i. 524; Rel. Baxt. pt. iii, 92.Google Scholar

71 In 1665, the Lord Lieutenant of Worcestershire arrested Spilsbury, whom he termed ‘A Silenc'd minister, a preacher at Conventicles, and follow'd by great Numbers’: PRO SP 29, 143/36. For the prosecutions for not coming to church, see churchwardens’ presentments, HWRO, 2289: 807, 4 (v), and Act Book, xviii 1661–4, 2513: 794–011, fo. 222. Those cited in 1663 for ‘refusinge to joyne in Communion with the people of the Church of England’ included several inhabitants who would later form a Baptist church. Almost two dozen persons were also presented for standing excommunicate from the Church; these offenders were local Quakers: P. J. Wortley (ed.), Church Record Book, vol. I, 1670–1715 (Baptist Historical Society, London 1974), 80–6.Google Scholar

72 Bate, , Declaration, app. vii, p. liv; ‘Churchwardens'Presentments’, Worcestershire Recusant vi (1965), 31–2; HWRO, 2884: 802 (i), fos. 142–3.Google Scholar

73 Spilsbury was excommunicated and threatened with civil prosecution. With the help of the vicar of a nearby parish, he obtained absolution: HWRO, 2884: 802 (i), fo. 146; (ii), fo. 21.

74 Ibid. 2289: 807, 4 (v), 2 June 1684.

75 Watts, , Dissenters, 258; HWRO, Shirehall, QS constables–presentment, Michaelmas (Oct.), 1681: thirty–one popish recusants were named.Google Scholar

76 ‘Churchwardens’ Presentments', 30.

77 DWL, Lyon Turner MS 89. 16–18, extracts from State Papers.

78 Turner, , Original Records, i. 29.Google Scholar

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80 West Sussex Record Office, Ep II/9/27, fo. 17; 9/28, fos 29V, 48V–49, 88v, 96–98; Turner, , Original Records, iii. 398. The licence was for a‘Presbyterian’meeting under Edward Newton.Google Scholar

81 Bodleian Library, Tanner MS 148, fo. 3.

82 Ibid. West Sussex Record office, Ep II/10/4, fos. I–IV. Snatt had been curate of St Michael's and All Saints since at least September 1670.

83 Ibid. Ep I/15/1, Box 152, misc. court papers, 1673–4, examination of William Trigge on articles against Martin.

84 Ibid. Ep III/7/6, 1–7.

85 Ibid. QR/W, 161, 4–7; Ep III/7/5–6.

86 Carleton to Sancroft, 27 Feb. 1683/4, BL, Tanner MS 131, fo. 89; Lake to Sancroft, Tanner MS 30, fo. 16.

88 Lake to Sancroft, 18 Apr. 1687, ibid., fo. 9.

90 In 1673, Bishop Morley spoke of minimal concessions that would have ‘devided the Presbyterians from the rest of the Sectaries’: Spurr, ‘Church of England’, 933–6, at p. 936 n. 3.

91 Ibid. 944–5.

92 Occasional Conformity Bill Proceedings, in Trevelyan, Documents of Anne's Reign, 40.