Samuel Pomfret 1650?-1722
Samuel POMFRET 1650?-1722
Biographical Note
Born at Coventry and apparently educated at Cambridge (though not recorded in the records there); he later attended the nonconformist academy of Ralph Button at Islington. He was chaplain to Sir William Dyer in the 1670s before becoming a presbyterian minister at Sandwich, Kent around 1677. He was imprisoned, but escaped, in the early 1680s and after some years of itinerant preaching he became minister to congregations at Winchester Street, London and in Houndsditch. He was popular, and noted for his piety and Calvinist principles.
Books
Pomfret's books were sold by retail sale in London, beginning 7 December 1730, along with those of his friend and fellow nonconformist minister Thomas Reynolds. No catyalogue survives, but the sale was advertised in the Daily Journal and Daily Post.
Sources
- Alston, R. C., Inventory of sale catalogues ... 1676-1800, St Philip, 2010.
- Mercer, M. J. "Pomfret, Samuel (1650?–1722), Presbyterian minister." Oxford Dictionary of National Biography.
[Category:Libraries Sold at Retail Sale]]