194 



HISTORY OF THE COUNTY OF WESTCHESTER. 



ration occurs on the iSth of June following. 



The present glebe was purchased by the vestry in 1794. Upon it a 

 neat parsonage has been erected. 



The first delegates from this parish to the Diocesan Convention in 

 1785, were Mr. William Miller and Mr. Alexander Hunt. 



Instit. or Call, 



Rectors, 



Vacated By, 



A.D. 1702, 



Rev. 



A.D. 1704, 



Rev. 



January, 1709, 



Rev. 



1719, 



Rev. 



1720, 



Rev. 



4 June 1722, 



Rev. 



1726, 



Rev. 



1746, 



Rev, 



1 July, 1763, 



Rev. 



27 Au?. 1765, 



Rev. 



1777, 



Rev. 



Sept. 1787, 



Rev. 



Nov. 1790, 



Rev. 



1793, 



Rev. 



Nov. 1796, 



Rev. 



An-. 1797, 



Rev. 



April, 1801, 



Rev. 



1809, 



Rev. 



1822, 



Rev. 



1830, 



Rev. 



1832, 



Rev. 



Aug., 1S34, 



Rev. 



May, 1849, 



Rev. 



May, 1859, 



Rev 



Nov. 1864, 



Rey. 



June 1873, 



Rev. 



Thomas Pritcuard, Clericus, 



George Muirson, Clericus, 



CnRisTOPnER Bridge, M.A., Cler.« 



Me. Barclay, Clericus, 



Thomas Poyer, Clericus, 



Robert Jenney, Clericus, b 



James Wetmore, Clericus, 



JosEPn Lamson, Clericus, 



Ebenezer Puxderson, Clericus. 



Ephraim Avery, Clericus, 



Isaac Hunt, Clerius, 



Richard C. Moore, Presb., 



David Foote, Presb., 



John J. Sands, Presb. 



George Ogilvie, Presb., 



Samuel Haskell, Presb., 



Evan Rogers, Presb., 



Samuel Haskell, Presb., 



William Thompson, Presb., 



John M. Forbes, Presb., 



William M. Carmichael, Presb., 



Peter S. Chauncey, Presb., 



Ed. C. Bull, 



John Campbell White, 



Reese F. Alsop, 



Chauncey B. Brewster, present 



death. 



resig. 



death, 

 resig. 



death. 



11 



resig. 



death. 



resig. 

 death. 



resig. 

 death. 



rosig. 

 death. 



resig. 



incumbent. 



a The following obituary notice of Mr. Bridge, is from the Boston newspaper of June 1st 

 to 8th, 1719 : " We have au account from Rye, in the government of New York, of the death 

 of the Bev. Mr. liridge. M. A , a Presbyter of the Church of England, and minister of the 

 gospel at that place, who died on Saturday, the 23d of May, last. He was formerly, for many 

 years together, one of the ministers of the Church of England, in Boston, a religious and 

 worthy man, a very good scholar, aud a fine grave preacher. His performances in the pulpit 

 were solid, judicious and profitable ; his conversation was agreeable and improving, and 

 though a strict Churchman in his principles, yet of great respect and charity to dissenters, 

 and much esteemed by them. lie was bred at the University of Cambridge, in England, and 

 was about forty-eight years of age when he died, very much lamented.'' Extracted from 

 Greenwood's History 01 King's Chapel. 



b This gentleman was the son of Archdeacon Jenny, of Wanney town, in the north of Ire- 

 laud. See BJflt of Narraganset church by Wilkins Updike. 



c Mr. Punderson graduated at Yale College in 1726, and was afterwards ordained 0. Congre- 

 ga'ional minister over the second church in Groton. In 1732 he rune into the KHscopal 

 church, and crossed the Atlantic to be ordained. On his return. he reorganized a cliurcl: at the 

 village of Poquetannuc,in North Groton, in 173S, which has ever Bince existed, Ac. Mr. Pun- 

 derson was for some years an Itinerant missionary of the "Society for the Propagation of 

 the Gospel," from 1710 to 1750. In 1753-4 he was settled missionary in the towns of Guilford. 

 >ew Haven and Bradford." Ibid. 



