Taylor, Nathaniel (2)
Taylor, Nathaniel (1)
an English clergyman was assistant minister in Westminster in 1683, and appointed pastor of a congregation at Salter’s Hall in 1695. He died in 1702, at the age of about forty. He published, Sermons (Lond. 1688, 4to): Funeral Sermon (1691, 4to): Preservative against Deism (1698, 4to): Funeral Sermon (1699, 4to): Discourse of Faith in Jesus Christ, etc. (1700, 4to): Dr. William Sherlock’s Case and Letter of Church Communion, etc., Considered (17028vo): Practical Discourses (1703, 8vo). See Allibone. Dict. of Brit. and Amer. Authors, s.v.
Fuente: Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature
Taylor, Nathaniel (2)
a Congregational minister, was born at Danbury, Conn., Aug. 27, 1722 (O.S.), He graduated at Yale College in 1745, and was ordained pastor, June 29, 1748, at New Milford, Conn., where he remained until his death, Dec. 9,1800. For twenty-sit years he was one of the Yale College board of trustees. His only publications were two occasional Sermons. In 1759 be was chaplain, under Col. N. Whiting, at and around Crown Point and Ticonderoga. See Sprague, Annals of the Amer. Pulpit, 1, 467.