Thomas Drennan
Thomas Drennan (1696–1768) was an Irish Presbyterian minister active in advocating political and religious reforms.
Drennan graduated from the University of Glasgow, and served as Presbyterian minister in Holywood and in , Belfast, where he was installed in 1736 as a colleague of Samuel Haliday. He became sole minister of the congregation following Hailday's death in 1739. He was one of several Irish reformers who influenced Scottish Enlightenment philosopher Francis Hutcheson, during the latter's time as master of an academy in Dublin. Drennan's son, William Drennan, would become a famous physician, poet, and political radical. His daughter, Martha, married the United Irishman Samuel McTier. James Crombie became one of the ministers of First Presbyterian Church, Belfast following Drennan's death
References[]
- Kerby A. Miller; Arnold Schrier; Bruce D. Boling; David N. Doyle (2003). Irish immigrants in the land of Canaan: Letters and memoirs from colonial and revolutionary America, 1675-1815. Oxford University Press. p. 511. ISBN 0-19-504513-0.
- 1696 births
- 1768 deaths
- 18th-century Presbyterian ministers
- Alumni of the University of Glasgow
- Irish non-subscribing Presbyterian ministers
- Irish religious biography stubs