Abstract

America's First Chaplain: The Life and Times of the Reverend Jacob Duche. By Kevin J. Dellape. [Studies in Eighteenth-Century America and the Atlantic World.] (Bethlehem, PA: Lehigh University Press. 2013. Pp. xxii, 208. $75.00. ISBN 978-1-61146-143-5.)Jacob Duche, a member of a prominent Philadelphia merchant family and Anglican minister, is primarily remembered by historians for his eloquent prayer delivered at the opening session of the First Continental Congress in September 1774 in Philadelphia. Three years later his initial enthusiasm for the revolutionary cause had diminished and dramatically changed. He expressed his revised sentiments and an extensive and cogent plea in a letter to General George Washington. It is Duche's initial encounter with national affairs and his abrupt change of opinion that is the subject of this intensively and diligently researched and engagingly written book.A member of the first class of eight graduates of the College of Philadelphia (now the University of Pennsylvania) in 1757, Duche traveled to England the next year and was admitted as a Pensioner at Clare Hall in Cambridge University. His attendance was brief as he was ordained a deacon in the Church of England by Edmund Keene, bishop of Chester, on March 11, 1759. Returning promptly to Philadelphia, he was appointed an assistant minister at St. Peter's Church and quickly demonstrated an eloquent preaching style in the pulpit. Three years later he returned to London for ordination as a priest by Thomas Seeker, archbishop of Canterbury, in the chapel at Lambeth Palace on September 12, 1762. For the next twelve years, he honed his preaching manner in Philadelphia and earned deserved adulation from his congregation and the wider audience of the city's civic, educational, and religious leaders. Among the ranks of local preachers he was the obvious candidate to invite to open the First Continental Congress session in September 1774, with a petition for divine guidance in the assembly's proceedings.The delegate charged to recruit Duche to open the Congress with a prayer was the sly, scheming, Massachusetts radical political leader and strategist Samuel Adams, who had his own agenda for the meetings and was no friend of the Church of England in New England. In a series of newspaper articles published in the Boston Gazette newspaper in 1768 he had honed his attack on the Anglican Church. Adams raised anew the condemnation of the presence of the English Church and episcopacy in the region that was launched by Increase Mather in the 1680s and recited regularly by subsequent generations of Congregational Church leaders. …

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