Timothy Thurscross, DD was Archdeacon of Cleveland from 1619 to 1635.
Thurcross was educated at Magdalen College, Oxford. [1] He became a Canon of York in 1622; Vicar of Kirkby Moorside in 1625; Archdeacon of Cleveland in 1635; and Fellow of Eton College in 1669. He died in the parish of St. Sepulchre's, City of London in November in 1671.
Richard Baylie was twice President of St John's College, Oxford, twice Vice-Chancellor of Oxford University, Archdeacon of Nottingham and Dean of Salisbury.
Richard Rawlins was Bishop of St David's between the years 1523 and 1536.
George Haliburton was a Scottish cleric and Jacobite. Haliburton received his education at St Salvator's College, St Andrews, obtaining a Master of Arts on 12 June 1652, and a Doctorate in Divinity in 1673.
John Hales was Bishop of Coventry and Lichfield (1459-1490). He was one of the Worthies of Devon of the biographer John Prince (d.1723).
John Eliot Southgate was Dean of York in the Church of England; holding this post from 1984 until 1994 when he was succeeded by Raymond Furnell.
Anthony Sparrow (1612–1685) was an English Anglican priest. He was Bishop of Norwich and Bishop of Exeter.
George Frederick Townley was the sixth Bishop of Hull in the modern era, serving from 1957 until 1965.
Richard Middleton was a Church of England clergyman and writer who served as Archdeacon of Cardigan and chaplain to Charles, Prince of Wales.
William Beale was an English royalist churchman, Master in turn of Jesus College, Cambridge and St John's College, Cambridge. He was subjected to intense attacks by John Pym from 1640, for an unpublished sermon he had given in 1635 supporting royal prerogative. According to Glenn Burgess, Pym's attention to Beale was because he exhibited a rare combination of Arminian or Laudian theological views with explicit political views tending to absolutism.
Michael Boyle, was Bishop of Waterford and Lismore.
John Warner was an English academic, cleric, and physician. He was the first Regius Professor of Physic at the University of Oxford, as well as the Vice-Chancellor of the University of Oxford and the Dean of Winchester.
Robert Cary (1615?–1688) was an English churchman, for a short while archdeacon of Exeter, known as a chronologist.
William Kexby MA was a late 14th-century Master of University College, Oxford, England.
Samantha Jayne Rushton is a British Anglican priest.
The Venerable Christopher John Hawthorn was Archdeacon of Cleveland from 1991 to 2001.
The Venerable Stanley Frederick Linsley was Archdeacon of Cleveland from 1965 until his death.
Thomas DodD.D. was an eminent Anglican priest in the second half of the 17th century.
Barnabas Long or Longe was Archdeacon of Cleveland from 1683 to 1685.
Henry Thurscross was Archdeacon of Cleveland from 1619 to 1635.
Robert Feild, DD was Archdeacon of Cleveland from 1675 until his death on 9 September 1680.