William Cradock (b Wolverhampton 28 June 1741 - d Edinburgh 1 May 1793) was an Irish Anglican priest in the 18th-century. [1]
Cradock was educated at Shrewsbury School and St John's College, Cambridge. [2] He was Archdeacon of Kilmore from 1770 until 1775; and Dean of St Patrick's Cathedral, Dublin from then until his death. [3]
Robert William Henry Maude (1784–1861) was an Anglican priest in Ireland in the nineteenth century.
Anthony Martin was an Anglican priest in Ireland during the first half of the 17th-century.
Venn Eyre was Archdeacon of Carlisle from 2 March 1756 until his death on 18 May 1777.
Waller de Montmorency was an Anglican priest in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, most notably Archdeacon of Ossory from 1911 until his death.
Francis George le Poer McClintock was Dean of Armagh from 1908 until his death.
Francis Walter Flack was an Anglican priest in the last two decades of the nineteenth century and the first three of the Twentieth, most notably Archdeacon of Port Elizabeth from 1919 until his death.
Samuel Freeman was dean of Peterborough from 1691 until his death.
The Rt. Rev. Thomas Moigne was an Anglican bishop in Ireland.
John Jebb was an Irish Anglican priest in the second half of the 18th century.
John Pulling was a British academic.
William Buckenham was a 16th-century priest and academic.
Edmund Stubb was a priest and academic at the end of the 15th century and the beginning of the 16th.
John Barly, D.D. was a priest and academic at the end of the 15th century and the beginning of the 16th.
John Hume (1743–1818) was a Dean of the Church of Ireland.
John Murray was an Anglican priest in Ireland in the eighteenth century.
Charles Talbot Blayney, 8th Baron Blayney was an Anglican priest in Ireland in the eighteenth century.
Arthur Pomeroy, D.D. was an 18th-century Anglican priest in Ireland.
Eyton Butts was an Anglican priest in the 18th century.
John Jaumard was Anglican priest in Ireland in the mid 18th century.
Robert Openshawe was a priest in Ireland.