# Richard Claridge

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{{Short description|English Anglican priest and Quaker convert}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=September 2019}}
'''Richard Claridge''' (1649 – 28 April 1723) was an English Anglican priest and [Quaker](/source/Quaker) convert.

==Life==
The son of William Claridge of [Farnborough](/source/Farnborough%2C_Warwickshire), [Warwickshire](/source/Warwickshire), he was educated at Farnborough grammar school. In 1666 he became a student at [Balliol College, Oxford](/source/Balliol_College%2C_Oxford), moving two years later to [St. Mary Hall](/source/St._Mary_Hall). While at the university he gained the reputation of being an "orator, philosopher, and Grecian". He graduated B.A. in 1670, and in the same year was ordained a deacon, being licensed to the curacy of [Wardington](/source/Wardington).<ref name="DNB">{{cite DNB|wstitle=Claridge, Richard|volume=10}}</ref>

Two years later Claridge was ordained priest, and in the following year was presented to the living of [Peopleton](/source/Peopleton) in [Worcestershire](/source/Worcestershire). He was there for nearly twenty years, and most of the time kept a grammar school. In 1689 a sermon by [Richard Baxter](/source/Richard_Baxter) made him dissatisfied with [episcopacy](/source/episcopacy), and a visit to London, during which he attended nonconformist services and inquired into church customs, increased this distaste; but he retained his living till 1691. [Joseph Besse](/source/Joseph_Besse), his biographer, states that he then became a [Baptist](/source/Baptist).<ref name="DNB"/>

In 1692 Claridge was appointed preacher at the Bagnio, a Baptist meeting-house in Newgate Street, London, and shortly afterwards opened a school in Clerkenwell. Two years later, becoming dissatisfied with Baptist doctrines, he resigned his appointment, and in 1696 joined the [Society of Friends](/source/Society_of_Friends), being accepted a minister during the following year.<ref name="DNB"/> In 1701 he disputed with [Benjamin Keach](/source/Benjamin_Keach) in a coffee house, [Christopher Meidel](/source/Christopher_Meidel) supporting him on the Quaker side.<ref>{{cite ODNB|id=18514|title=Meidel, Christopher|first=David J.|last=Hall}}</ref> In 1702, while a schoolmaster at [Barking](/source/Barking%2C_London), he opposed a [church rate](/source/church_rate) and was excused from paying it; but for the next collection his goods were distrained.<ref name="DNB"/>

In 1707 Claridge moved to [Tottenham](/source/Tottenham) and opened a school, shortly after which an ecclesiastical suit was begun against him for keeping a school without a license. The prosecution was dropped, only to start up a few years later (1708), when a verdict was given against him for £600, he appealed to the [court of king's bench](/source/Court_of_King's_Bench_(England)), and the fine reduced to £4. During the same year his goods were distrained for tithes. In 1714, when a bill was before parliament to prevent the growth of schism, particularly intended to suppress [dissenting academies](/source/dissenting_academies), Claridge opposed it and wrote tracts to show that it would be oppressive. When the bill became law, however, he made the declaration it required.<ref name="DNB"/>

For the rest of his life Claridge was mainly involved with the affairs of the Society of Friends. He died of a rapid decline in his 74th year, and was buried in the Quaker burial-ground at [Bunhill Fields](/source/Bunhill_Fields).<ref name="DNB"/>

==Works==
Claridge's major works were:<ref name="DNB"/>
* ''A Defence of the present Government under King William and Queen Mary'', 1689. 
* ''A Second Defence of the present Government'', 1689. 
* ''A Looking-glass for Religious Princes'', 1691. These were written while he was rector of Peopleton. 
* ''The Sandy Foundation of Infant Baptism shaken, or an answer to a Book entituled "Vindicæ Fœderis,"'' 1695. Written while he was a Baptist; the further works belong to the period during which he was a Quaker. 
* ''Mercy covering the Judgment-seat and Life and Light triumphing over Death and Darkness'', 1700. 
* ''Lux Evangelica attestata, or a further Testimony to the sufficiency of the Light within'', 1701. 
* ''Melius Inquirendum, or an answer to a Book of Edward Cockson. M.A., and Rector, as he styles himself of Westcot Barton'', 1706. 
* ''The Novelty and Nullity of Dissatisfaction, or the Solemn Affirmation defended'', 1714 (reprinted with alterations 1715). 
* ''Tractatus Hierographicus, or a Treatise of the Holy Scriptures'', 1724. 
* ''A Plea for Mechanick Preachers, shewing, first, that the following of a Secular Trade or Employment is consistent with the office of a gospel Minister; secondly, that Human Learning is no essential qualification for that service'', 1727.

Claridge answered Richard Allen's ''A Brief Vindication from Dr. Russel's Animadversions'' (1696) for [William Russel](/source/William_Russel_(minister)),<ref>{{cite ODNB|id=24297|title=Russel, William|first=Michael|last=Davies}}</ref> and wrote an epistle for ''The Enormous Sin of Covetousness Detected'' (1708) by [William Crouch](/source/William_Crouch_(Quaker)) 
<ref>{{cite ODNB|id=6816|title=Crouch, William|first=Richard L.|last=Greaves}}</ref> His posthumous works were collected and published with a memoir prefixed in 1726 under the title of ''The Life and Posthumous Works of Richard Claridge, being memoirs and manuscripts relating to his experiences and progress in religion: his changes of opinion and reasons for them''.<ref name="DNB"/> 
 
==Notes==
{{reflist}}
 
'''Attribution'''<!--Please do not reformat, for the sake of those using screen-readers-->

{{DNB|wstitle=Claridge, Richard|volume=10}}

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{{DEFAULTSORT:Claridge, Richard}}
Category:1649 births
Category:1723 deaths
Category:17th-century English Anglican priests
Category:English Baptists
Category:English Quakers
Category:Dissenting academy tutors
Category:Burials at Bunhill Fields
Category:Alumni of Balliol College, Oxford
Category:Alumni of St Mary Hall, Oxford
Category:People from Warwickshire (before 1974)
Category:Date of birth unknown

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Adapted from the Wikipedia article [Richard Claridge](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Richard_Claridge) by Wikipedia contributors ([contributor history](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Richard_Claridge?action=history)). Available under [Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International](https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/). Changes may have been made.
