Thomas DeLaune

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Thomas DeLaune (d. 1685), was an Irish non-conformist writer known for running a grammar school and printing house.[1] He was born in Brinny, County Cork on an unknown date.[2] Protestant persecution forced him to flee to England where he met Edward Hutchinson, a Baptist minister and writer. Thomas would later marry his daughter Hannah. Thomas was a scholar, not considering himself to be a minister or lay preacher but entered into many religious debates. He would speak against Richard Baxter, Obadiah Wills, and Joseph Whiston on the subject of infant baptism. Thomas DeLaune would end up dying in prison in 1685. He was accused and found guilty of writing seditious material against the king and the Book of Common Prayer in January of 1684. Deprived of his income as a schoolmaster, his wife and two children would move to live near his prison in Newgate.[2] They would eventually suffer and die from undernourishment. Thomas died in Newgate, in prison, fifteen months after his incarceration. Thomas DeLaune would be considered a martyr for generations of Nonconformists.

List of works:

Books and articles written about DeLaune:
  • Delaune: The English Baptist Martyr (1870) by an American Baptist, Charles Thompson.
  • Thomas Delaune (ca.1635-1645-1685) by Andy Compton, in The British Particular Baptists - Vol. I Revised, edited by Michael A. G. Haykin and Terry Wolever
  • Thomas Delaune: The life and times of Ireland's first Baptist martyr by Andy Compton, in Occasional Publications edited Michael A. G. Haykin
  1. Andrews, H. (2009). Delaune, Thomas. Dictionary of Irish Biography. Retrieved 2024, from https://www.dib.ie/biography/delaune-thomas-a2517
  2. 2.0 2.1 Lewis, S. (2022). The Reception of Thomas Delaune's Plea for the Non-Conformists in England and America, 1684–1870. Church History, 91(1), 41–61. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0009640721002869