Annals of King's Chapel from the Puritan age of New England to the present day . Foxcroft, late Wife of FrancisFoxcroft, Esq., who died there July 4th,1721, In the 57th year of her age. Withan Addition, chiefly referring to herDeath: Also a Funeral Poem f theReverend Mr. John Dan/orth. Bj I 1 .[Thomas Foxcroft] One of the bereavedSons. Boston: 1721. The author, min-ister of the First Church, was intended io6 ANNALS OF KINGS CHAPEL. The angry feeling on funeral occasions was again wrote from the jail to the Bishop ofLondon, Oct. 26, 1689, of the death of MajorHowa


Annals of King's Chapel from the Puritan age of New England to the present day . Foxcroft, late Wife of FrancisFoxcroft, Esq., who died there July 4th,1721, In the 57th year of her age. Withan Addition, chiefly referring to herDeath: Also a Funeral Poem f theReverend Mr. John Dan/orth. Bj I 1 .[Thomas Foxcroft] One of the bereavedSons. Boston: 1721. The author, min-ister of the First Church, was intended io6 ANNALS OF KINGS CHAPEL. The angry feeling on funeral occasions was again wrote from the jail to the Bishop ofLondon, Oct. 26, 1689, of the death of MajorHoward and the refusal of his wife, with ad-vice of Mr. Moode, an independent preacher,to let him be buried in the burying-place ofthe Church of England, though wished in hiswill and the grave ready; word sent by Moodethat he would have men enough ready in thestreets to show [the executors] the place ofhis burial, and he was buried as Moode Episcopalians found themselves barely tolerated, afterthe brief sunshine of power, and made energetic representations. FOXCROFT ARMS. in by his father for an Episcopal clergy-man, but followed the Puritan tenden-cies of his mothers family. Governor Dudley rewarded Colo-nel Foxcroft for signing the address toKing William, with a place on the benchof Common Pleas, which he held till1719. He died at Cambridge, Dec. 31,1729, having removed to the homesteadthere on the death of his Flynt wrote, in a preface to thefuneral sermon on him by Rev. NathanielAppleton: . . He lived and died infirm adherence to the Constitution ofEngland in Church as well as State; andyet attended with satisfaction and devo-tion on all the public administrations ofdivine worship in Cambridge, where hespent the latter part of his life; and wasfar from the unchristian opinion, whichconfines the true ministry and ordinancesof Christ to one particular denominationor persuasion of Christians. See An-dros Tracts, iii. 200; N. E. Hist, an


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