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Church of England clergyman and poet From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
James Sterling (1701–1763) was an Irish cleric and poet.
The son of James Sterling, he entered Trinity College, Dublin as a scholar in 1718, graduating B.A. in 1720 and M.A. in 1733. In that year he went to London with his friend Matthew Concanen.[1]
In November 1737 Sterling took a living in Anne Arundel County, Maryland. He was from 1739 the minister of the Episcopal St. Paul's Church near Chestertown.[2][3] His ministry lasted to 1763, and saw the brick church doubled in size.[4]
Sterling travelled to London in 1752. He had associated in a scheme, with Benjamin Franklin who brought in backers from Philadelphia, to develop the North-West Passage. Franklin had become a sponsor of Captain Charles Swaine, who eventually made a Labrador Sea expedition in the Argo, in 1753. Sterling, however, struck out on his own, with a group of London merchants, and went to the Board of Trade for them, seeking exclusive rights to trade on the Labrador coast. Plans came to nothing, when the Board favoured the Hudson's Bay Company instead.[1][5]
Sterling published:[1]
In 1724 Sterling made three contributions to Concanen's Poems, signed "J. S."[1]
Sterling married, firstly, Nancy Lyddell, who had acted in The Rival Generals in Dublin. In 1723 they went on to London, and Nancy made her stage debut there. She had died by 1733. In Maryland, he married in 1743 Rebecca Holt, widow of the Rev. Arthur Holt, and they had a daughter Rebecca, who married William Carmichael. He married as his third wife Mary Smith, in 1749.[2]
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