Preston, Thomas Scott
PRESTON, THOMAS SCOTT: Roman Catholic; b. at Hartford, Conn., July 23,
1824; d. in New York Nov. 4, 1891. He was brought up in the Protestant Episcopal
Church; was graduated from Trinity College, Hartford,, 1843, and from the General
Theological Seminary, New York, 1846; was ordained in 1846, and served as assistant
rector at the Church of the Annunciation and subsequently at St. Luke's, both
in New York City, till 1849, when he entered the Roman Catholic Church; he studied
a year at St. Joseph's Seminary, Fordham, and was ordained priest in 1850; served
as assistant at the cathedral in New York and at St. Mary's, Yonkers; became chancellor
of the diocese of New York in 1853 and vicar-general in 1873, and was also rector
of St. Anne's, New York, after 1861. Among his books are: Sermons for the Principal
seasons of the Sacred Year (New York, 1864); Christian Unity (1867);
Reason and Revelation (1868); Christ and the Church (1870); Catholic
View of the Public School System (1870); The Vicar of Christ (1871);
Divine Paraclete: Sermons (1880); Protestantism and the Bible (1880);
and God and Reason (1884).