The Reviewer Reviewed (1821) as "Heresiae Mastix", in defence of César Malan.[14][15]
Domestic Portraiture; or the successful application of religious principle in the education of a family, exemplified in the memoirs of three of the deceased children of the Rev. L. Richmond (1833), on the family life of his friend Legh Richmond.[16]
A Father's Reason for Repose (1839), by "the author of Domestic Portraiture", and an extract published as The Causes and Cure of Scepticism.[17][18]
New Testament in Hebrew (Berit hadashah 'al pi Mashiah: ne'etak mi-leshon Yavan lileshon 'Ivri. London: A. Macintosh,1817). Published as an early edition of the London Jews' Society's New Testament in Hebrew. Text in vocalized Hebrew; assisted by G. B Collier and other scholars
On 23 September 1802, as vicar of Radley, Fry married Anne Cresswell, daughter of Estcourt Cresswell (died 1823) of Bibury, by his first marriage to Mary Wotton.[19][20] She died in 1811, and he then married Margaret Henrietta Middleton.[21] The children of this marriage were:
Peter Samuel, eldest son, married in 1840 to Katherine Eliza Anne Williams, daughter of Rev. John Charles Williams, and father of Thomas Charles Fry.[22][23]
Thomas Osmond, second son, died in 1846, aged 26.[24][25]
Hannah Mary Elizabeth, only daughter, married Harris Prendergast in 1832.[27]
Mary Ann Foster, a widow, married Fry as his third wife, in 1846. She was the second daughter of Sir William Chambers Bagshawe (1771–1832), a physician (originally Darling), and had married her first husband, William Foster, in 1817.[28][29]
Complex litigation in Chancery over Cresswell family trusts followed Fry's death in 1860.[30] He had claimed in 1845 title to and a life interest in estates of the Wottons of Inglebourne, through his deceased first wife, which had led to Spitchwick House, Widecombe-in-the-Moor in Devon being attacked.[31]
^Nicholas Temperley, The Lock Hospital Chapel and Its Music, Journal of the Royal Musical Association Vol. 118, No. 1 (1993), pp. 44–72 at pp. 54 and 61. Published by: Taylor & Francis, Ltd. on behalf of the Royal Musical Association. JSTOR766542
^R. H. Martin, United Conversionist Activities among the Jews in Great Britain 1795-1815: Pan-Evangelicalism and the London Society for Promoting Christianity amongst the Jews, Church History Vol. 46, No. 4 (Dec., 1977), pp. 437–452, at p. 445. Published by: Cambridge University Press on behalf of the American Society of Church History. JSTOR3164439
^Thomas Fry, The necessity of religious knowledge to salvation. A sermon, preached at Christ-Church, Newgate-Street, for the benefit of the Society for the Propagation of Christian Knowledge in the Highlands and Islands of Scotland, Hume Tracts, 1805. Contributed by: UCL Library Services.
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