Page:Dictionary of National Biography volume 60.djvu/389

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out endeavouring to procure the restoration of Sheridan, to whose support he contributed. He restored the episcopal residence at Kilmore and rebuilt the cathedral at Ardagh (since demolished). He recovered lands belonging to the see, alienated by William Smith (d. 1698), his predecessor. To raise money he sold a wood belonging to his see, valued by William King, D.D. [q. v.], archbishop of Dublin, at 20,000l., ‘if standing now’ (17 June 1721).

In regard to concessions to dissenters, which he advocated as early as 1682, he was prepared to go further than the English Toleration Act. He intervened as a peacemaker in the controversy on the doctrine of the Trinity raised by the publications of William Sherlock, D.D. [q. v.], and John Wallis (1616–1703) [q. v.]. In ‘An Earnest and Compassionate Suit for Forbearance … by a Melancholy Stander-by,’ 1691, 4to, he commends Hooker's ‘explication of this mystery,’ and argues that further discussion is futile and damaging. He followed it up with ‘The Antapology of the Melancholy Stander-by,’ 1693, 4to. Against William Penn [q. v.], the quaker, he wrote a couple of pamphlets (1698–9). He was present (but not on the bench) at the trial (14 June 1703) in Dublin of Thomas Emlyn [q. v.] the unitarian, and subsequently paid friendly visits to him in prison. In 1710 he drew up a very important memorial to Ormonde, the lord lieutenant, urging the need of providing ‘books of religion’ in the Irish language, in accordance with the ideas of John Richardson, D.D. (1664–1747) [q. v.], a clergyman in his diocese.

His later years were spent in London, where he died on 12 Nov. 1713; he was buried on 18 Nov. in the south transept of Westminster Abbey, where is an inscribed gravestone to his memory. In his will he affirms the church of England and Ireland to be ‘the purest church in the world,’ though ‘there are divers points which might be altered for the better’ in ‘articles, liturgy, and discipline, but especially in the conditions of clerical communion.’ His portrait by Vandervaart has been engraved. His name is also spelled Wettenhall, Whetenhall, Whitnall, Withnoll, and Wythnall. He married twice; his second wife was Philippa (buried 18 April 1717), sixth daughter of Sir William D'Oyly, bart., of Shottisham, Kent. His eldest son by his first wife was Edward Wetenhall, M.D. (d. 29 Aug. 1733, aged 70).

Besides the above and single sermons, a charge (1691) and tracts, including the funeral sermon for James Bonnell [q. v.], he published: 1. ‘A Method … for Private Devotion,’ 1666, 12mo. 2. ‘The Wish: being the Tenth Satyr of Juvenal … in Pindarick Verse,’ Dublin, 1675, 4to. 3. ‘The Catechism of the Church of England, with Marginal Notes,’ 1678, 8vo. 4. ‘Of Gifts and Offices in … Worship,’ Dublin, 1676–9, 8vo. 5. ‘The Protestant Peacemaker,’ 1682, 4to (answered by Richard Baxter [q. v.] in ‘History of Councils,’ 1682, 4to). 6. ‘A Judgment of the Comet … at Dublin, Dec. 13, 1680,’ 1682, 8vo. 7. ‘Hexapla Jacobæa: a Specimen of Loyalty to … James II, in Six Pieces,’ Dublin, 1686, 8vo (sermons). 8. ‘A Plain Discourse proving the … Authority of the … Scriptures,’ 1688, 8vo (with new title, 1689). 9. ‘A Letter … occasioned by the Surrender of Mons,’ 1691, 4to (anon.). 10. ‘A Method … to be … prepared for Death,’ 1694, 12mo. 11. ‘The Testimony of the Bishop of Cork as to a Paper intituled Gospel Truths … by the People called Quakers,’ Cork, 1698, 8vo. 12. ‘A brief … Reply to Mr. Penn's … Defence,’ Cork, 1699, 8vo. 13. ‘Due Frequency of the Lord's Supper,’ 1703, 12mo. 14. ‘A View of our Lord's Passion, with Meditations,’ 1710, 8vo. His revision of the Eton Latin Grammar was reprinted 1856, 12mo. His ‘Græcæ Grammatices Institutio,’ 4th edit. 1713, 8vo, was translated and revised by G. N. Wright (2nd ed. 1820, 12mo), and edited as ‘Græcæ Grammatices Rudimenta,’ by G. B. Wheeler, 1853, 12mo. In 1692 he edited sermons by Ezekiel Hopkins, D.D. [q. v.]

[Wood's Athenæ Oxon. ed. Bliss, iv. 562; Wood's Fasti, ed. Bliss, ii. 249, 250, 308; Ware's Works, ed. Harris, 1739 i. 243, 570, 1764 ii. 358; Life of Firmin, 1698, p. 68; Emlyn's Works, 1746, i. 29; Granger's Biographical Hist. of England, 1779, iii. 255; Mant's Hist. of the Church of Ireland, 1840, i. 699, ii. 25, 55, 220, 555; Smith's Bibliotheca Antiquakeriana, 1873, p. 449; Chester's Registers of Westminster Abbey, 1876, pp. 278, 289, 339; Foster's Alumni Oxon. 1500–1714.]

A. G.

WETHAM, ROBERT (d. 1738), president of Douay College. [See Witham.]

WETHERALL, Sir FREDERICK AUGUSTUS (1754–1842), general, born in 1754, was the son of John Wetherall, and belonged to a family which migrated from Wetherall Priory, near Carlisle, to Ireland in the reign of William III. He obtained a commission as ensign in the 17th foot on 23 Aug. 1775, embarked for Boston in September, and became lieutenant on 27 Aug. 1776. During the American war