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Philip Doddridge

Philip Doddridge (1702–1751) was an English preacher, Nonconformist minister, and hymn-writer whose influential ministry bridged pastoral care, education, and hymnody in 18th-century Britain. Born on June 26, 1702, in London, he was the youngest of 20 children of Daniel Doddridge, a merchant, and Monica Bauman, though only two siblings survived infancy. Orphaned by age 13—his mother died in 1711 and his father in 1715—he was raised by family friends and educated at a Dissenting school in Kingston-upon-Thames. Declining an offer to train for the Anglican priesthood from the Duchess of Bedford in 1719, Doddridge instead studied at Kibworth Academy under John Jennings, embracing Congregationalism. In 1723, he married Mercy Maris, and they had nine children, four surviving to adulthood. Doddridge’s preaching career began in 1723 as pastor of a small congregation at Kibworth, Leicestershire, but he gained prominence after moving to Castle Hill Church in Northampton in 1729, where he served until his death. There, he established a Dissenting academy, training over 200 ministers with a curriculum blending theology, science, and philosophy, earning him an honorary D.D. from Aberdeen University in 1736. Known for his warm, practical sermons, he preached twice on Sundays and monthly to youth, emphasizing personal faith and charity—evidenced by his Northampton infirmary project. A prolific hymn-writer, he composed over 400 hymns, including “O Happy Day” and “Hark, the Glad Sound!” often paired with his sermons. His theological works, like The Rise and Progress of Religion in the Soul (1745), influenced figures like William Wilberforce. Worn by overwork, Doddridge died of tuberculosis on October 26, 1751, in Lisbon, Portugal, where he had traveled for health, leaving a legacy as a preacher whose ministry shaped Nonconformist faith and education. He was buried in the English Cemetery there.