Background
Born at Donington, Shropshire, England about 1708, he was the eldest son of the Reverend William Cradock, Principal Official, Prebendary, Sacrist, Lecturer & Reader of the Collegiate Church of Wolverhampton and also Rectory of Donington.
Born at Donington, Shropshire, England about 1708, he was the eldest son of the Reverend William Cradock, Principal Official, Prebendary, Sacrist, Lecturer & Reader of the Collegiate Church of Wolverhampton and also Rectory of Donington.
Having received his education at Street John"s College, Cambridge, where he graduated Bachelor of Arts in 1728, Cradock was elected to a fellowship of his college, which he held with the rectory of Dry Drayton, Cambridgeshire.
Cradock"s brother was the Reverend Thomas Cradock (1717–1757), Clerk, Master of Arts Principal Official, Prebendary, Sacrist, Lecturer & Reader of the Collegiate Church of Wolverhampton and also Vicar of Pennsylvania The degree of Bachelor of Divinity was conferred on him in 1740, and that of Doctor of Divinity in 1749. He became rector of Street Paul"s, Covent Garden, London, and chaplain to John Russell, 4th Duke of Bedford, on whose estate he was born and whose patronage helped him to the rectorship.
Cradock"s portrait appears in a painting by William Hogarth entitled "A View of Covent Garden Market".
Accompanying the Duke of Bedford to Ireland on his appointment to the office of lord-lieutenant, he was soon after promoted, on 11 November 1757, to the bishopric of Kilmore. And having held that see for fourteen years, he was translated to the archbishopric of Dublin, by patent dated 5 March 1772.
In 1777 he was attacked by Patrick Duigenan in his Lachrymae Academicae, who censured Cradock as Visitor of Trinity College, Dublin, for having spoken favourably of Provost John Hely-Hutchinson. Bishop Cradock seems to have been a helpful man even to Roman Catholics, if we are to believe the testimony of Major Edward Magauran who visited the bishop in the Spring of 1767 ("Memoirs of Major M’Gauran", Volume I, Page 134, London 1786).
The major was born in Ballymagovern, County Cavan on 16 April 1746, the grandson of Colonel Bryan M’Gauran, the Chief of the Clan McGovern who fought in the Battle of the Boyne for King James II against William III of Orange.
At the time of his visit to the bishop, Edward M’Gauran was then serving as an ensign in General Loudon’s Austrian Regiment of Foot. He needed his pedigree proved by a respectable witness in Ireland and he states as follows. "My relations being numerous, and dispersed throughout the kingdom, I was several months employed in collecting their attestations, which I found was necessary to have corroborated by the testimony of Doctor Reilly, the Titular Bishop of Kilmore, who was then absent: I applied to Doctor M’Guire, the Catholic Bishop of Dromore, then at the house of Mr.
Robert M’Guire of Tempo.
He refused to grant me my request, although he knew my pretensions to be just.