Thomas Tregenna Biddulph was an English cleric, a leading evangelical in the Bristol area.
Background
He was the only son of the Review Thomas Biddulph by his first wife, Martha, daughter and coheir of Review John Tregenna, rector of Mawgan in Cornwall, and was born at Claines, Worcestershire, 5 July 1763.
His father became in 1770 the vicar of Padstow in Cornwall.
Education
He was educated at Truro grammar school, and aged 17 matriculated at The Queen"s College, Oxford (23 November 1780).
Career
He particularly opposed the evangelical secession around George Baring (1781–1854), the "western Schism". He took his degrees of Bachelor of Arts and Master of Arts in 1784 and 1787, respectively. Biddulph was ordained deacon by John Ross, Bishop of Exeter, 26 September 1785, was licensed to the curacy of Padstow, and preached his first sermon in its church.
After holding numerous curacies he became the incumbent of Bengeworth near Evesham in 1793.
He retained this living for ten years, but mostly resided in Bristol, and it was as the incumbent from 1799 to 1838 of Saint James"s, Bristol, that his reputation as a preacher and a parish priest was acquired. With ideas that were at first unpopular in Bristol, in time Biddulph became accepted.
He died at Saint James"s Square, Bristol, 19 May 1838, and was buried 29 May. He shared Hutchinsonian views with William Romaine.