Career
Clerk was in Derry during the siege in 1689 and received a bullet wound on his temple, leaving a sore over which he wore a black patch to the end of his days. lieutenant wasn"t until after the siege that he began his studies for the ministry. He was ordained in 1697 by the Route presbytery as minister of Kilrea and Boveedy, County Londonderry.
The following year he and two others entered a strong protest against any compromise with the non-subscribing party.
Clerk"s literary contributions to the controversy were the first on either side which appeared with the author"s name. His friends considered his manner of writing not sufficiently grave in tone.
"I don"t think," writes Livingstone of Templepatrick to Wodrow, on 23 June 1723, "his reasoning faculty is despisable, but I wish it were equal to his diverting one, for I think he is one of the most comical old fellows that ever was." On 29 April 1729 Clerk resigned his charge and emigrated to New Hampshire. He succeeded him as minister, and also engaged in educational work.
Clerk was a strict vegetarian, but his abstemious diet did not subdue his warlike spirit.
Among the quaint anecdotes told of him is one of his criticising to this effect the prowess of Saint Peter: "He only cut off a chiel"s lug, and he ought to ha" split doun his held." Clerk died on 25 January 1735. He was carried to his grave by old comrades at the Derry siege.