Background
Preston, Thomas Scott was born on July 23, 1824 in Hartford, Connecticut, United States. Son of Zephaniah and Ann (Canfield) Preston.
administrator General pastor vicar
Preston, Thomas Scott was born on July 23, 1824 in Hartford, Connecticut, United States. Son of Zephaniah and Ann (Canfield) Preston.
He was graduated in 1843 from Washington (later Trinity) College, Hartford. Preston graduated in 1846 he was ordained deacon, and served in this capacity at Trinity Church, the Church of the Annunciation in West Fourteenth Street, and at Holy Innocents, West Point.
His family was Episcopalian. In 1847 he was ordained presbyter by Bishop Delancey of Western New York, his own bishop having refused to advance him to this order on account of his ritualistic views. He now served for some time at Saint Luke"s, Hudson Street, New York, hearing confessions and urging frequent Holy Communion.
A student of the early history of the Christian Church and the Church Fathers, he gradually began to feel the branch theory untenable.
He entered Saint Joseph"s Seminary in Fordham to complete his studies and in the autumn of 1850 was ordained priest by Rt. Review John McCloskey, then Bishop of Albany.
Father Preston was assigned to duty at the old cathedral on Mott Saint
In 1851 he was appointed pastor of Saint Mary"s in Yonkers with out-missions at Dobbs Ferry and Tarrytown. Father Preston sought to erect a mission church for the Tarrytown portion of his congregation.
Despite opposition from prominent area residents, in late 1851 he purchased a piece of land on De Peyster Street on which Saint Teresa’s Church now stands.
The church served the growing Catholic community of immigrants that had come to build the Hudson River railroad. In 1853 the diocese of Brooklyn and Newark were created. Staff from the Archdiocese of New York were sent to administer these dioceses, and Archbishop Hughes was left without a chancellor or secretary.
Preston was recalled from Yonkers to take these positions.
He was appointed pastor of Saint Ann"s Church on Eighth Saint in 1862, and was promoted in 1872 to be vicar-general. He was a firm supporter of the parochial school system.
He was appointed monsignor in 1881. During the absence of Archbishop Corrigan in 1890 he was administrator of the diocese.
His Advent and Lenten conferences attracted hearers from all parts of the city.