Edward Hoare (priest)

As a recent graduate (1824) of Trinity College, Dublin, he was a curate in 1825 at Parwich and Alsop en le Dale in Derbyshire.

[14] The House of Lords committee on Richard Whately's Irish national education system heard evidence from Hoare.

[1] Hoare was noted as an evangelical preacher, and edited The Christian Herald, a prophetical journal that appeared from 1830 to 1835, and was published in Dublin.

[22] The attitude of The Christian Herald to eschatology had something in common with other periodicals, Churchman's Monthly Review, and The Quarterly Journal of Prophecy, and the views of Thomas Nolan (1809–1882).

He had by his first wife two sons, including Edward Newenham Hoare, rector of Acrise and writer of tracts (with whom as an author he is sometimes confused), and three daughters.

Edward Hoare in His Later Years
Trinity Church, Limerick, built 1834 with funds raised by Edward Newenham Hoare