James Glazebrook (11 October 1744–3 July 1803) was an English cleric, controversialist, and writer.
When he was a young man of twenty-three, working as a collier and getter of ironstone, he was brought under the influence of the Rev.
With this view he was educated at Lady Huntingdon's Trevecca College in South Wales.
[1] Glazebrook was ordained deacon by Brownlow North, the Bishop of Lichfield and Coventry, in December 1771, and six years later he received priest's orders.
On being appointed vicar of Belton, Leicestershire in 1796, in bad health, he left Warrington, but he retained his incumbency at St. James's.