Dr. Thomas Gibbons (1720–1785) was a London nonconformist minister who wrote hymns, sermons, and poetry.
At about 15 years of age he was sent to Abraham Taylor's dissenting academy in Deptford, and then to that of John Eames in Moorfields.
For a lack of poetical talent, Gibbons was satirised in An Epistle to the Rev.
[1] Gibbons's writings included:[1] A favourite form of composition was elegies on the death of his friends and others.
A list of between forty and fifty works by Gibbons was in the Protestant Dissenters' Magazine, ii.