Rev. Slator Clay

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Rev. Slator Clay

Also Known As: "Slater"
Birthdate:
Birthplace: New Castle County, Delaware
Death: September 25, 1821 (66)
Perkiomen, Upper Providence Township, Montgomery County, PA, United States
Place of Burial: Philadelphia, Philadelphia County, Pennsylvania, United States
Immediate Family:

Son of Slator Clay and Ann Clay
Husband of Hannah Hughes
Father of Rev. Jehu Curtis Clay
Brother of Curtis Clay; Rev. Robert Clay and Mary Forman / Porter

Managed by: David Takemoto-Weerts
Last Updated:
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Immediate Family

About Rev. Slator Clay

name "Slator"

comes from the ancestor Jonathan Slater

Burial record:

https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/99691524/slator-clay

He was born 1 Oct 1754, the son of Slator and Ann (Curtis) Clay of New Castle, Delaware. Slator, the son, was admitted to the bar about 1779-80, but then went to the West Indies with a friend, where they were ship-wrecked. They were captured by the British who were blockading the colonies trade with the Bermudas, so he taught school there for 6 years, returning to Philadelphia in 1786.

He was ordained an Episcopal priest in Feb 17, 1788 and served as rector of St. James' in Perkiomen, St. Peter's in Great Valley, and assistant at Christ (Old Swedes) Church under Dr. Collin in Upper Merion, Montgomery Co, PA.

~• He succeeded the Rev. William Currie at St. James and St. Peter's although not directly for Currie resigned at the outset of the Revolution. ~• Other leaders of associated parishes are included in this list. and are fleshed out in the "panoply" project noted at right.

He died 25 Sep 1821 at age 67 and Hannah died 13 Jun 1832; both were buried in the Christ Church graveyard.

religious link between SPG families
One of Ann Clay's sons was the Rev. Slator Clay:

Rev. Slator Clay is Rev. George Aeneas Ross, M.A.'s daughter's husband's first cousin's husband.
Both Rev. Slator Clay and Rev. George Aeneas Ross spang form the cadreof SPG ministers involved in the organization of several early Pennsylvania/Delaware parishes including the one on the Perkiomen (Saint James Episcopal. Their main interests lay in New Castle but Rev. George's son-in-law, the Rev. Currie presided at Saint James Perikomen and others in PA.

another account

Clay, Slator

Clay, Slator, a Protestant Episcopal minister, was born in New Castle, Del., Oct. 1,1754. When a young man he studied law, and soon after began to practice. About 1780 he was induced by the captain of a vessel to sail with him to the West Indies on what he supposed would be a short voyage; but the war of the Revolution was in progress, and the vessel in which he was a passenger was captured by a British 'privateer. :He was put ashore on the island of Antigua and abandoned, but soon after took passage in a vessel for New York, which was then in possession of the British. The ship, however, was taken by an American privateer, which was caught in a storm and wrecked on the rocks of Bermuda, where, nevertheless, Mr. Clay landed in safety. There being little prospect of his getting away from the island, he opened a school, and taught for six years. The events of his late voyage had produced in him great seriousness, which led to his devoting himself to the Christian ministry. His friends in Bermuda proposed to accept him as their pastor as soon as he should receive ordination from the bishop of London; but hearing of the consecration of bishop White in Philadelphia, and preferring to spend his life in his native land, he left Bermuda and arrived in Philadelphia in 1786. On Dec. 23 of the next year he was ordained deacon, and Feb. 17 following (1788) he was admitted to the order of presbyters. He became successively rector of St. James's Church, Perkiomern; of St. Peter's, Great Valley; and of St. David's, Radnor, all in Pennsylvania; and also assistant minister of Christ Church, in Upper Merion. In July, 1799, he removed to Perkiomen, near Norristown, and gave a part of his time to St. Thomas's Church in Whitemarsh. He died in Perkiomen, Sept. 25, 1821. Mr. Clay. was a man of fervent piety. In the pulpit his manner was earnest and impressive. See Sprague, Annals of the Amer. Pulpit, v, 355

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Rev. Slator Clay's Timeline

1754
October 1, 1754
New Castle County, Delaware
1792
February 3, 1792
Upper Merion Township, Montgomery County, PA, United States
1821
September 25, 1821
Age 66
Perkiomen, Upper Providence Township, Montgomery County, PA, United States
????
Christ's Church graveyard, Philadelphia, Philadelphia County, Pennsylvania, United States