Born: Sep­tem­ber 9, 1807, North Fred­erick Street, Dub­lin, Ire­land.

Died: March 28, 1886, Lon­don, Eng­land.

Buried: West­min­ster Ab­bey, Lon­don, Eng­land.

His fa­ther was Richard Trench, sixth son of Fred­er­ick Trench, of Wood­lands, Coun­ty Gal­way; his mo­ther Mel­e­si­na, on­ly grand­child and heir­ess of Ri­chard Che­nevix, Bi­shop of Wa­ter­ford, and wi­dow of Col­o­nel St. George. Trench’s home in child­hood was Elm Lodge, close to the vill­age of Burs­le­don, not far from South­amp­ton. In Feb­ru­a­ry, 1816 he pro­ceed­ed to Twy­ford School, and in 1819 to Har­row, where he won great dis­tinct­ion. In Oc­to­ber 1825 he was en­tered at Trin­i­ty Coll­ege, Cam­bridge. His mo­ther’s cor­res­pond­ence is full of ref­er­enc­es to a lit­tle per­i­od­i­cal called The Trans­lat­or, be­gun in 1825, or im­me­di­ate­ly on his be­com­ing an un­der­grad­u­ate. She was his ar­dent co-work­er, both as con­trib­ut­or and cri­tic.

In 1826 he had ac­quired Span­ish, and in that year ap­plied him­self to pre­par­ing and pub­lish­ing a vol­ume of Mis­cel­la­nies, of which the “pro­fits were to be sent to the com­mit­tee formed for the re­lief of the ex­iled Span­iards.” On May 27th, 1827, his mo­ther died at Mal­vern. The Let­ters and Me­mor­i­als (188) give vi­vid de­tails of his con­tin­u­ous in­ter­est and dar­ing per­son­al ser­vice and sac­ri­fic­es on be­half of Spain. It was dur­ing the win­ter of 1829-30 that the con­sul­ta­tions and schemes re­spect­ing Spain were dis­cussed in John Ster­ling’s apart­ment. Ro­bert Boyd, Trench’s cou­sin, threw him­self and his en­tire for­tune in­to the plot by pur­chas­ing a small ship in the Thames and stor­ing it with arms, in which Gen­er­al Torrijos and fif­ty picked Span­iards were to sail for the new ad­ven­ture of the Gold­en Fleece. The en­ter­prise ende­d tra­gic­al­ly. Boyd and others per­ished by the in­ev­i­ta­ble ven­geance of the Span­ish sov­er­eign when cap­tured. Trench, though, was safe in Gi­bral­tar.

Till far up in young man­hood he was un­de­cid­ed as to his call­ing, law ra­ther than di­vin­i­ty col­or­ing his thoughts and plans. He left Cam­bridge Feb­ru­a­ry 1, 1829, and re­joined his wi­dowed fa­ther at Elm Lodge, near South­amp­ton. He mar­ried, at the Ab­bey Church, Bath, May 31, 1832, his cou­sin, Fran­ces Ma­ry Trench, daugh­ter of his uncle Fran­cis Trench (nd son of Fred­er­ick Trench, of Wood­lawn, Coun­ty Gal­way, Ire­land, and next bro­ther to the 1st Lord Ash­town). On Oc­to­ber 7, 1832, he re­ceived Dea­con’s Or­ders in Nor­wich Ca­thed­ral at the hands of Bi­shop Bath­urst of Nor­wich, with H. J. Rose. He was or­dained a priest ear­ly in Ju­ly, 1835, by Bi­shop Sum­ner of Win­ches­ter…In 1846 he was ap­point­ed Pro­fess­or of Di­vin­i­ty at King’s Coll­ege, Lon­don, later changed in­to “Pro­fess­or of Ex­e­ge­sis of the New Test­a­ment,” which he held un­til 1858…In 1856 he was ap­point­ed Dean of West­minster…On New Year’s Day, 1864, he was cons­e­crat­ed Arch­bi­shop of Dub­lin in Christ Church Ca­thed­ral. He in­stant­ly took a fore­most place in the re­gard of the en­tire com­mun­i­ty…His fin­al con­fir­ma­tion was in St. Bar­thol­o­mew’s Church on May 16th, 1884. On No­vem­ber 28th, 1884, he re­signed his Arch­bi­shop­ric.

Trench’s works in­clude:

Hymns

  1. Lord, What a Change Within Us