David McGregore

David McGregore
David McGregore's Tombstone
Born1710
Derry, Ireland
DiedMay 30, 1777
Londonderry, New Hampshire
Other namesMacGregore, McGregore
SpouseMary Boyd
ParentJames McGregore & Maryanne Cargill
ChurchPresbyterian
Ordained1732

David McGregore (November 6, 1710 – May 30, 1777), also known as McGregor, MacGregore or MacGregor, was a Presbyterian Minister and Member of the Colonial America Christian Clergy. His father, James McGregore, led his family and congregation of Scotch-Irish immigrants to America on five ships in 1718 and settled in a part of New Hampshire called Nutfield, which covers the modern towns of Derry, Londonderry, and Windham.[1][2] Rev. David McGregor's sermons were very much ahead of his time and sheds light on the religious sentiments of colonial New England. He questioned the old scriptures and seems to have believed in experimenting in new beliefs and new forms of religion, which was considered very revolutionary for his time.

McGregor was the first minister of the West Parish of Derry and until he died in 1777, forty families from the East Parish worshiped in the West Parish and vice versa, West to East. The residents chose to pay their worship tax to the adjacent town. Seems the problems with the different religious sects truly divided the town. The townspeople would cross paths on the way to worship. People were known to carry their shoes for miles until they got to the church.[3]

On June 3, 1720, at a public meeting it was voted that a small house be built “convenient for the inhabitants to meet in for the worship of God,” and it should be placed “as near to the center of the one hundred and five lots as can be convenience.” [4] Reverend James McGregor claimed “there is just three kinds of songs. There is the very good song, the very bad song, and the song that is neither bad nor good. ‘While Shepherds Watch Their Flocks by Night’ is a very good song, ‘Janie Stoops Down to Buckle Her Shoe’ is a very bad song. But ‘Sue Loves Me and I Loves Sue’ is neither good nor bad.”[5]

  1. ^ Town of Windham. "Nutfield 300th Anniversary". Windham, New Hampshire. Retrieved 22 March 2024.
  2. ^ Lindemann, Paul. "Nutfield History". Retrieved 22 March 2024.
  3. ^ Parker, Edward Lutwyche (1851). The History of Londonderry, Comprising the Towns of Derry and Londonderry, N. H. Boston: Perkins and Whipple. pp. 147–148. Retrieved 22 March 2024.
  4. ^ Willey, George Franklyn (1896). Willey's Semi-centennial Book of Manchester, 1846-1896, and Manchester Ed. of the Book of Nutfield: Historic Sketches of that Part of New Hampshire Comprised Within the Limits of the Old Tyng Township, Nutfield, Harrytown, Derryfield, and Manchester, from the Earliest Settlements to the Present Time. Manchester, NH: G. F. Willey. p. 136. Retrieved 22 March 2024.
  5. ^ Willey, George Franklyn (1896). Willey's Semi-centennial Book of Manchester, 1846-1896, and Manchester Ed. of the Book of Nutfield: Historic Sketches of that Part of New Hampshire Comprised Within the Limits of the Old Tyng Township, Nutfield, Harrytown, Derryfield, and Manchester, from the Earliest Settlements to the Present Time. Manchester, NH: G. F. Willey. p. 164. Retrieved 22 March 2024.