Thomas Croskery D.D. was an Irish theologian and reviewer.
Early life
The son of a tradesman from County Down, Ireland, he was born in the village of Carrowdore, nearly midway between Donaghadee and Greyabbey, on 26 May 1830. Most of his boyhood was spent in Downpatrick, to which the family moved during his childhood. His parents were poor, but gave him a good school training, and in November 1845 he was entered at the old college in Belfast, with a view to becoming a minister of the unitarian body, with which his father was connected. His religious views soon changed, and he determined to enter the ministry of the Presbyterian Church in Ireland. His father's poverty forcing him to support himself by his own exertions, he learned shorthand and became a reporter in connection with the Belfast press. He thus got through the six years of his college course, and on 6 May 1851 was licensed to preach by the presbytery of Down. Shortly after he went to America, where he remained for two years preaching. Returning to Belfast, he resumed his connection with the press, becoming first a reporter and subsequently editor of the ‘Banner of Ulster.’ He also officiated on Sundays, but used laughingly to tell that he preached in twenty-six vacant churches before he received a ‘call.’
Parish ministry
At length he was invited to undertake the charge of the congregation of Creggan, County Armagh, and on 17 July 1860 was ordained. He was translated to Clonakilty, County Cork, and installed on 24 March 1863. In 1866 he received a call to the newly formed congregation of Waterside in the city of Derry, and was installed there on 20 March in that year. In all three charges he was greatly beloved and respected.
Croskery's literary life began early with contributions to newspapers. His first work of importance was which ran through several editions. In 1879 he published a larger work of conspicuous ability, entitled In 1884 appeared his ‘Irish Presbyterianism: its History, Character, Influence, and Present Position.’ He had charge of the homiletical portion of the which appeared in 1885. But his main strength as an author was given to periodical literature. He was a contributor of articles on varied topics to the Edinburgh Review, the British Quarterly Review, Fraser's Magazine, the London Quarterly, the British and Foreign Evangelical Review, and the Princeton Review, of leaders to such Irish newspapers as the Witness and the Northern Whig, and of papers to several denominational periodicals.
Assessment
He was a most indefatigable worker. Five long review and magazine articles from his pen sometimes appeared in the same month, besides newspaper leaders and other contributions, and this in the height of the college session, when he was lecturing daily. His ceaseless application no doubt shortened his days. Few men had a better knowledge of Irish character and history. He had a fine literary taste, a clear style, and such versatility that there were few subjects on which he could not write to advantage. In the discussions of the Church courts of which he was a member, he scarcely ever mingled, but even in the midst of his heaviest literary work he usually preached somewhere on the Sundays, his pulpit service being greatly prized.