Sheridan entered Trinity College, Dublin on 17 Jan. 1661 from where he was awarded a Bachelor of Arts degree in 1664, and in 1667 he was elected a Fellow of Trinity.[3]
Career
Sheridan attended the Middle Temple in London from 29 June 1670 to study law but cut his studies short when he was appointed Cork Collector of Customs, where he made his fortune. In 1676 he was appointed a farmer of the Irish Revenue and sold his interest for a profit of £4,000. On 6 August 1677 Sheridan received an honorary degree of Doctor of Civil Law from the University of Oxford and on 6 February 1679 he was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society, London. He was imprisoned in 1680 for allegedly conspiring in the Popish Plot and on 15 December 1680 he gave evidence before the House of Commons but, as Parliament was dissolved shortly afterwards, was set free.[4]
When James II of England was deposed, Sheridan's political career was finished and he spent his remaining days in France attending the court of James II. He authored the following works-
1. Mr. Sheridan's Speech after his Examination before the late House of Commons[6] (London, 1681)
2. A Discourse on the Rise and Power of Parliaments[7] (1677)
3. The Sheridan Papers (1702), (contained in Calendar of the Stuart papers)[8]
About June 1684 Sheridan married Helen Ravenscroft (née Appleby), widow of George Ravenscroft, the developer of English lead crystal,[11] and the daughter of Thomas Appleby and Helen Gascoigne of Linton-on-Ouse in Yorkshire. There were three children of the marriage- Therese Helen, Mary and Sir Thomas Sheridan junior who became tutor to Prince Charles Edward Stuart.
References
^Geoghegan, Vincent (2001). "Thomas Sheridan: Toleration and Royalism". Political Discourse in Seventeenth- and Eighteenth-Century Ireland. pp. 32–61. doi:10.1057/9781403932723_2. ISBN978-1-349-40293-9.