English clergyman, schoolmaster, and literary editor
James Upton (1670–1749) was an English clergyman, schoolmaster, and literary editor.
Life
Upton was born at Wilmslow, Cheshire, on 10 December 1670. He was educated at Eton College, and was elected a fellow of King's College, Cambridge, where he graduated B.A. in 1697, and M.A. in 1701.[1][2] At the request of John Newborough, the headmaster, Upton returned to Eton as an assistant master, around 1798.[3]
In 1731 Upton received the vicarage of Bishop's Hull, Somerset. He died at Taunton on 13 August 1749.[1]
Works
Upton edited Theodore Goulston's Poetics of Aristotle (1623), with selected notes, Cambridge, 1696; Dionysius of Halicarnassus, 1702 (reprinted 1728 and 1747); and Roger Ascham's Scholemaster, 1711 (reprinted 1743, 1761, and 1815). He published A Selection of Passages from Greek Authors, 1726.[1]
Family
Upton married Mary Proctor of Eton, by whom he had six sons and two daughters. From the second daughter Ann descended the Tripp family of Huntspill and Sampford Brett, Somerset.[1]