In 1731 Denne resigned his Rochester parish for the rectory of St. Mary's Church, Lambeth. He was for some time prolocutor of the lower house of convocation. From about 1759 he suffered from ill-health. He died on 5 August 1767, and was buried in Rochester Cathedral.[1]
Works
Denne was a scholar of English ecclesiastical history. He published:[1]
Articles of Enquiry for a Parochial Visitation, 1732.
The State of Bromley College in Kent, 1735.
Register of Benefactors to the Parish of St. Leonard, Shoreditch, London, 1777 (posthumous).
Fifteen sermons (published separately), including Want of Universality no just Objection to the Truth of the Christian Religion, London, 1730, and The Blessing of a Protestant King and Royal Family to the Nation, 1737.
Denne also contributed materials to John Lewis's Life of Wickliffe. He arranged and bound up the archives of Rochester Cathedral and the Acts of the Courts of the Bishop and Archdeacon. He also made some collections for the history of the cathedral, and collated Thomas Hearne's edition of the Textus Roffensis with the original at Rochester.[1]
Family
Denne married in 1724 Susannah, youngest daughter of Samuel Bradford, bishop of Rochester, to whom he was for many years domestic chaplain. He had three children, John (d. 1800), chaplain of Maidstone gaol; Samuel, the antiquarian; and Susannah.[1]