preacher and theologian, who greatly valued Tallents. In the summer of 1652 Tallents was invited by the mayor and aldermen, and urged by
Richard Baxter, to become lecturer and curate at
St Mary's, Shrewsbury. St Mary's had been a
Collegiate church and
Chapel Royal in the
Middle Ages and remained a
Royal Peculiar as before, although the council of Shrewsbury had assumed effective control. The precise reasons for the vacancy are slightly mysterious. The incumbent had been
Samuel Fisher (died 1681), a
Puritan preacher and controversialist of some note, but apparently not to the taste of some in the parish. In 1650 the
Rump Parliament prescribed an
Oath of Engagement, which was distasteful to many Presbyterians as they felt it contradicted the
Solemn League and Covenant, to which they had subscribed at Parliament's behest in September 1643. Subsequently,
Humphrey Mackworth, the governor of Shrewsbury, was instructed to expel from the town preachers who stirred up "sedition and uproar" among the people. Fisher and his mentor,
Thomas Blake were among those who left, presumably refusing to take the Engagement. Both remained in Shropshire and continued to preach, leaving the situation unresolved. The next year brought the culmination of the
Third English Civil War, when the Scottish army camped at
Tong, Shropshire, held at bay by Mackworth, on its way to defeat at the
Battle of Worcester. but his churchwardens prevailed on him to stay, supported by Richard Baxter. The council then sought advice from Baxter, who recommended Tallents. Baxter greatly valued Tallents as a moderate Calvinist. In 1670 he described his friend as Mr. Francis Talents, an ancient Fellow of Magdalen Colledge in Cambridge, and a good Schollar, a godly, blameless Divine, most eminent for extraordinary Prudence, and moderation, and peaceableness towards all, who in our Wars lived at Saumours in France and is now there again. The mayor,
recorder and four
aldermen sent an express messenger to Cambridge on 29 June to present their invitation to Tallents. Tallents had scruples about the position of Fisher, who wrote to the parish through Richard Pigot, the headmaster of
Shrewsbury School, "not his willingness alone, but his earnest desire to have Mr. Tallents settle with them." This decided the matter and Tallents decided to accept. His formal nomination to the post of
curate and lecturer was dated 4 January 1653. The
Committee for Plundered Ministers added £50 to his income of £150 This was also the year he himself married for the first time: to Anne Lomax (born 1632), who was a niece of Samuel Hildersam, the minister at
West Felton, member of the
Westminster Assembly and son of
Arthur Hildersam. They were married at West Felton on 9 June. Tallents acted on a larger scale than his own church. An ordinance of 22 August 1654 set up county commissions for ejecting "scandalous, ignorant, and insufficient or negligent ministers and schoolmasters." For Shropshire 21 commissioners were appointed, with 20 "Ministers Assistant." Tallents was one of those appointed. There is no extant record of their proceedings but about six ministers are known to have been dealt with. Some were clearly unpopular with their people, for example, William Gower, a Scot who had been installed at
Moreton Corbet after it was taken during the Civil War. The parish register asserts that he was a usurper installed by "Traytors and Rebells" but omits to mention that he was ejected by the Commonwealth too. The preaching ministry involved controversy over basic principles of Christian belief. In 1652 a Shrewsbury preacher named Fidge had drawn complaints for seeming to teach
antinomianism. against a Mr Haggar, a
Baptist, described by Calamy as an
Anabaptist. ==Ejection==