He was born in
Llanilar,
Cardiganshire, the son of John Jones. He was admitted to
Worcester College, Oxford, migrated to
St Edmund Hall, graduating with a B.A. in 1725. From college, he went to the curacy of
King's Walden in
Hertfordshire. In 1726 or thereabouts he became curate at
Abbot's Ripton,
Huntingdonshire, and began compiling for
London booksellers. Around 1741, he moved to the vicarage of
Alconbury, near
Huntingdon. There he had difficulty in collecting the
small tithes, and gave up the vicarage in 1750. At this time his friends included
Gilbert West and
Philip Doddridge,
John Barker and
George Lyttelton. In the same year he obtained the rectory of
Bolnhurst in Bedfordshire, but complained that it did not suit his health. For a short period after 1755 he was curate for
John Berridge, at
Everton, Bedfordshire. But they quarrelled. In 1757, Jones accepted the curacy of
Welwyn in Hertfordshire from
Edward Young. He remained at Welwyn until 1765, when Young died, and he acted as one of his executors, receiving a legacy of £200. As a result of appeals to friends for assistance, Jones was in April 1767 inducted into the vicarage of
Shephall or Sheephall, Hertfordshire, where he continued until his death on 8 August 1770. He was unmarried. ==Works==