He was born at
Barnstaple in August 1633, the son of another Thomas Brancker, a graduate of
Exeter College, Oxford, who was in 1626 a schoolmaster near
Ilchester, and about 1630 head-master of the Barnstaple High School. The family originally bore the name of Brouncker. Young Brancker matriculated at his father's college 8 November 1652; proceeded B.A. 15 June 1655, and was elected a probationer fellow of Exeter 30 June 1655, and full fellow 10 July 1656. After taking his master's degree (22 April 1658), he took to preaching, but he refused to conform to the ceremonies of the church of England, and was deprived of his fellowship 4 June 1663. He then retired to
Cheshire, changed his views, and applied for and obtained episcopal ordination. He became a minister at
Whitegate, Cheshire, but his reputation as a mathematician reached
William Brereton, 3rd Baron Brereton, who gave him the rectory of
Tilston, near
Malpas, in 1668. He resigned the benefice after a few months, and became head-master of the
grammar school at Macclesfield, where he died in November 1676. He was buried in
Macclesfield church, and the inscription on his monument states that he was a linguist as well as a mathematician, chemist, and natural philosopher, and that he pursued studies under
Robert Boyle. Around 1665 he married Hannah Meyrick and had four daughters and two sons. The youngest son, Benjamin, became a gold and silversmith in Liverpool and was the grandfather of Peter Whitfield Brancker, Mayor of Liverpool (1801). ==Works==