Thomas Bowers was educated at Shrewsbury school, he matriculated on 13 June 1677, aged 17, and studied at St Johns College, Cambridge as a sizar. He was awarded his BA in 1680 – 1681. He received his M.A.,in 1684 and his DD in 1716.
Bishop Bowers' Survey 1724 was a survey to enable Bowers to run his diocese more efficiently. The survey was carried out in Sussex, parish by parish during the summer of 1724. Each incumbent was presented with 13 questions. The questions were wideranging. They included questions to ascertain the state of buildings and their fittings; the population of the parish, the strength of Nonconformity and Roman Catholicism, and provide details of patronage and parochial charities. Example: survey results for the Parish of Rusper:
RUSPER – Rectory
Patron: Mr THOMAS MARCHANT.
Incumbent:
Mr William Martin A.M. of Brazen Nose in Oxford instituted into the living19 December 1721.
Condition of Church, bible, Common Prayer book Communion plate and cloath....poor box and chest for surplice etc., number of bells:
Church in good order. Bible and Common Prayer book very well. Pewter flaggon, Silver cup and cover for the Communion Chest to put the surplice in. No poor box. Pulpit cloth cushion, table cloth for the Communion, and a cloth for it at other times, all very well. Bells, 6, all in good order.
Chancell in good order, repairable by the Rector.
The mansion house and barn in good and sufficient repair
The number of families in parish, any papists or Protestant dissenters:
The glebe about 35 acres whereof about 6 coppice. But note the neighbours surrounding it will not allow the Rector a way to it as yet. We find also the church marks miserably down, so as to lay the churchyard almost in common. Ordered to be repaired.
The survey indicated that most of the churches in the diocese were in a good state of repair and had adequate plates and vestments. In 1676 Henry Compton, the Bishop of London had taken a national census, known as the Compton Census, to ascertain the Catholic and Protestant nonconformists in the country. The figures from Bowers survey, indicated that compared to the Compton Census of 1676, the nonconformists in Sussex had dropped from about 4,300 to around 3,300 in 1724.
Patronage
The Whig politician Thomas Pelham was the member of an influential Sussex family. It was through his family contacts that Pelham built a network of patronage and influence amongst the clergymen of Sussex. Thomas Pelham's grandfather, John Pelham, had appointed Thomas Bowers to the Rectory at Burwash in 1693. The Pelham family seat was at Halland close to Burwash, and it is likely that Bowers would have been a frequent visitor. It is thought that he would have tutored the young Thomas at this time. Thomas Pelham inherited the estates of both his father and also his uncle John Holles, 1st Duke of Newcastle-upon-Tyne. He was also created the 1stDuke of Newcastle-under-Lyne and appended Holles to his name to become Thomas Pelham-Holles. Thomas Bowers rose rapidly through the ecclesiastical ranks, probably with the dukes help. Bowers was the first avowed Whig bishop, who was a strong supporter of the Hanoverian cause in the Chichester diocese and was the first in a series of Newcastle appointees. The bishop was as keen as Newcastle to appoint clergy who were sympathetic to their cause, and wrote to the duke, in 1723, suggesting that any men so nominated should be "worthy with unblemished characters". Presumably not too many men were advanced as Bowers died in 1724 the year after, however the precedent of patronage was continued by many of his successors.