John Gregg (bishop of Cork)
John Gregg was an Anglican bishop.
He was born in 1798 near Ennis, County Clare, the son of Richard Gregg, a small landowner, and educated at Trinity College, Dublin. He was ordained in 1822, and quickly gained a reputation as an eloquent preacher, and was fluent in the Irish Language. Gregg served as assistant and then as chaplain to the Bethesda Chapel, Dublin, from 1835, until 1839 when he became Rector of the newly established Holy Trinity Church, Gardner Street, Dublin, and then appointed Archdeacon of Kildare in 1857 before his elevation to the Episcopate as the Bishop of Cork in 1862. As Bishop he is mainly remembered for overseeing the building of Saint Fin Barre's Cathedral, at a cost of over £100,000. He published "A Missionary Visit to Achill and Erris" in 1850.
Gregg died in post on 26 May 1878 He had married Elizabeth Law and had six children. His son Robert Gregg and grandson, John Gregg were also bishops, and both became Archbishop of Armagh. His daughter, Frances Gregg was the founder of Saint Luke's Home, Cork in 1872.