The illustrated history of Methodism [electronic resource]; the story of the origin and progress of the Methodist church, from its foundation by John Wesley to the present dayWritten in popular style and illustrated by more than one thousand portraits and views of persons . ada, etc.; well known as a public lecturer inAustralia and elsewhere. 11. H. Paisley, M. A., D. D.; born, 1*43; ordained, 1S70; Professor of Church His-tory and New Testament Exegesis, Mt. Allison University. 12. J. S. Ross, D. D., Guelph, Ontario; bora at Kingston,1848; ordained, 1867; President of Niagara Annual
The illustrated history of Methodism [electronic resource]; the story of the origin and progress of the Methodist church, from its foundation by John Wesley to the present dayWritten in popular style and illustrated by more than one thousand portraits and views of persons . ada, etc.; well known as a public lecturer inAustralia and elsewhere. 11. H. Paisley, M. A., D. D.; born, 1*43; ordained, 1S70; Professor of Church His-tory and New Testament Exegesis, Mt. Allison University. 12. J. S. Ross, D. D., Guelph, Ontario; bora at Kingston,1848; ordained, 1867; President of Niagara Annual Conference, 1893; author of The First Hundred Years of ModernMissions, etc. 13. Rev. Isaac B. Aylesyvorth; born, 1S31; ex-President of the London (Ontario) Conference;Representative at Methodist Episcopal General Conference, Philadelphia, 18S4. 14. Charles R. Flanders, D. D.;entered the Methodist ministry 1873; Fellow of McGill University; Principal of Stanstead Methodist E. Ryerson Young, Toronto; born, 1840; ordained, 1S6;; missionary amotiLC the Indian tribes of the North-west; author of Stories from Indian Wigwams and Northern Camp-Fires, etc.; well known as a popular lecturerin England and the United States. 576 The Illustrated History of REV. ALEXANDER SUTHERLAND, D. D., General Missionary Secretary of the Methodist Church, Canada; ordained, 1859; author of A Summer in Prairie Land. gem-like island, which was their desti-nation. For the next nine years hestruggled manfully to gain the second year the membership hadgrown to sixty and the preaching-placesto thirty-six; and the society felt justifiedin sending an assistant to his aid. Intime he was helped by two native preach-ers whom he had himself reared for thework; and other worthy helpers arrivedfrom England. A year of particular pros-perity was that of 1843-4, when threehundred and fifty-one new members werereported, largely the result of an exten-sive revival. At length, after overt
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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1900, bookid0186, booksubjectmethodism