| First printed in 1853 this book covers a wide range
of historic and biographical revival material concerning the Great
Awakening in England in the 18th century.
Selina Hastings, the Countess of Huntingdon, (1707-91) was converted
in early 1739 and became a member of the famed Fetter Lane Society.
Although she had very close links with the Wesley brothers and used
Methodist preachers to evangelise in her residences, she broke with
the Wesley’s in 1740.
She developed strong Calvinistic leanings and appointed her favourite
preacher, the Calvinistic George Whitefield, as her personal chaplain,
employing him, and others, to preach to her aristocratic friends.
She built chapels in the south from 1761, in Bath in 1765 and in
other places in England in the 1770’s. These chapels, built
to provide an evangelical witness where there was none, eventually
became the Countess of Huntingdon’s Connexion. In 1768 she
got Trevecca College from Howell Harris and she had her ministers
trained there.
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