Gilbert, Ann Taylor. Ann Taylor Gilbert’s Album. Editor Stewart, Christina Duff, Garland.
521
Connections | Author name Sort descending | Excerpt |
---|---|---|
Cultural formation | Ann Martin Taylor | Born into the English Dissenting
middle class, she held a strong religious faith which was the guiding principle of her life. |
Family and Intimate relationships | Ann Martin Taylor | Her father had already treated her harshly, though he was one of the first converts of the early Methodist
preacher George Whitefield
. Gilbert, Ann Taylor. Ann Taylor Gilbert’s Album. Editor Stewart, Christina Duff, Garland. 521 |
Cultural formation | Flora Thompson | |
Cultural formation | Mary Tighe | MT
's gentry-class family had links with the English nobility; nevertheless, her Irish identity was important to her. Her parents were a prominent Methodist
and a clergyman in the Church of Ireland
. |
Textual Production | Julia Wedgwood | JW
published The Moral Ideal: A Historic Study, a comparative account of world religions. (She had already, eighteen years before, published a study of Methodism
.) Wedgwood, Barbara, and Hensleigh Wedgwood. The Wedgwood Circle, 1730-1897: Four Generations of a Family and Their Friends. Studio Vista. 330 Wedgwood, Julia. The Moral Ideal. Trübner. |
Family and Intimate relationships | Susanna Wesley | SW
bore the child who became the most famous of all her offspring: John Wesley
, father of Methodism
. Wesley, Susanna. “Introduction”. Susanna Wesley: The Complete Writings, edited by Charles Wallace, Oxford University Press. xiii |
death | Susanna Wesley | |
Textual Production | Phillis Wheatley | The MethodistArminian Magazine carried the poem which was until recently regarded as PW
's last, An Elegy on Leaving —. It seem, though, that this was not by Wheatley but by Mary Whateley Darwall
. Wigginton, Caroline. “Digitally Mapping the Transatlantic Lives and Texts of Black Women Authors of the Long Eighteenth Century”. 42nd ASECS Annual Meeting. |
Theme or Topic Treated in Text | Jane Williams | Volume one begins with a discussion of religion in Wales, followed by a short biography of Davis's father, the Methodist
preacher Dafydd Cadwaladyr
. The book then moves into a first-person account of Davis |
Birth | Ethel Wilson | Ethel Bryant (later EW
) was born in Port Elizabeth, South Africa, of Wesleyan Methodist
missionary parents. She was their only surviving child. Stouck, David. Ethel Wilson: A Critical Biography. University of Toronto Press. 3, 8 |
Family and Intimate relationships | Ethel Wilson | Ethel Bryant
married Dr Wallace Algernon Wilson
, at a quiet ceremony at Wesley Methodist Church
in Vancouver. McAlpine, Mary. The Other Side of Silence: A Life of Ethel Wilson. Harbour. 67-8 |
Cultural formation | Ethel Wilson | |
Family and Intimate relationships | Ethel Wilson | EW
's mother was Eliza Davis Malkin
, called Lila. She was the oldest of nine children born to a serious, deeply pious Wesleyan Methodist
family at Burslem in Staffordshire, England. Upon marriage... |
Residence | Ethel Wilson | |
Education | Ethel Wilson | As a teenager EW
was sent back to England for further education at Trinity Hall School
in Southport, Lancashire, a Wesleyan Methodist
boarding school for girls. She later recalled this as a highly regimented,... |
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