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Circuit rider (religious)

Circuit rider clergy, in the earliest years of the United States, were clergy assigned to travel around specific geographic territories to minister to settlers and organize congregations. Circuit riders were clergy in the Methodist Episcopal Church and related denominations, although similar itinerant preachers could be found in other faiths as well, particularly among minority faith groups.

Illustration from The Circuit Rider: A Tale of the Heroic Age by Edward Eggleston depicting a Methodist circuit rider on horseback.

History

In sparsely populated areas of the United States it always has been common for clergy in many denominations to serve more than one congregation at a time, a form of church organization sometimes called a "preaching circuit". In the contemporary United Methodist Church, a minister serving more than one church has a "(number of churches) point charge". However, in the rough frontier days of the early United States, the pattern of organization in the Methodist Episcopal denomination and its successors worked especially well in the service of rural villages and unorganized settlements. In the Methodist denominations, congregations do not "call" (or employ) a pastor of their own choice. Instead, a bishop "appoints" (assigns) a pastor to a congregation or a group of congregations, and until late in the 20th century, neither pastor nor congregation had any say in the appointment. This meant that in the early days of the United States, as the population developed, Methodist clergy could be appointed to circuits wherever people were settling.

A "circuit" (nowadays referred to as a charge) was a geographic area that encompassed two or more local churches. Pastors met each year at "Annual Conference" where their bishops would appoint them either to a new circuit or to remain at the same one. Most often they were moved to another appointment every year. (In 1804, the Methodist Episcopal General Conference decreed that no pastor was to serve the same appointment for more than two consecutive years.)[1] Once a pastor was assigned a circuit, it was his responsibility to conduct worship and visit members of each church in his charge on a regular basis in addition to possibly establishing new churches. He was supervised by a Presiding Elder (now called a District Superintendent) who would visit each charge four times a year (the "Quarterly Conference").

Rural locations

Riding on horseback between distant churches, these preachers were popularly called "circuit riders" or "saddlebag preachers" although their official role was "traveling clergy" (a term still used in Methodist denominations). Carrying only what could fit in their saddlebags, they traveled through wilderness and villages, preaching every day at any place available (peoples' cabins, courthouses, fields, meeting houses, even basements and street corners). Unlike clergy in urban areas, Methodist circuit riders were always on the move, needing five to six weeks to cover the longest routes. Their ministerial activity boosted Methodism into the largest Protestant denomination at the time,[2] with 14,986 members and 83 traveling preachers in 1784 [3] and by 1839, 749,216 members served by 3,557 traveling preachers and 5,856 local preachers.[4]

The early frontier ministry was often lonely and dangerous. Samuel Wakefield's hymn describes a circuit rider's family anxiously waiting for the preacher's return; the final stanza reads

Yet still they look with glistening eye,
Till lo! a herald hastens nigh;
He comes the tale of woe to tell,
How he, their prop and glory fell;
How died he in a stranger’s room,
How strangers laid him in the tomb,
How spoke he with his latest breath,
And loved and blessed them all in death.[5]

Bishop Francis Asbury

Francis Asbury (1745–1816), the founding bishop of American Methodism, established the precedent for circuit riding. Together with his driver and partner "Black Harry" Hosier, he traveled 270,000 miles and preached 16,000 sermons as he made his way up and down early America supervising clergy. He brought the concept of the circuit from English Methodism, where it still exists: British Methodist churches are grouped in circuits, which typically include a dozen or more churches, and ministers are appointed ("stationed") to the circuit, not to the local church. A typical English circuit has two or three times as many churches as ministers, the balance of the services being led by lay Methodist local preachers or retired ("supernumerary") ministers. The title circuit rider, however, was an American coinage born of American necessities. Although John Wesley, the founder of Methodism, covered enormous distances on horseback during his career, and early British Methodist preachers also rode around their circuits, in general they had far less formidable traveling commitments than their American counterparts.

Modern Methodist practices

As well as being constantly on the move between the churches in their charge, Methodist ministers were regularly moved between charges, a principal known as itinerancy. Although most charges in the United States now consist of a single church, the tradition of itinerancy is still alive and functioning today in American Methodism, as it is in most Methodist Churches worldwide. Although not moving as frequently as in the past, the average U.S. United Methodist Church pastor will stay at a local church for 2–5 years before being appointed to another charge at the Annual Conference (although technically, every pastor is assigned to a charge every year, it is just usually the same one). In British Methodism, ministers are normally appointed to a circuit for five years (again, they are stationed there annually by the Conference); the Conference may not station someone beyond this period without an invitation from the Circuit Meeting for that minister to remain in the circuit, but it is unusual for a minister to stay for longer than seven or eight years in one circuit.

Examples

Possibly the most famous circuit rider was Peter Cartwright, who wrote two autobiographies.[6] John B. Matthias was an early circuit rider from New York state who is credited with having written a gospel hymn, "Palms of Victory." Wilbur Fisk, who became an educator, served as a circuit rider for three years. It was not uncommon for clergy to serve on circuits for a few years and then go to other work. Kentucky native Eli P. Farmer, a circuit rider for the Methodist Episcopal Church on the Indiana frontier from 1825 to 1839, became a Bloomington, Indiana, farmer, newspaper editor, and businessman. He later served in the Indiana Senate (1843 to 1845) and as a self-appointed chaplain during the American Civil War.[7] Joseph Tarkington, another circuit rider in Indiana, was the grandfather of novelist Booth Tarkington.[8]

 
Portrait of Governor Brownlow by George Dury.

William G. "Parson" Brownlow, Tennessee's radical newspaper publisher, noted book author, American Civil War-Reconstruction Era Tennessee governor, and U.S. Senator, began his career as a circuit rider in the 1820s and 1830s. Brownlow gained wide notoriety for his wild clashes --- both in person and in print --- with rival Baptist and Presbyterian missionaries and Christian sectarian authors across the Southern Appalachian region of the United States.[9] Brownlow's books detailing the Confederate States of America military occupation of his hometown of Knoxville, Tennessee, and his own time briefly spent in a Confederate prison during the American Civil War gained Brownlow a greatly expanded audience across the northern United States who were eager to purchase both his books and admission tickets for his northern U.S. speaking tour during the later years of the American Civil War.

The father of outlaw John Wesley Hardin, James "Gip" Hardin, was a Methodist preacher and circuit rider in the mid-1800s. Hardin's father traveled over much of central Texas on his preaching circuit until 1869 when he and his family settled in Sumpter, Trinity County, Texas where he established a school – also named for John Wesley, the founder of Methodism.

Thomas S. Hinde was a Methodist circuit rider in Illinois, Indiana, Kentucky and Missouri from the early 1800s until about 1825. He eventually settled in Mount Carmel, Illinois, the town he had earlier founded. Hinde was a notable minister, newspaper publisher, attorney, real estate entrepreneur and clerk for the Ohio House of Representatives. More than 47 volumes of his personal and business documents are among the Lyman Draper collection at the Wisconsin Historical Society, since they were donated after his death by his son in law Charles H. Constable.

Father Pierre Yves Kéralum was a Catholic priest who ministered to ranchers in the Lower Rio Grande Valley from 1853 to 1872. He was one of about thirty Catholic priests known as the Cavalry of Christ because they traveled on horseback. Kéralum was also an architect who designed and helped build churches such as the Immaculate Conception Cathedral in Brownsville, Texas, as well as chapels, rectories, and other buildings in the region.[10]

In culture

In retrospect, the circuit rider became a romantic figure and was featured in a number of novels in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Two of the better known novels are Edward Eggleston's The Circuit Rider.[11] and Ernest Thompson Seton's Preacher of Cedar Mountain.[12]

A circuit rider is also a character in the Newbery Award–winning novel for children, "Caddie Woodlawn", set in western Wisconsin in the 1860s.[13]

During the 1970s, prior to its sign-off message, Richmond, Virginia television station WWBT broadcast "Justice and The Circuit Rider", a rural preacher appearing on his mount, Justice, and presenting a brief parable using props from his saddlebag. These spots also appeared on the Richmond ABC affiliate WXEX, now operating as WRIC-TV just after the end of "Shock Theater". In these short films, the host was identified only as the Circuit Rider from Cobbs Creek, Virginia at the end of the three-minute segment. The preacher was William B. Livermon Sr., who served several Virginia churches during his lifetime before passing away in 1992.[14]

Inspired by the story of Catholic circuit rider Pierre Yves Kéralum, author Paul Horgan wrote a fictionalized account of the priest's last days titled The Devil in the Desert (1952).[15]

Autobiographies

The first-person accounts of pioneer circuit riders give insight to the culture of the early United States as well as the theology and sociology of religion (and especially Methodism) in the young nation. Quite a few circuit riders published memoirs. These are generally available in the collections of United Methodist seminary libraries. The United Library of Garrett-Evangelical Theological Seminary and Seabury-Western Theological Seminary (Evanston, Illinois) seems to have the largest collection of these writings, including over 70 items.[16]

Through his role as chairman of the United Methodist editorial committee in Shreveport, Louisiana in the latter 1970s, the historian Walter M. Lowrey spearheaded a project, A History of Louisiana Methodism,[17] which includes material on the church's extensive network of circuit riders.[18]

References

  1. ^ Hyde, A. B. The Story of Methodism (revised edition). Springfield, Mass: Willey & Co., 1889, p. 470. The 1887 edition is available as a Google Book. [1]
  2. ^ Gaustad, Edwin Scott. Historical Atlas of Religion in America. New York: Harper and Row, 1962, pp. 77–78.
  3. ^ Porter, James. A Compendium of Methodism. New York: Carlton & Porter, 1851, p. 134. The 1853 edition is available as a Google Book. [2]
  4. ^ Porter, James. op. cit., p. 160.
  5. ^ Christ-Janer, Albert, Charles W. Hughes, and Carleton Sprague Smith. American Hymns Old and New. New York: Columbia University Press, 1980. p.380.
  6. ^ Cartwright, Peter (Ed. W. P. Strickland). Autobiography of Peter Cartwright the Backwoods Preacher. Cincinnati: Cranston and Curts, 1856; Cartwright, Peter (Ed. W. S. Hooper). Fifty Years as a Presiding Elder. Cincinnati: Hitchcock and Walden, 1871. [3]
  7. ^ Case, Riley (2018). Faith and Fury: Eli Farmer on the Frontier, 1794–1881. Indianapolis: Indiana Historical Society Press. p. 1. ISBN 9780871954299. See also: Shepherd, Rebecca A. (1980). A Biographical Directory of the Indiana General Assembly. Vol. 1. Indianapolis: Select Committee of the Centennial History of the Indiana General Committee, Indiana Historical Bureau. p. 123. OCLC 6263491.
  8. ^ Morley, Christopher (1947). Mince Pie: Adventures on the Sunny Side of Grub Street. Library of Alexandria. ISBN 1465552669.
  9. ^ "William Gannaway 'Parson' Brownlow," Tennessee Encyclopedia of History and Culture. Retrieved: 5 May 2014.
  10. ^ "Kéralum, Pierre Yves". Missionary Oblates of Mary Immaculate. Retrieved February 2, 2019.
  11. ^ Eggleston, Edward. The Circuit Rider: A Tale of the Heroic Age. New York: Scribner's, 1878, 1902. Available as a Google Book [4]
  12. ^ Seton, Ernest Thompson. The Preacher of Cedar Mountain. New York: Grosset & Dunlap, 1917. Available as a Google Book [5]
  13. ^ Brink, Carol Ryrie. Caddie Woodlawn. New York: Simon & Schuster, 1935.
  14. ^ Callis, Rita A. (1992). "William B. Livermon Sr., 1916–1992". Memoirs from the 1992 Journal of the Virginia Annual Conference. Virginia Conference of the United Methodist Church. Retrieved 2009-04-21.
  15. ^ "Keralum, Pierre, Yves". Texas State Historical Association. Retrieved February 3, 2019.
  16. ^ [6] (Search books for the subject heading, "Methodist Episcopal Church --Clergy --Biography," and look for 19th Century publications.)
  17. ^ . iscuo.org. Archived from the original on July 26, 2011. Retrieved March 23, 2011.
  18. ^ . centenary.edu. Archived from the original on October 3, 2010. Retrieved March 23, 2011.

Further reading

With the advent of Google Books, several memoirs became available on-line. Here is a list of some circuit rider memoirs available through Google Books:

  • Bangs, Nathan. The life of the Rev. Freeborn Garrettson [1752–1827], 1845.[7]
  • Dyer, John Lewis, 1812–1901. The Snow-shoe Itinerant : An Autobiography of the Rev. John L. Dyer, Familiarly Known as "Father Dyer" of the Colorado Conference, 1890.[8]
  • Richardson, Simon Peter, 1818–1899. The Lights and Shadows of Itinerant Life, 1900 [9]
  • Finley, James Bradley, 1781–1856 (W. P. Stricklkand, Ed.). Autobiography of Rev. James B. Finley, or, Pioneer Life in the West, 1856.[10]
  • Caughey, James, 1810?–1891. Earnest Christianity Illustrated, 1855.[11]
  • Hibbard, Billy, 1771–1844. Memoirs of the Life and Travels of B. Hibbard, 1843 [12] (Someone wrote “Good Circuit Riding” on one of the unnumbered front pages of the Google copy.)
  • Peterson, Daniel H. The looking-glass: being a true report and narrative of the life, travels and labors of the Rev. Daniel H. Peterson, a colored clergyman; embracing a period of time from the year 1812 to 1854, and including his visit to western Africa, 1854.[13]
  • Zersen, Frederick. The Second Circuit Rider on the Soo Line. Concordia Historical Institute Quarterly, Summer 1990, Vol. 63, No. 2.

In addition, St. George's Methodist Church in Philadelphia recently digitized the diaries of circuit rider David Dailey

circuit, rider, religious, circuit, rider, clergy, earliest, years, united, states, were, clergy, assigned, travel, around, specific, geographic, territories, minister, settlers, organize, congregations, circuit, riders, were, clergy, methodist, episcopal, chu. Circuit rider clergy in the earliest years of the United States were clergy assigned to travel around specific geographic territories to minister to settlers and organize congregations Circuit riders were clergy in the Methodist Episcopal Church and related denominations although similar itinerant preachers could be found in other faiths as well particularly among minority faith groups Illustration from The Circuit Rider A Tale of the Heroic Age by Edward Eggleston depicting a Methodist circuit rider on horseback Contents 1 History 1 1 Rural locations 1 2 Bishop Francis Asbury 2 Modern Methodist practices 3 Examples 4 In culture 5 Autobiographies 6 References 7 Further readingHistory EditIn sparsely populated areas of the United States it always has been common for clergy in many denominations to serve more than one congregation at a time a form of church organization sometimes called a preaching circuit In the contemporary United Methodist Church a minister serving more than one church has a number of churches point charge However in the rough frontier days of the early United States the pattern of organization in the Methodist Episcopal denomination and its successors worked especially well in the service of rural villages and unorganized settlements In the Methodist denominations congregations do not call or employ a pastor of their own choice Instead a bishop appoints assigns a pastor to a congregation or a group of congregations and until late in the 20th century neither pastor nor congregation had any say in the appointment This meant that in the early days of the United States as the population developed Methodist clergy could be appointed to circuits wherever people were settling A circuit nowadays referred to as a charge was a geographic area that encompassed two or more local churches Pastors met each year at Annual Conference where their bishops would appoint them either to a new circuit or to remain at the same one Most often they were moved to another appointment every year In 1804 the Methodist Episcopal General Conference decreed that no pastor was to serve the same appointment for more than two consecutive years 1 Once a pastor was assigned a circuit it was his responsibility to conduct worship and visit members of each church in his charge on a regular basis in addition to possibly establishing new churches He was supervised by a Presiding Elder now called a District Superintendent who would visit each charge four times a year the Quarterly Conference Rural locations Edit Riding on horseback between distant churches these preachers were popularly called circuit riders or saddlebag preachers although their official role was traveling clergy a term still used in Methodist denominations Carrying only what could fit in their saddlebags they traveled through wilderness and villages preaching every day at any place available peoples cabins courthouses fields meeting houses even basements and street corners Unlike clergy in urban areas Methodist circuit riders were always on the move needing five to six weeks to cover the longest routes Their ministerial activity boosted Methodism into the largest Protestant denomination at the time 2 with 14 986 members and 83 traveling preachers in 1784 3 and by 1839 749 216 members served by 3 557 traveling preachers and 5 856 local preachers 4 The early frontier ministry was often lonely and dangerous Samuel Wakefield s hymn describes a circuit rider s family anxiously waiting for the preacher s return the final stanza reads Yet still they look with glistening eye Till lo a herald hastens nigh He comes the tale of woe to tell How he their prop and glory fell How died he in a stranger s room How strangers laid him in the tomb How spoke he with his latest breath And loved and blessed them all in death 5 Bishop Francis Asbury Edit Francis Asbury 1745 1816 the founding bishop of American Methodism established the precedent for circuit riding Together with his driver and partner Black Harry Hosier he traveled 270 000 miles and preached 16 000 sermons as he made his way up and down early America supervising clergy He brought the concept of the circuit from English Methodism where it still exists British Methodist churches are grouped in circuits which typically include a dozen or more churches and ministers are appointed stationed to the circuit not to the local church A typical English circuit has two or three times as many churches as ministers the balance of the services being led by lay Methodist local preachers or retired supernumerary ministers The title circuit rider however was an American coinage born of American necessities Although John Wesley the founder of Methodism covered enormous distances on horseback during his career and early British Methodist preachers also rode around their circuits in general they had far less formidable traveling commitments than their American counterparts Modern Methodist practices EditAs well as being constantly on the move between the churches in their charge Methodist ministers were regularly moved between charges a principal known as itinerancy Although most charges in the United States now consist of a single church the tradition of itinerancy is still alive and functioning today in American Methodism as it is in most Methodist Churches worldwide Although not moving as frequently as in the past the average U S United Methodist Church pastor will stay at a local church for 2 5 years before being appointed to another charge at the Annual Conference although technically every pastor is assigned to a charge every year it is just usually the same one In British Methodism ministers are normally appointed to a circuit for five years again they are stationed there annually by the Conference the Conference may not station someone beyond this period without an invitation from the Circuit Meeting for that minister to remain in the circuit but it is unusual for a minister to stay for longer than seven or eight years in one circuit Examples EditPossibly the most famous circuit rider was Peter Cartwright who wrote two autobiographies 6 John B Matthias was an early circuit rider from New York state who is credited with having written a gospel hymn Palms of Victory Wilbur Fisk who became an educator served as a circuit rider for three years It was not uncommon for clergy to serve on circuits for a few years and then go to other work Kentucky native Eli P Farmer a circuit rider for the Methodist Episcopal Church on the Indiana frontier from 1825 to 1839 became a Bloomington Indiana farmer newspaper editor and businessman He later served in the Indiana Senate 1843 to 1845 and as a self appointed chaplain during the American Civil War 7 Joseph Tarkington another circuit rider in Indiana was the grandfather of novelist Booth Tarkington 8 Portrait of Governor Brownlow by George Dury William G Parson Brownlow Tennessee s radical newspaper publisher noted book author American Civil War Reconstruction Era Tennessee governor and U S Senator began his career as a circuit rider in the 1820s and 1830s Brownlow gained wide notoriety for his wild clashes both in person and in print with rival Baptist and Presbyterian missionaries and Christian sectarian authors across the Southern Appalachian region of the United States 9 Brownlow s books detailing the Confederate States of America military occupation of his hometown of Knoxville Tennessee and his own time briefly spent in a Confederate prison during the American Civil War gained Brownlow a greatly expanded audience across the northern United States who were eager to purchase both his books and admission tickets for his northern U S speaking tour during the later years of the American Civil War The father of outlaw John Wesley Hardin James Gip Hardin was a Methodist preacher and circuit rider in the mid 1800s Hardin s father traveled over much of central Texas on his preaching circuit until 1869 when he and his family settled in Sumpter Trinity County Texas where he established a school also named for John Wesley the founder of Methodism Thomas S Hinde was a Methodist circuit rider in Illinois Indiana Kentucky and Missouri from the early 1800s until about 1825 He eventually settled in Mount Carmel Illinois the town he had earlier founded Hinde was a notable minister newspaper publisher attorney real estate entrepreneur and clerk for the Ohio House of Representatives More than 47 volumes of his personal and business documents are among the Lyman Draper collection at the Wisconsin Historical Society since they were donated after his death by his son in law Charles H Constable Father Pierre Yves Keralum was a Catholic priest who ministered to ranchers in the Lower Rio Grande Valley from 1853 to 1872 He was one of about thirty Catholic priests known as the Cavalry of Christ because they traveled on horseback Keralum was also an architect who designed and helped build churches such as the Immaculate Conception Cathedral in Brownsville Texas as well as chapels rectories and other buildings in the region 10 In culture EditIn retrospect the circuit rider became a romantic figure and was featured in a number of novels in the late 19th and early 20th centuries Two of the better known novels are Edward Eggleston s The Circuit Rider 11 and Ernest Thompson Seton s Preacher of Cedar Mountain 12 A circuit rider is also a character in the Newbery Award winning novel for children Caddie Woodlawn set in western Wisconsin in the 1860s 13 During the 1970s prior to its sign off message Richmond Virginia television station WWBT broadcast Justice and The Circuit Rider a rural preacher appearing on his mount Justice and presenting a brief parable using props from his saddlebag These spots also appeared on the Richmond ABC affiliate WXEX now operating as WRIC TV just after the end of Shock Theater In these short films the host was identified only as the Circuit Rider from Cobbs Creek Virginia at the end of the three minute segment The preacher was William B Livermon Sr who served several Virginia churches during his lifetime before passing away in 1992 14 Inspired by the story of Catholic circuit rider Pierre Yves Keralum author Paul Horgan wrote a fictionalized account of the priest s last days titled The Devil in the Desert 1952 15 Autobiographies EditThe first person accounts of pioneer circuit riders give insight to the culture of the early United States as well as the theology and sociology of religion and especially Methodism in the young nation Quite a few circuit riders published memoirs These are generally available in the collections of United Methodist seminary libraries The United Library of Garrett Evangelical Theological Seminary and Seabury Western Theological Seminary Evanston Illinois seems to have the largest collection of these writings including over 70 items 16 Through his role as chairman of the United Methodist editorial committee in Shreveport Louisiana in the latter 1970s the historian Walter M Lowrey spearheaded a project A History of Louisiana Methodism 17 which includes material on the church s extensive network of circuit riders 18 References Edit Hyde A B The Story of Methodism revised edition Springfield Mass Willey amp Co 1889 p 470 The 1887 edition is available as a Google Book 1 Gaustad Edwin Scott Historical Atlas of Religion in America New York Harper and Row 1962 pp 77 78 Porter James A Compendium of Methodism New York Carlton amp Porter 1851 p 134 The 1853 edition is available as a Google Book 2 Porter James op cit p 160 Christ Janer Albert Charles W Hughes and Carleton Sprague Smith American Hymns Old and New New York Columbia University Press 1980 p 380 Cartwright Peter Ed W P Strickland Autobiography of Peter Cartwright the Backwoods Preacher Cincinnati Cranston and Curts 1856 Cartwright Peter Ed W S Hooper Fifty Years as a Presiding Elder Cincinnati Hitchcock and Walden 1871 3 Case Riley 2018 Faith and Fury Eli Farmer on the Frontier 1794 1881 Indianapolis Indiana Historical Society Press p 1 ISBN 9780871954299 See also Shepherd Rebecca A 1980 A Biographical Directory of the Indiana General Assembly Vol 1 Indianapolis Select Committee of the Centennial History of the Indiana General Committee Indiana Historical Bureau p 123 OCLC 6263491 Morley Christopher 1947 Mince Pie Adventures on the Sunny Side of Grub Street Library of Alexandria ISBN 1465552669 William Gannaway Parson Brownlow Tennessee Encyclopedia of History and Culture Retrieved 5 May 2014 Keralum Pierre Yves Missionary Oblates of Mary Immaculate Retrieved February 2 2019 Eggleston Edward The Circuit Rider A Tale of the Heroic Age New York Scribner s 1878 1902 Available as a Google Book 4 Seton Ernest Thompson The Preacher of Cedar Mountain New York Grosset amp Dunlap 1917 Available as a Google Book 5 Brink Carol Ryrie Caddie Woodlawn New York Simon amp Schuster 1935 Callis Rita A 1992 William B Livermon Sr 1916 1992 Memoirs from the 1992 Journal of the Virginia Annual Conference Virginia Conference of the United Methodist Church Retrieved 2009 04 21 Keralum Pierre Yves Texas State Historical Association Retrieved February 3 2019 6 Search books for the subject heading Methodist Episcopal Church Clergy Biography and look for 19th Century publications Louisiana Commission on Archives and History iscuo org Archived from the original on July 26 2011 Retrieved March 23 2011 Methodist Circuit Riders centenary edu Archived from the original on October 3 2010 Retrieved March 23 2011 Further reading EditWith the advent of Google Books several memoirs became available on line Here is a list of some circuit rider memoirs available through Google Books Bangs Nathan The life of the Rev Freeborn Garrettson 1752 1827 1845 7 Dyer John Lewis 1812 1901 The Snow shoe Itinerant An Autobiography of the Rev John L Dyer Familiarly Known as Father Dyer of the Colorado Conference 1890 8 Richardson Simon Peter 1818 1899 The Lights and Shadows of Itinerant Life 1900 9 Finley James Bradley 1781 1856 W P Stricklkand Ed Autobiography of Rev James B Finley or Pioneer Life in the West 1856 10 Caughey James 1810 1891 Earnest Christianity Illustrated 1855 11 Hibbard Billy 1771 1844 Memoirs of the Life and Travels of B Hibbard 1843 12 Someone wrote Good Circuit Riding on one of the unnumbered front pages of the Google copy Peterson Daniel H The looking glass being a true report and narrative of the life travels and labors of the Rev Daniel H Peterson a colored clergyman embracing a period of time from the year 1812 to 1854 and including his visit to western Africa 1854 13 Zersen Frederick The Second Circuit Rider on the Soo Line Concordia Historical Institute Quarterly Summer 1990 Vol 63 No 2 In addition St George s Methodist Church in Philadelphia recently digitized the diaries of circuit rider David Dailey Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Circuit rider religious amp oldid 1144671981, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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