Both of the Wesley brothers had transforming religious experiences in May
1738. John’s heart “was strangely warmed” at a prayer meeting on Aldersgate
Street in London. In the years following, the brothers succeeded in leading a
lively renewal movement in the Church of England. As the Methodist movement
grew, it became apparent that their ministry would spread to the American
colonies as some Methodists made the exhausting and hazardous Atlantic voyage
to the New World.
Organized Methodism in America began as a lay movement. Among its earliest
leaders were Robert Strawbridge, an immigrant farmer who organized work about
1760 in Maryland and Virginia, Philip Embury and his cousin, Barbara Heck, who
began work in New York in 1766, and Captain Thomas Webb, whose labors were
instrumental in Methodist beginnings in Philadelphia in 1767. African Americans
participated actively in these groundbreaking and formational initiatives
though much of that contribution was acknowledged without much biographical
detail.
Learn more at the General Commission on Archives and History.
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