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Benevolent Designs - The Countess and the General: George Washington, Selina Countess of Huntingdon, their correspondence, & the evangelizing of America (Paperback)
Loot Price: R297
Discovery Miles 2 970
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Benevolent Designs - The Countess and the General: George Washington, Selina Countess of Huntingdon, their correspondence, & the evangelizing of America (Paperback)
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Loot Price R297
Discovery Miles 2 970
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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Lady Selina Shirley was the daughter of Washington Shirley, second
earl Ferrers; she married Theophilus Hastings, ninth earl of
Huntingdon. As Selina, countess of Huntingdon, she became the
patroness of the evangelicals in - and out - of the Church of
England, including the early Methodists in England, Wales, and
America alike. And she had a distant cousin in America: George
Washington, to whom she decided to write about her plans for a
mission to the Native Americans and the settling of her congregants
on the frontier. In the midst of revolution, war, peace treaties,
reprisals, and the birth of a new nation, the Countess and the
General shared first a correspondent, in Phillis Wheatley,
America's first Black author and poet; then, a correspondence; and
eventually, a friendship and something of a vision. The Countess
entrusted to her distant cousin the General her hopes of
maintaining charities in the former colonies, settling the
back-country with pious families, and evangelizing the Native
Americans. The General came to endow what became Washington College
- now Washington & Lee University - where one of America's
first Black clergymen was educated, and to move towards
abolitionism. Their lives and correspondence, and their actions,
touched at various points those of John Wesley and George
Whitefield; Phillis Wheatley; Olaudah Equiano the Black British
writer whose voice powerfully indicted slavery; the Reverend Samson
Occom, the Mohegan evangelist; and Granville Sharp, the
pro-American British civil servant who midwifed abolitionism and
helped create Sierra Leone. In the end, they helped to create the
forces that evangelized the American frontier, put down slavery,
gave the United States its standing sense of a special moral
mission in the world, and made the Nonconformist Conscience a
permanent factor in British politics.
General
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