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The Cambridge Extra Mural Board, which celebrated its centenary in
1973, was the first extra-mural department in any university, and
is important both as a pioneer, much copied elsewhere, and because
it was instrumental in the founding of other kinds of institution,
including university colleges. Dr Welch has written a detailed
history of the board and its predecessor, the Local Lectures
Syndicate, based primarily on the archive material at Stuart House,
Cambridge. The book will interest social and educational historians
and those actively concerned with adult education.
Selina, Countess of Huntingdon, was the only woman to take an
active and independent part in the Methodist Revival of the 18th
century. She was converted in 1739, at the age of 32, and became a
close friend of Charles Wesley - a friendship which continued
despite her conversion to Calvinistic Methodism in 1748. During the
last 23 years of her life, she founded a college for training
evangelical ministers, supported an orphanage in Savannah, Georgia,
encouraged the building of Calvinistic Methodist chapels in England
and Wales, and established her own denomination. Based on extensive
original manuscript sources, including letters and papers, Welch
traces Selina's story from a genteel but impoverished upbringing
and the separation of her parents, her love-match with Lord
Huntingdon, her long widowhood during which she managed the family
estates, her clashes with John Wesley, through to the culmination
of her work for the Methodists and the conclusion of her pilgrimage
towards spiritual fulfilment.
The Plymouth Building Accounts record the expenditure on three
public building projects undertaken in Plymouth between 1564 and
1620, including the building of the Guildhall in 1606-7. This
edition, with introduction, tells us much about the city's
builders, their wages, and the techniques they used, and will
interest historians of architecture and of urban economies.
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