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185:, William Dawson, and many others. In 1815 he was appointed to the Manchester circuit. On account of a serious throat infection in 1821, Everett gave up the regular ministry and became a bookseller, first in Sheffield, afterwards in Manchester. He had been collecting materials for the history of Methodism in those towns, part of which he published. He was the intimate friend and became the biographer of Dr.
214:, two volumes of disparaging sketches of the preachers. In 1845 and following years certain clandestine pamphlets called "Fly Sheets" were circulated widely, bearing neither printer's nor publisher's names. These contained serious charges against the leading men of the conference, reflecting on their public actions and their personal characters.
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in
Northumberland. He was the second son of John Everett and his wife, Margaret Bowmaker. Everett's father died when he was young, and the boy soon learned to help his mother. After a short time at a private school in Alnwick, he was apprenticed to a general dealer, where he was given to fun and
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To the end of his life
Everett remained a minister of this community, filling their pulpits as health and opportunity permitted. He lived for some years in Newcastle and finally in Sunderland. He wrote many articles for magazines and printed a few poems. In July 1865 his wife died, leaving no
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The foremost event in
Everett's life was his expulsion from the Wesleyan Methodist Conference in August 1849. For many years he had been opposed to its policy and working and published anonymously several volumes of free criticism, such as
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A general suspicion attributed these pamphlets to
Everett. He was brought before the conference and questioned about them, but declined to give any answer. After further inquiry and discussion he was formally expelled.
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Everett then took the lead in agitation against the conference, which shook the entire
Wesleyan community and resulted in the loss of over 200,000 members and adherents. Some of the seceders, the
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children. Everett had formed a large collection of
Methodist literature, both printed and in manuscript. These he disposed of to the Rev. Luke Tyerman, biographer of
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in 1839. Through failure of health he was again made a supernumerary minister in 1842, but remained in York, and employed his pen more actively than ever.
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246:. His library was bought after his death for the theological institute of the United Methodist Free Churches. He died at Sunderland on 10 May 1872.
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At an early period he formed the habit of taking careful notes of the celebrated characters whom he met, and thus preserved recollections of
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126:(1784โ1872) was an English Methodist and miscellaneous writer. He was a prominent figure behind the formation of the
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in 1835, arguing against the scheme to start a theological college for the training of ministers. He wrote much of
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to prepare for the ministry among the independents. At the end of his apprenticeship in 1804 he went to
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The
Midshipman and the Minister: Sketch of the Rev. A. A. Rees, circa 1861
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practical jokes. In 1803 he underwent a great change, joined the
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In August 1810 he married
Elizabeth Hutchinson of Sunderland.
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Gatherings from the Pit Heaps, or the Allens of Shiney Row
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Memoirs of the Life and
Writings of James Montgomery
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History of
Methodism in Manchester and its vicinity
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268:The Village Blacksmith: Memoirs of S. Hick
16:English Methodist and miscellaneous writer
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416:19th-century English Methodist ministers
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304:The Wallsend Miner: Life of W. Crister
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406:People from Alnwick
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