Our indexes include entries for the spelling bustard. In the period you have requested, we have the following 100 records (displaying 41 to 50):
Wesleyan Methodist preachers on trial
(1808-1809) After three years 'on trial' new Wesleyan Methodist preachers were admitted into full connexion with the church: lists of the ministers on trial in England and Ireland were published in the church's annual minutes. | Sample scan, click to enlarge
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Wesleyan Methodist preachers
(1809) A comprehensive list of Wesleyan Methodist ministers arranged by station and circuit in Britain, Ireland and abroad, was prepared each year at the church's annual conference. This includes supernumeraries and missionary preachers. | Sample scan, click to enlarge
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Wesleyan Methodist preachers on trial
(1809-1810) After three years 'on trial' new Wesleyan Methodist preachers were admitted into full connexion with the church: lists of the ministers on trial in England and Ireland were published in the church's annual minutes. | Sample scan, click to enlarge
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Wesleyan Methodist preachers
(1810) A comprehensive list of Wesleyan Methodist ministers arranged by station and circuit in Britain, Ireland and abroad, was prepared each year at the church's annual conference. This includes supernumeraries and missionary preachers. | Sample scan, click to enlarge
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Wesleyan Methodist preachers
(1811) After three years on trial these new Wesleyan Methodist preachers were admitted into full connexion with the church in 1811. | Sample scan, click to enlarge
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Wesleyan Methodist preachers afflicted with illness
(1811-1812) The Wesleyan Methodist church allowed payments for relief of the afflicted among their clergy, and these payments are listed in the annual accounts. | Sample scan, click to enlarge
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Wesleyan Methodist preachers
(1813) A comprehensive list of Wesleyan Methodist ministers arranged by station and circuit in Britain, Ireland and abroad, was prepared each year at the church's annual conference. This includes supernumeraries and missionary preachers. | Sample scan, click to enlarge
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Wesleyan Methodist Preachers: (I) London District
(1813-1814) The Seventieth Annual Conference 'of the Preachers, late in Connexion with the Rev. John Wesley' was held in Liverpool in July 1813, stationed the preachers throughout the districts for the following year, as set out in this report from the Methodist Magazine. The first, or London, district, comprised London East, London West, Leigh (in Essex), Reading, Deptford, Brentford, Colchester and Chelmsford, Ipswich, Harwich, Rochester, Canterbury, Ashford Mission, Margate, Dover, Rye, Seven Oaks, Bedford and Newport Pagnell, Leighton Buzzard, Luton, St Neot's, Huntingdon, Biggleswade, Brighthelmstone, and Chichester Mission. | Sample scan, click to enlarge
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Wesleyan Methodist preachers' wives
(1813-1814) Wives of Wesleyan Methodist ministers were supported by the church, either centrally or through the local congregations: lists of wives were therefore printed in the annual minutes. Unfortunately, the ladies' Christian names are never given; where it is necessary to distinguish between wives of ministers with the same surnames, the husbands' Christian names are given. The S. preceding each name signifies 'Sister'. Examining these lists is nevertheless a good way to trace approximate dates of marriage for a minister, and approximate dates of death of wives that predeceased them.
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Wesleyan Methodist preachers
(1814) A comprehensive list of Wesleyan Methodist ministers arranged by station and circuit in Britain, Ireland and abroad, was prepared each year at the church's annual conference. This includes supernumeraries and missionary preachers. | Sample scan, click to enlarge
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