Our indexes include entries for the spelling lomas. In the period you have requested, we have the following 569 records (displaying 181 to 190):
Wesleyan Methodist preachers
(1812) 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' widows
(1812-1813) The Wesleyan Methodist church's Merciful Fund provided annuities for preachers' widows, as well as other payments to retired clergy, widows and other dependants in need. These are listed in the annual minutes. Particularly useful is the fact that, after a widow remarried, her first married surname and her new surname were both given. | Sample scan, click to enlarge
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Deaths, Marriages, News and Promotions
(1813) Death notices and obituaries, marriage and birth notices, civil and military promotions, clerical preferments and domestic occurrences, as reported in the Gentleman's Magazine. Mostly from England and Wales, but items from Ireland, Scotland and abroad.
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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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Daughters of Wesleyan Methodist preachers
(1813-1814) Children of Wesleyan Methodist preachers could be educated by the church at their schools at Kingswood and Woodhouse Grove. For each girl not educated at these schools 8 guineas was allowed by the church to her father; these sums are listed in the annual accounts, with the girl's full name, arranged by school year, giving us an idea of her age. | Sample scan, click to enlarge
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Wesleyan Methodist Preachers: (XVI) Halifax 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 sixteenth, or Halifax, district, comprised Halifax, Sowerby Bridge, Todmorden, Burnley, Colne, Skipton (with Clithero), Grassington, Addingham, Keighley, Bingley, Woodhouse Grove, Bradford, Huddersfield Circuit (our old Chapel in Huddersfield and our Chapel at Shelly), and Holmfirth. | Sample scan, click to enlarge
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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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Subscribers to the Wesleyan Methodist preachers' schools
(1814-1815) Children of Wesleyan Methodist preachers could be educated by the church at their schools at Kingswood and Woodhouse Grove. These schools were supported by subscriptions and donations raised in local congregations throughout England and Wales, and in some years the individuals making larger donations are listed in the annual minutes, grouped together by congregation. | Sample scan, click to enlarge
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Wesleyan Methodist preachers
(1815) 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' wives
(1815-1816) 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. | Sample scan, click to enlarge
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