Showing posts with label Christ Church. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Christ Church. Show all posts

Wednesday, December 25, 2019

TREATY OF GHENT | 205th Anniversary (Clerihew inside)

A Celebratory Poster of the Treaty, 1814.
Off to Belgium they went,
To work on the Treaty of Ghent.
The Brits wanted uti possidetis
Meaning after-capture status.
The Yanks sought a total recante,
Way back to their status quo ante.
- Clerihew by JT Marlin, 2014
December 24, 2019 – Five years ago, just about the only person who celebrated the 200th Anniversary of the Treaty of Ghent was Oxford University Vice Chancellor Andrew Hamilton, who began his remarks with a reference to it. (Hamilton is now President of New York University.)

The  Treaty of Ghent was formally titled the “Treaty of Peace and Amity between His Britannic Majesty and the United States of America.” It was signed on December 24, 1814.

The only American or British newspaper to have acknowledged the anniversary on the date in 2014, as far as I could determine, was the East Hampton Star.

Declaration of War, 1812

The Treaty formally ended a state of war between Britain and the United States. President James Madison initiated a declaration of war on Britain originally because British Orders in Council made it harder for the United States to trade with France.

In addition, the British Navy was seizing (“impressing”) sailors on colonial ships and putting them on Navy ships. The War Hawks in the House of Representatives were calling for war on Britain.

The British Government responded by repealing the Orders in Council, ending the curb on trading. However, impressment remained. If the British had given up the right to impress American sailors, Madison might have called off the war.

Negotiations

Russia's Czar Alexander I in March 1813 offered to host negotiations, but the British were winning and refused. In the fall of 1813, British foreign minister Lord Castlereagh, a Cambridge alum, offered to negotiate directly with the United States. The two countries picked Ghent in eastern Flanders as the venue because it was a neutral city, speaking both Dutch and French. Since the Dutch had settled New York, there were family connections to U.S. officials from that state. The goal of both the British and the United States was to end the fighting, which was far too costly for both countries.

The main issue addressed by the negotiators was how the spoils of war – territories that were captured during the war – would be divided.

The United States wanted all the captured regions back; their negotiating team was led by two Harvard-connected officials. Britain wanted to keep what they had won; their team was led by Oxford and Cambridge men:
  • In this corner, for the Stars and Stripes – John Quincy Adams, chief negotiator, a Harvard graduate; Henry Clay, the hawk (the "bad cop"); Albert Gallatin, former Treasury Secretary, who grew up in Geneva, emigrated to the USA and settled south of Pittsburgh, teaching French at Harvard and elsewhere to earn a living before he became Secretary of the Treasury in 1801, remaining in that job until he went to Ghent in 1814; James A. Bayard, moderate anti-war Federalist; and Jonathan Russell, chargé d’affaires for Madison in Paris. It took the Americans six weeks or more to communicate with Washington, D.C. so they were negotiating largely on their own. The U.S. team wanted to restore territory to what it was before the war, the status quo ante bellum. They won.
  • In this other corner, for the Union Jack – The central negotiator was a Cambridge graduate. The two senior members were more senior, and Oxonians, but it seems they didn't want to make the trip, thereby prompting the thought the idea that the Oxford men were more talented, but lazier; while Cambridge provided someone with less experience and talent, but more willing to make the effort. (1) The senior team was Lord Castlereagh, Britain's Foreign Secretary and an alumnus of St. John's College, Cambridge, and Henry Lord Bathurst, the Third Earl, Secretary for War and the Colonies and alum of Christ Church, Oxford. However, they stayed in London and did not dignify the talks with their presence. (2) Instead, they sent a less-skilled team: Admiralty lawyer William Adams, impressments expert Admiral Lord Gambier, and the real workhorse of the group, and a graduate of Trinity College, Cambridge, Henry Goulburn, Undersecretary for War and the Colonies. The British negotiators wanted uti possidetis, that each side could keep what it had won militarily, such as Detroit and Mackinac Island. They lost.
Admiral of the Fleet James Gambier (L, with Treaty) shakes hands
with U.S. Ambassador to Russia and son of the 2nd U.S. President.
John Quincy Adams. British Undersecretary of State for War and
the Colonies Henry Goulburn (R, red folder) and others look on.
The British senior negotiators were far closer to the Treaty signing than the theoretical U.S. decision-makers, but they were not in London. Being closer, in Europe turned out not to have been much of an advantage. The British being close to London meant they felt they needed to send telegrams to get approvals from their superiors.

The Americans in Ghent understood they were too far from Washington to be able to get approval for their strategy. They were thus able to settle on a common goal, and take action on behalf of their country.

The outcome of the Treaty was favorable for the United States, perhaps because the war was going well for the Americans during the month before the Treaty was signed:
  • News of two U.S. victories was the last information that negotiators in Ghent received. The Americans seemed to be losing early in the war, with the burning of the U.S. Capitol and other buildings in Washington. But: (1) Lieutenant General Sir George Prévost and a naval squadron under Captain George Downie engaged in Plattsburgh, N.Y., with New York and Vermont militia and U.S. Army regulars, under the command of Brigadier General Alexander Macomb. They were supported by ships commanded by Master Commandant Thomas Macdonough. The British failed to take Lake Champlain and fled north after the battle. (2)  Fort McHenry in Baltimore, Md., withstood a severe attack, inspiring the National Anthem, "The Star Spangled Banner."  
  • The Americans therefore refused to let the British keep what they won. The British did not get what they wanted regarding the independence of Native lands in the state of Ohio, and in the Indiana and Michigan Territories. The British wanted this reserved land to be a buffer state to protect Canada from American annexation, but Clay would not give it up. The British did not get any territory in northern Maine, or demilitarization of the Great Lakes or navigation rights on the Mississippi. Lord Castlereagh asked the Duke of Wellington and his advice was for them to take the status quo ante bellum
On December 24 the negotiators agreed on the 3,000-word Treaty. After approval by the two governments, hostilities ended and “all territory, places and possessions whatsoever, taken by either party from the other during the war” were restored to what they were before the war.

Although the United States didn't give up any territory, it had been the one that declared war, so presumably it was bent on expansion. That was not to be, and the Canadian border was left in place, which would have been the consolation for the British. Also, the United States never did get the British to promise not to impress American sailors, but as hostilities in Europe ended, this issue ceased to be such a concern.

The Treaty was signed by the British on December 30, but it took a month for word to get to Washington, D.C. Before the combatants got word of the Treaty, the British attacked New Orleans on January 8, 1815 with a large army. It was overwhelmed by a smaller and less experienced American force under General Andrew Jackson (1767-1845) in the greatest U.S. victory in the war. The news of the Treaty and the outcome of the Battle of New Orleans reached a celebratory American public at about the same time. (However, the Second Battle of Fort Bowyer was won by the British. For them, the news was mixed.)

The United States ratified the treaty in mid-February 1815 under President James Madison, who started it all, with a formal exchange of papers.

Comments

1. The United States won back in the Treaty what it had lost.
As the Canadian historian and War of 1812 expert Donald E. Graves concludes:  What Americans lost on the battlefield, "they made up for at the negotiating table.”

2. The Treaty of Ghent has held up for 205 years. However, the Treaty does not imply a  "Special Relationship", just a cessation of hostilities. During the American Civil War, Britain (as Amanda Foreman has shown) came in mostly on the losing side, the South. This makes sense historically. The Pilgrims were led by Cambridge alumni fleeing to New England to avoid religious persecution at the hands of the Church of England. South of New York, however, was populated through friendly grants of land from the Crown to mostly Oxford alumni (Pennsylvania to William Penn of Christ Church, Oxford; Maryland to the Calverts of Trinity College, Oxford; see chart here: https://theoxbridgepursuivant.blogspot.com/2013/06/oxford-alumni-who-shaped-american.html).

3. Hitler brought the United States and Britain together. During World War I, many Irish Catholics opposed U.S. entry on the side of Britain. It was not until World War II that the Special Relationship was cemented. The threat of Hitler tied the United States and Britain, first with Lend-Lease in March 1941 and then with the U.S. declaration of war following the Pearl Harbor attack in December 1941.

4. Relations have been good since World War II. Brexit will leave Britain more dependent on its relationship with the United States.

Friday, September 14, 2018

R.I.P. | Robert L. Schuettinger (Exeter and Christ Church)

Robert L. Schuettinger,
1936-2018.
Posted on the bulletin board of the Oxford and Cambridge Club of London, where Alice and I stayed on Wednesday night, was a notice of the death of member Professor Robert L[indsay] Schuettinger, who was up at Oxford the same time as I was in 1962-64.

The notice said that Bob (as we knew him) died on September 11, 2018.

Schuettinger was the founder and president of the Oxford Study Abroad Programme, which began as a Washington Academic Internship Program in 1983 and first sent American students to Oxford in 1985. He was an Affiliated Faculty Member of the Washington International Studies Council in Oxford. He studied at Columbia, the University of Chicago, and at Oxford University (Exeter and Christ Church). His graduate supervisor in political philosophy was Professor Sir Isaiah Berlin, Fellow (and President) of the British Academy, Order of Merit, and Fellow of All Souls College.

Schuettinger taught at St. Andrews University in Scotland and Yale University, where he was an Associate Fellow of Yale's Davenport College from 1974 until his death. He has lectured at the Kennedy School of Politics in Harvard and also was a Visiting Research Fellow in International Relations at Mansfield College, Oxford University, for a three- year term. He taught an Oxford seminar in diplomacy jointly with Professor Lord Beloff, FBA, Fellow of All Souls College. He was a Visiting Research Fellow of Oxford University's Rothermere American Institute, elected by the RAI's Fellowship Committee in April 2013. He was an Associate Member of the Senior Common Room of Christ Church. He was also appointed by Christ Church to the college's Board of Benefactors.

One of Schuettinger's books.
He authored or co-authored 19 books, including Forty Centuries of Wage and Price Controls, which he wrote with Eamonn F. Butler and was rated 4.11 out of 5 on Goodreads and went into a third edition in the United States and was translated into Chinese. He also wrote U.S. Strategy for the Decade Ahead, China: The Turning Point, Korea in the World TodaySaving Social SecurityScholars, Dollars and Public Policy, and Toward Liberty.

He served as a senior aide in foreign affairs in the U.S. House of Representatives, as deputy to the Under Secretary of State for Security Assistance, as a senior policy aide in foreign policy in the White House and in the Senior Executive Service in the US Information Agency and the Pentagon (Director of Long-Range Policy Planning).

He was also Assistant Director for National Security Policy in a Presidential Transition Office. He was Director of Studies in Washington's largest think tank, The Heritage Foundation, and was founding editor of its social science quarterly, Policy Review, now published by the Hoover Institution of Stanford University.
Besides his membership in the Oxford and Cambridge Club in London, he was a member of the Cosmos Club and the Metropolitan Club in Washington, and of the Beefsteak Club and The Reform Club in London. He was elected to membership of The Pilgrims Society, the Anglo-American Society, and of the Institut d'Études Politiques. He also received several teaching awards, including "Best Professor of the Year."

Sources of information, in addition to citations above, include: https://www.iwp.edu/faculty/detail/robert-schuettinger. 

Saturday, July 2, 2016

OXFORD IN FICTION: Top Six Fictional Colleges (Updated July 4, 2018)

Morse, Lewis, Endeavour...
Which Oxford colleges are most often models for fictional colleges?

Two ground rules: 

First, exclude colleges used as sets for stories about schools (e.g., Hogwart's) or estates (e.g., Downton Abbey).

Second, exclude real colleges referred to in fiction, as when Jay Gatsby claimed that he went to Trinity College after the Great War. (His character's attendance was fictional, his purported alma mater is not.)

Based on these rules, my nominees for the top six real colleges used as models for fictional Oxford colleges are...:
Christ Church - 7
Oriel - 4
Balliol - 3
Brasenose - 3
LMH - 3
New - 3
The tabulation is below. Let me know of sites that might qualify and have been left out and I will reconsider and if necessary re-compute with credit to you if you want it.

College (or Hall)Fictional College
All SoulsAll Saints College - North and South by Elizabeth Gaskell.
Balliol (3)Baillie College – Yes Ministerand Yes, Prime Minister, attended by two consecutive cabinet secretaries.
Scone College- Decline and Fall by Evelyn Waugh; Something Nasty in the Woodshedand The Great Mortdecai Moustache Mystery by Kyril Bonfiglioli. (John de Balliol was crowned King of Scotland at Scone in 1292 and ruled for four years.)
Biblioll College Jude the Obscure
Brasenose(3)Brazenface College – Verdant Green by Cuthbert Bede.
Lonsdale College – Inspector Morse novels and subsequent Lewis TV series filmed there.
Mayfield College –Lewis episode "Life Born of Fire” filmed there. Could also be Greyfriars, former Permanent Private Hall, nearest to “Mayfield” Press.
Christ Church (7)Anonymous college in A Staircase in Surrey, a series of five novels by J. I. M. Stewart.
Cardinal College – A Yank at Oxford.Cardinal College is the original name that Cardinal Wolsey gave to Christ Church in 1525.
Cardinal's College - Philip Pullman's His Dark Materials
Clapperton College - The Oxford Virusby Adam Kolczynski.
St Thomas's College - An Oxford Tragedy and The Case of the Four Friends by John Cecil Masterman. St Thomas the Martyr's Church is located near Osney. Christ Church owns the church.
Cardinal College Jude the Obscure
Wolsey College - Inspector Morse novels and Endeavour. Cardinal Wolsey founded Christ Church.
Corpus ChristiFoxe College - Philip Pullman's His Dark Materials. Corpus was founded by Richard Foxe.
Exeter (3)Carlyle College - Lewis, episode "The Soul of Genius" filmed there.
Jordan College - Philip Pullman's His Dark Materials
Plymouth College - North and South by Elizabeth Gaskell.
JesusSt Michael's College -  Philip Pullman's His Dark Materials
Keble (2)Baidley College -Endeavour TV series; "Home", the last episode of the first season filmed there.
Tresingham College - The Oxford Virusby Adam Kolczynski.
LincolnGresham College - Lewis,episode "Dark Matter". The "Invisible College", a group of Oxford scientists (including Robert Boyle, Robert Hooke and Christopher Wren) that went on to establish the Royal Society. met at Gresham College in London.
LMH (3)Lady Matilda's College -Lewis. Based on and filmed in Lady Margaret Hall.
St Margaret's College - Fire and Hemlock by Diana Wynne Jones. Probably based on Lady Margaret Hall.
St Sophia's College - Based on Lady Margaret Hall. PP
MagdalenSt Mary's College – Sinister Street by Compton Mackenzie (who attended Magdalen).
Merton (2)Chaucer College – Lewis. Named after Geoffrey Chaucer.
Judas College – Zuleika Dobson by Max Beerbohm.
New College (3)St Saviour's College –Inspector Morse, episode "Fat Chance" filmed there.
Wykeham College – Philip Pullman's His Dark Materials. New College was founded by William of Wykeham, Bishop of Winchester.
St Gerard's Hall – Lewis episode "Wild Justice"; fictional Permanent Private Hall. Filmed here, and also at SEH and Christ Church.
Oriel (4)Bartlemas College – Kate Ivory detective novels by Veronica Stallwood. Oriel's property includes St Bartholomew's Chapel.
Courtenay College – Inspector Morse TV series. Nuneham Courtenay is a village 5 miles south-east of Oxford. Nuneham House now belongs to the University.
St Ambrose's College - Tom Brown at Oxford by Thomas Hughes. Oriel was both film location and the probable location of the college based, for example, on the boat race in 1842.
The King's College (known as "Dick's" after alleged founder Richard II) - Colonel Butler's Wolf and Our Man in Camelot by Anthony Price.
Queen’sQueen Philippa's College - Philip Pullman's His Dark Materials. Queen's College was founded in honor of Queen Philippa of Hainault.
Somerville(2)St Jerome's College - Endymion Spring by Matthew Skelton. The Reluctant Cannibals by Ian Flitcroft.
Shrewsbury College - Dorothy L. Sayers, Gaudy Night.
St Benet’s Hall

St Scholastica's College - Philip Pullman, His Dark Materials. Scholastica was the sister of St Benedict (Benet).
St Catherine’sSt Katherine’s – Virginia Woolf, The Pargiters
St Peter’sSt Mary’s College - Tony Strong, The Poison Tree.
St. Hilda’sBede College - Operation Pax by Michael Innes, nom-de-plume of J. I. M. Stewart. (St Bede wrote about St Hilda.)
Trinity (2)Savile College – Lewis
Oriel College – Tom Brown at Oxford by Thomas Hughes. Under current computation rules, Gatsby doesn't count.
WadhamGabriel College – Philip Pullman, His Dark Materials.

Monday, May 9, 2016

SUMMER EIGHTS: May 20-28, 2016 (Updated August 26, 2018)

Head of the River Pub (next to the Folly Bridge) –
a good place to observe the rowing scene.
All photos by JT Marlin.
The 2016 Summer Eights begin with trials starting May 20 and are followed by the Head of the River races, May 25-28. 

They bring out some 170 boats and 1,500 participants. 


At one time, the Summer Eights races took six full days.


The boats compete to be in first place, i.e., Head of the River. 
Brigid Marlin, artist, at Folly Bridge. She is the
 sister of two Oxonians (Randal and me), mother
 of a third (Chris), aunt of two others (Christine
and Kate). Photo by JT Marlin.

They compete in single file because the Thames–a.k.a. the Isis in the Oxford segment above Iffley Lock, can't accommodate very many boats abreast.

A boat advances one place in the long line by "bumping" the boat ahead. Colleges have "bump" suppers after the event to celebrate their advancement(s).

The event, sponsored by Neptune Investment Management, has its own website.

History of Summer VIIIs

Is your Oxford college blade
On this clever clock arrayed?
Is one of them your very own,
Of 36 blades that here are shown?

Recreational rowing at Oxford was under way in 1769. Students then used single wherries, which were designed for choppy seas and have keels and higher sides than than today's flat-bottomed single sculls.


For Isis use, the gunnels were lowered and then the keel was eliminated. A history of competitive-rowing boat design is here.

The first boat-racing clubs at Oxford were organized in 1815, when Brasenose and Jesus Colleges competed for Head of the River in eights, giving the event its name. 

Exeter claims to have been the fourth entrant and that seems to fit with available historical record.

Guide to markings of Oxford college oars.

The "eights" of course have eight oars but nine on board. 

The cox is the extra person in the back who steers and shouts the rowing rhythm. 


Since the cox is baggage, he (or she)  is preferably smaller than the others in the boat.

The cox needs good timing, a big voice, sharp eyes and cough drops.


Christ Church added itself as a competitor in 1817. Seven years on, when Exeter went Head of the River, the crews agreed not to bring in rowers from other colleges. This generated five new college boats – the fifth boat being Worcester in 1824 or 1825, Balliol and Univ (6th and 7th) in 1827, and Oriel and Trinity (8th and 9th) in 1828.


Location of the Boathouses


A visiting Cantabridgian has written a frank tour guide of the Oxford boathouses and he is mostly impressed.


A map of the locations of the boathouses is provided below. The links to the boat clubs don't work because this is a screen shot, but I have included after the screen shot some links that work. The Folly Bridge notations show Salter's and the Head of the River Public House, but are missing the new Folly Bridge restaurant and the attached boathouse that provides boats to visitors.



University and College Boat Club Websites 

Oxford University Boat Club . Oxford University Women's Boat Club
Oxford University Lightweight Rowing Club
Oxford University Women's Lightweight Rowing Club

Balliol
Brasenose
Christ Church
Corpus Christi
Exeter
Green Templeton
Hertford
Jesus
Keble

Lady Margaret Hall
Linacre
Lincoln
Magdalen
Mansfield
Merton
New
Oriel
Osler House (Med students)
Pembroke
Queen's
Regent's Park
Somerville
St Anne's
St Antony's
St Benet's
St Catherine's
St Edmund Hall
St Hilda's
St Hugh's
St John's
St Peter's
Trinity
University
Wadham
Wolfson
Worcester


Other Rowing Posts: Rowing Blazers . 2012 NYC Boat Race Dinner . Punting . Head of Charles . 2017 Summer Eights

Sunday, October 18, 2015

OXFORD-USA: Oct. 18–Oxons Create Mason-Dixon Line (Updated Oct. 29, 2016)

This day in 1767 the border was settled that a century later became the boundary of the American Civil War–the Mason-Dixon line.

The line was named after two surveyors, Mason and Dixon. They were hired by two prominent families on either side of the border. Both were originally headed by Oxonians:
The Calvert and Penn families, to settle a dispute over the border between them, hired English surveyors Charles Mason and Jeremiah Dixon.

The essential element of their survey, which had been interrupted by skirmishes with Indians, was completed on this day.

It established the boundary not only between the colonies of Pennsylvania and Maryland but for territories in the west that after the Revolution became the state of West Virginia and those in the east that became Delaware.

Why did this become the dividing line in the War Between the States?

It is no puzzle why the South favored slavery–the earliest immigrants to the southern colonies like Virginia were loyalists to the British Crown and the C of E and they were given generous grants of land that required huge numbers of workers. The cash crops such as tobacco and cotton that became the mainstay of the southern farms required workers to do strenuous repetitive tasks, and slavery provided a solution.

It is also no puzzle why New England did not favor slavery. They did not get large grants of land from the Crown because the earliest immigrants to New England were dissenting rebels from the Church of England. Most therefore became small farmers, traders or manufacturers.

Maryland and Pennsylvania were in-between colonies and states. Unlike most other southern states (Georgia's Wilberforce was another exception), Maryland was not founded by someone with allegiance to the Church of England. Even though Pennsylvania was not founded by a dissenting Quaker, its founder Penn had enough good will from the Crown to get given some land:
  • In Maryland, the Crown carved a large piece of land out of northern Virginia to give to the Catholic Calverts. The Catholicism of the day was not aggressively opposed to slavery.
  • In Pennsylvania (as it was to be called), lands were granted to Quaker William Penn because he  had won favor with the Crown, even though leaders of his religion included many abolitionists who fought actively against slavery. It was easier in Pennsylvania than it was in Maryland to be opposed to slavery because of the coal and iron reserves that provided higher-paying jobs, and therefore without having to rely on slaves.
To settle their border dispute, the land-rich Calvert and Penn families hired Mason and Dixon to establish the borderline. The families were responding to a 1760 demand from the British Crown that colonial settlers cease their skirmishes and adhere to a 1732 border cease-fire. Both families claimed the land between the 39th and 40th parallels. On this day in 1867, Mason and Dixon established the border at 39º43'. If they believed that the rights on the two sides were equally balanced, they would have settled on 39º30', which suggests that Pennsylvania was the victor, getting 72 percent (43/60) of the disputed land area.

During the year 1767, the colonies were engaged in a dispute with the Parliament over the Townshend Acts, which sought–through taxes on tea and other imports–to pay for the British costs of troops sent by Prime Minister William Pitt the Elder (like the Calverts, an alumnus of Trinity College, Oxford) of establishing the continuing military presence that had driven the French and the Indians allied with them from the colonies.

However, the border dispute seemingly settled in 1767 was not over. The Mason-Dixon line held as a dividing line, but after the American Revolution, the states south of the Mason-Dixon line began lobbying the new U.S. Congress for the legal rights of slaveowners. The northern states argued that ownership of human beings was not acceptable in the "New Constellation" of states.

Although the arguments were temporarily ended by the Missouri Compromise of 1820, which accepted the states south of the Mason-Dixon line as slave-holding and those north of the line as free, the attempted compromise–and its successors–failed and Pennsylvania became the site of many famous Civil War battles. Gettysburg, Pa., in 1863 was the site of one of the bloodiest battles of the American Civil War. The Quaker commitment to abolitionism trumped their commitment to peace.

In April 1865, the south capitulated. The ensuing 13th Amendment (1865) was immediately passed abolishing slavery and nullifying the Supreme Court's Dred Scott decision (1857). The bitterly fought 14th Amendment gave citizenship to all persons born or naturalized in the United States. It was ratified 101 years after the Mason-Dixon line was established. However, civil rights did not mean voting rights. It took many more debates and political battles, some more amendments, and another 100 years, for the United States to pass laws to ensure that all adult citizens be allowed to vote...

Monday, September 21, 2015

ALICE BORN | 150 Years Old—the Book

It's the 150th Anniversary of the publication of Alice's Adventures in Wonderland.

The author was a Christ Church don who signed himself Lewis Carroll.

A few hours ago I had the pleasure of attending - with Alice Tepper Marlin and my nephew Chris Oakley - the Choral Evensong at Christ Church Cathedral.

It was an occasion of some historical importance.

First, there was an exhibition within the cathedral in honor of Alice in Wonderland.

Second, the Evensong itself was a glorious hour and a half of choral music and congregational singing, with a newly instituted girls' (ages 7-24) choir - the Frideswide Voices, based at Worcester College. I was told that the choir is so named after a medieval girls' choir and that today was the first time in 1300 years that a female choir has sung in Christ Church Cathedral.

The Worcester Senior Organ Scholar, Benjamin Cunningham, played the organ. The Frideswide Voices choir was conducted by Will Dawes.

One of the original illustrations of Alice 
by John Tenniel.
The communal hymns were "Ye Watchers and Ye Holy Ones," "By All Your Saints Still Striving," and "All My Hope on God Is Founded".

The choir sang Psalm 119, the Magnificat and Nunc Dimittis (both from St. Luke), and "How Beautiful Are the Feet" (Handel). I was surprised that on the feast of St. Matthew, none of the readings was from St. Matthew.

The exhibit honoring Alice - and especially the Mad Hatter character in the book - is of sculptures by Peter Eugene Ball.

The sculpture that Ball is holding is a tribute to the illustrator of the original Alice in Wonderland, John Tenniel.

One of the nearby sculptures by Ball is in the Merton College Chapel. It is is of "Our Lady, Seat of Wisdom" and was commissioned in 2014.

I was especially interested in that because there is a college in Barry's Bay, Ontario, Canada called Our Lady, Seat of Wisdom Academy.

My niece Christine Schintgen is a dean at the college. Christine, this post is for you!

Wednesday, May 20, 2015

AMERICAN OXONIAN: May 20–W. H. Auden Naturalized

W.H. Auden, 1907-73
On this day in 1946, W[ystan] H[ugh] Auden became a U.S. citizen. He was born in York, England, on February 21, 1907. Auden began writing poetry in Gresham's School and had his first poem published in a collection called Public School Verse when he was 17.

He went up to Christ Church, Oxford, and made friends with other writers, including Cecil Day-Lewis, Stephen Spender and novelist Christopher Isherwood. As a young man he was influenced by the poetry of Thomas Hardy, Robert Frost, William Blake, Emily Dickinson and Gerard Manley Hopkins. He also liked Old English verse.

In 1928, the year he graduated from Oxford, his first collection, Poems was printed by his friend Stephen, the last of the Big Spenders. Two years later, another (different) collection called Poems was published, establishing Auden as a voice of England's youngest writers. He was a virtuoso of writing in different poetic styles and often mimicked the writing styles of other poets such as Dickinson, W. B. Yeats, and Henry James.

Auden spent a year in Berlin, then for five years taught in Scotland and England and worked for a government film bureau. He also visited Iceland and China. In the 1930s, Auden embraced leftist causes and went to Spain intending to drive an ambulance during the Spanish Civil War. However, he was shocked by the destruction of Roman Catholic churches and returned to England.

In 1935, he married Thomas Mann’s daughter Erika to help her escape Nazi Germany. In 1936, he published On This Island. In 1939, he moved to the United States, and his work became less political as he turned to Christianity, reading theologians Søren Aabye Kierkegaard and Reinhold Niebuhr and in 1940 rejoining the Episcopal Church.

In 1940-41, he shared a house in New York with the writer Carson McCullers and the composer Benjamin Britten, writing Another Time (1940) and The Double Man (1941). He met Chester Kallman, his lover for two years, to whom Auden dedicated two of his poetry collections.

He volunteered to serve in the British Army when war broke out, but was told that 32 made him too old. He taught English at the University of Michigan, was drafted into the U.S. Army but was dismissed on medical grounds. He received a Guggenheim Fellowship in 1942-43 but decided not to use it. Instead, he spent the war years 1942-45 teaching at Swarthmore.

He visited Germany after the war to study the effects of the Allied bombing on German morale, came back to New York City and worked as a freelance writer while lecturing at The New School and occasionally at Bennington and Smith.

In 1948, Auden won the Pulitzer Prize for The Age of Anxiety (1947), a poem about spiritual isolation in contemporary urban settings. He moved in his focus on religion from personal exploration of Protestantism to a study of Roman Catholic ritual, building on the writing of Dietrich Bonhoeffer, the anti-Nazi Lutheran minister who explored the ability of religion to provide relief from human suffering.

Auden was a literary virtuoso, accessing current events, vernacular speech, and many kinds of writing and data. His poems are often in the form of a journey for which he makes use of his own travels. Auden was an essayist and playwright as well as being esteemed as the greatest English poet of the twentieth century.

Auden served as a chancellor of the Academy of American Poets from 1954 to his death. He divided most of the second half of his life between a residence in New York City and a farm in Austria, staying in Oxford in 1956-60 while serving to as a Professor of Poetry.

He died in Vienna on September 29, 1973. This post draws on information in bios of Auden published by the Writers Almanac (Garrison Keillor) and the Academy of American Poets.

Comment

In the 1960s, after his stint at Oxford, Auden had some connection with Harvard. I sat opposite him at a formal Harvard College event in my senior year and my recollection of the table conversation was that it had both the fluency and incoherence of a current-news discussion drowned by too many glasses of sherry. (It was often rumored that the endless flow of Amontillado Sherry at Harvard in 1958-1962 was financed by the Ford Foundation; I have never been able either to confirm or disprove this rumor.)

I did not have any sense that Auden was even vaguely interested in unburdening himself of new personal insights. It was a quite different experience from a lunchtime conversation I had near that time with Quincy House Honorary Fellow (or whatever his title was) Robert Lowell, who spoke to me as if he were kneeling in a confessional box and I – an incredulous undergraduate – was a bishop.

Somewhere I read that Auden and Edna St. Vincent Millay are the only two poets in the 20th Century to have made a living from their poetry. However, when I ask Grandma Google to remind me where I read that, she only provides links to my own prior assertions of it. At any rate, Millay's ability to earn a living from her poetry benefited greatly by her having married businessman Eugen Boissevain, who gave up his business to become her agent and "cruise director". Auden said:
It's a sad fact about our culture that a poet can earn much more money writing or talking about his [or her] art than he [or she] can by practicing it.

Thursday, December 18, 2014

BIRTH: Dec. 18–Charles Wesley, Oxonian Colonizer of Georgia

Charles Wesley
Oxonian Methodist and
Colonizer of Georgia
Things that happened long ago, 
Things that happened far away,
May tell us much we need to know,
 And connect us up with things today.  
- JT Marlin, 2014

December 18, 2015 – This day was born in England, in 1707, a colonizer of Georgia and the prolific writer of Methodist hymns, Charles Wesley. He lived to be 81 years old, a ripe old age in those days.

He was one of three Oxonians who made a major contribution to the earliest days of Georgia and South Carolina. Georgia was created as a British colony, named in honor of George II, who saw the colony as a buffer zone to protect South Carolina from the Spanish troops in Florida.

The stories of these Oxonians in Georgia helps explain why the American states differ so greatly – and therefore why it was such a struggle to keep together the American Experiment a century later.

The intellectual origins of the colonies derive in large measure from Oxford and Cambridge, which were preeminent in the training of the scholars in the colonies. The early colonists had no universities, and when colonial universities were created their teaching staff and reading materials depended heavily on Oxford and Cambridge men (and a few women) and their students or children.

Two of the three Oxonians were born in mid-December – Charles Wesley today in 1707 and James Oglethorpe four days later and 11 years earlier, in 1696. The third Oxonian was Charles's older brother John, born in 1703, midway between the other two. The influence of the Wesleys on Georgia was limited - both of them had their spirits broken by gossip and accusation. However, the influence of the Methodist religion on all the colonies, especially immediately after the American Revolution when the Anglican Church was disestablished in the new United States, was enormous.

General James Oglethorpe (Corpus Christi), 1696-1785, Georgia’s First Governor
James Oglethorpe, sure,
Really meant to help the poor –
No rum, no slaves, no large estates
And an Anglican wait for the Pearly Gates.
Clerihew by JT Marlin.


James Oglethorpe's name appears in many places in Georgia and South Carolina. Georgia has an Oglethorpe County, two Oglethorpe towns, an Oglethorpe University and many Oglethorpe streets, parks, schools and businesses (Oglethorpe Power, for example).

His first vision for the colony was as a Utopia for Britain's poor. When he saw that King George II preferred to see it as a buffer zone between Spanish Florida and South Carolina, he was willing to modify his idea.

Oglethorpe's place in history as the visionary founder and venerated first governor of Georgia is unquestioned. His military prowess is less clear, but given the successful outcome – the significant Spanish military presence in Florida was successfully kept at bays – Oglethorpe gets the benefit of any doubt.

Oglethorpe bravely interrupted his Oxford studies to join the defense of Europe against the invading Turks. He was kindly, caring deeply about those in prison, especially after a friend of his died in debtors'  prison. He then pondered the plight of the poor, and pursued a plan for a new colony in America to provide a place for Britain's poor. When he got to Georgia under the modified plan, he was friendly and fair with the native Americans he met - they repaid him by providing men for his army. He was loyal, not seeing his Methodist principles in conflict with Anglican doctrine, and not wishing to split from the Church of England. He was practical, adjusting his vision for the new colony of Georgia to the shifts in the wind. His dream became a reality, although not quite the reality he dreamed of.

James Oglethorpe was born in 1696 in the London area, the tenth and youngest child of Eleanor and Theophilus Oglethorpe. As anyone near the tail end of a big family knows, it takes constant effort to avoid being put down by one's older siblings. It is a make-or-break position in the family. In James Oglethorpe's case, being the youngest child made him resilient, assertive and at the same time accommodating.

He grew up in Westbrook Manor, the family estate in Godalming, in Surrey, southwest of London. His father lived from rents on property in Godalming and adjacent Haslemere, and was elected in 1698 by local voters to the Halemere seat in the House of Commons. Godalming is an ancient Saxon town, and when James Oglethorpe was growing up it was a prosperous and pleasant place. This surely contributed to James's self-confidence and constructive attitude.

From the year 1300, the town of Godalming held a weekly market and an annual fair. It became a major center for woolen cloth manufacture and when that declined in the 17th century, the residents aggressively sought out new weaving and knitting technology and applied it to the manufacture of stockings and then leather.

Other initiatives in Godalming included:
  • Papermaking, from the 17th to the 19th century. 
  • Quarrying of Bargate stone.
  • Trade with people traveling between London and Portsmouth. 
  • In 1764, canals linking it to Guildford, and from there to the Thames and London.
 In 2013 Godalming retained its preeminence, being voted the best place to live in Britain.

In 1714, at 18, James Oglethorpe went up to Oxford, living at Corpus Christi College. When the Turks invaded Europe, however, he showed unusual initiative for an Oxford student in dropping out of the University to enroll in a military academy in France. Upon graduation he went to Austria to become an aide to Prince Eugene of Savoy. After the Turks were defeated, Oglethorpe returned to his studies at Corpus Christi.

The military training he received in France and Austria would prove to be extremely valuable when he went to America and faced a large invading Spanish army.

In 1722, Oglethorpe went home to Godalming and ran successfully for the Haslemere seat his father had held in Parliament. During that time, his friend Robert Castell was jailed in London's Fleet Prison for non-payment of debts. Castell was put in a cell with a prisoner who had smallpox, and he died of the disease. Oglethorpe channeled his grief into work as Chairman of a parliamentary committee to investigate the jails, where he saw up close their terrible abuses. Oglethorpe thereafter gained national attention as a reformer who exposed maltreatment of prisoners.

During his first decade in Parliament, Oglethorpe focused on the underlying problem of poverty. In a Committee report on this subject, Oglethorpe and his fellow M.P.s proposed transporting “worthy” poor people from England to a new colony in America, where land was plentiful and offered the potential of a classless Utopia.

The founding vision of the Trustees of Georgia, published in 1733, was an economic development plan with a moral purpose, what we might call today a social enterprise. The motto of the Trustees was Non sibi sed aliis ("Not for self, but for others”), much like the Wellesley College motto Non ministrari, see ministrare ("Not to be cared for by others, but to care for them"). The practical ground rules were, as my Clerihew notes, no rum, no slaves, no large estates, and an Anglican wait for the Pearly Gates. 

This Utopian plan was not making any headway until 1732, when Spanish forces in Florida were  immediately seen as a threat to the colonies, starting with the South Carolina. Suddenly, Oglethorpe's initiative was tasked with a military purpose - a  buffer zone between South Carolina and the Spanish army. In retrospect, it was a brilliant proposal, and Oglethorpe's prestigious military training made him a credible advocate for it.

The new colony immediately became Priority #1. George II, perhaps pleased that the colony would be named Georgia after himself, swiftly granted Oglethorpe and 20 other Trustees a charter for new colony. The naming of the colony was in the tradition of virtually all the colonies outside of dissenting New England - New York was named for the Duke of York, James II; Virginia for the Virgin Queen Elizabeth I; Carolina for Charles I; and Maryland after Queen Henrietta Maria, wife of Charles I.

Charles I is the only British monarch to have three colonies named after him and his wife. He paid for it with his life, the only British monarch to have his reign interrupted by an axe to the neck. Charles eventually hid out at Oxford, but Oxford could not protect him from Cromwell's New Army.

Georgia was the first new colony in several decades. Oglethorpe and the other Trustees selected a mix of artisans, farmers and merchants to ensure that the colony would be a success. Many people lined up to get on the list, evaporating the idea of tackling poverty by restricting settlers to poor people and ex-prisoners. In late 1732, Oglethorpe finally led a sailing expedition of 114 colonial pioneers, financing the trip in part with his own money. They were mostly British gentry but also included Scotsmen, English tradesmen, religious refugees from Europe, and a few Jewish refugees.

While the principals were Anglicans, and sought to bring Christianity to the region, the colony's charter tolerated people of almost all religions. The exception was Roman Catholics, whose loyalty was suspect because of their likely sympathy for the hostile Spanish settlements in Florida.

The expedition sailed from Gravesend in Kent, England to the port of Savannah, arriving early 1733. The colonists proceeded to Port Royal, South Carolina's then-southernmost outpost. Oglethorpe had the rank of colonel and commander-in-chief over whatever troops he was sent by Britain or could assemble in the colonies.

Returning to Savannah with colonists and a militia, Oglethorpe directed his troops and African-American slaves from South Carolina to clear the pine forest. Col. Oglethorpe then laid out a plan for the new town of Savannah with features consistent with his dream of a classless society: a common pattern of streets, ten-house units ("tithings") and public squares, identical clapboard houses built on identical lots and restrictions on how much land could be owned, ensuring that each plot had a worker and an armed defender - thus in effect limiting land ownership to adult males, the least popular of his provisions.

He also imposed an outright prohibition against slave-owning by Georgians. He had an enlightened policy toward Georgia's Indians, respecting their customs and language. He was determined to settle of all land agreements by treaty, while addressing the Indians' needs and protecting them from dishonest traders.

He fully lived up to the motto of Georgia's Trustees in the early months of his time in Georgia, "not for self but for others". Sometimes violating Trustee policy, Oglethorpe permitted persecuted religious minorities (such as Jews and Lutheran Salzburgers) to settle in Georgia. Not long after landing, in February 1734, Oglethorpe established the first Masonic Lodge in the Western Hemisphere, Solomon's Lodge No. 1.

Since Oglethorpe came to Georgia as a Trustee, he was technically not allowed to hold office in the colony. But he was de facto the colony's leader, i.e., its first governor. Oglethorpe's commitment to Georgia is hard to overstate. He mortgaged his own landholdings back in England to finance the colony's needs. He hoped that Parliament would repay his rising debts, but he was aware he could lose everything.

After the War of Jenkins' Ear erupted in 1739, when Georgia was just six years old, the long-simmering dispute over land between Florida and South Carolina came to a head. Oglethorpe took an initiative in 1740, assembling an invasion force consisting of his own troops, his new-found Indian allies, some Carolina Rangers, and several ships sent by the Royal Navy. His goal was to take the Spanish fortress at St. Augustine.  Unfortunately, the siege failed and the allied force fell apart, forcing Oglethorpe back to St. Simons Island to the south of Savannah.

Two years later, the Spanish counterattacked. This could have been the end of British control of Georgia and then South Carolina. Ships with thousands of Spanish troops landed on the south end of St. Simons Island. At Fort Frederica, which he was still in the process of building, Col. Oglethorpe rallied his troops for battle. In a critical skirmish known as the Battle of Gully Hole Creek, his forces turned back a Spanish advance force.

As they pursued the retreating Spaniards, Oglethorpe halted his force at the edge of a marsh and positioned his men to await a counterattack by the Spanish army. The main force of the Spaniards  joined with the fleeing advance unit and the two armies engaged in a brief but fierce fight known as the Battle of Bloody Marsh. The colonists prevailed and the Spanish commanders retreated back to St. Augustine, never again to attack the British colonies.

Oglethorpe rightly became a national hero in England and in September 1743 George II promoted him to brigadier general. The plan to use Georgia to protect South Carolina had worked. But late in 1743 Gen. Oglethorpe was emboldened to lead a second attempt to take the Spanish fortress at St. Augustine, and for a second time he was unsuccessful.

This time an officer in his regiment charged Gen. Oglethorpe with poor judgment bordering on misconduct and for many months there was a cloud over Oglethorpe and a question whether he would ever be repaid for the loans he made. But in 1744, the charges were dismissed and Parliament voted to reimburse Oglethorpe. Both his honor and his fortune were preserved.

Oglethorpe was then 48, which especially then was late career for a military officer. Around that time the general met Elizabeth Wright, whose wealthy husband had recently died. They married and settled at her estate - Cranham Hall, Essex, 17 miles east of London. Oglethorpe partook in the active London social life and befriended prominent Londoners of the time like lexicographer Samuel Johnson, his biographer James Boswell, and Oliver Goldsmith.

He continued to serve as a Trustee of Georgia but his influence over and interest in the colony waned.  In his absence, many of the class-defying restrictions on large land ownership, inheritance, prohibition against rum, and slavery disappeared. Georgia took on the character of its northern neighbors and became a part of the Deep South portrayed so vividly in Gone with the Wind.

By 1750 Oglethorpe seems to have totally given up his interest in Georgia. He remained in Parliament for another ten years after his marriage, until in 1754 he was challenged and defeated. After 1760, James Oglethorpe and his wife Elizabeth divided their remaining quarter-century together between their country estate at Cranham Hall and their London town house on Lower Grosvenor Street.

Oglethorpe eventually lived to see the colony that he founded become part of the new nation, the USA. On June 4, 1785, Oglethorpe met with John Adams, the first U.S. ambassador to Great Britain, and expressed to Adams "great esteem and regard for America." After a brief illness later that month,  Oglethorpe died in Cranham Hall on June 30 at 89 years of age, a long life for that time, especially for someone so active as a military commander. He is buried under the chancel floor of the Parish Church of All Saints at Cranham.

John Wesley

John Wesley (1703-1791)
Christ Church and Lincoln College,
Oxford. Co-founder of the Methodist
Church and Colonizer of Georgia.
John Wesley sought to reform the Anglican Church and instead created a new religion, Methodism, which turned out to be very important when the Anglican Church became defunct after the American Revolution. While the Church of England struggled with the task of being reborn as the American Episcopal Church, Methodist bishops were actually at work.

He was born on June 28, 1703 in Epworth, Lincolnshire, England. Epworth is halfway between Sheffield and Grimsby on the eastern coast of England, 23 miles north-west of Lincoln. John was the 15th (!) child of Anglican Rev. Samuel Wesley and his wife Susanna Wesley (née Annesley).

Samuel Wesley was himself a graduate of the University of Oxford and was since 1696 rector of Epworth. He had married Susanna, the 25th (!) child of Samuel Annesley, a Dissenting minister, in 1689. Ultimately, Susanna bore him 19 children, of whom nine lived beyond infancy. She and Samuel had both become members of the Church of England as young adults.

The children of Samuel and Susanna were homeschooled in their early years, as was common then. Each child, boy or girl, was taught to read as early as possible. Before they went off to school, they were expected to become proficient in Latin and Greek and to have learned major portions of the New Testament by heart. Susanna Wesley examined each child twice a day, before lunch and before evening prayers, and each child was interviewed weekly by their mother for the purpose of intensive spiritual instruction.

In 1714, at 11, Wesley was sent to the Charterhouse School in London, where he lived the studious religious life he was used to at home. In June 1720, Wesley matriculated at Christ Church, Oxford, graduating with a B.A. in 1724. He was ordained a deacon in September 1725, holy orders being a necessary step toward becoming a fellow and tutor at the university. He sought holiness through study of Scriptures and performance of his religious duties. He deprived himself to have money to give to the poor.

In 1726, Wesley was elected a fellow of Lincoln College, Oxford - entitling him to a room in college and a salary. While continuing his studies, Wesley taught Greek and lectured on the New Testament. For two years he helped his father, serving as a parish curate. Ordained a priest on September 22, 1728, Wesley served the parish for two years, returning to Oxford in 1729 to maintain his status as junior Fellow at Lincoln College.

During Wesley's absence from Oxford, his younger brother Charles took up residence at Christ Church. Along with two fellow students, he formed a club to study and pursue the Christian life. John Wesley became the leader of this group, which attracted new members. In 1730, the group began the practice of visiting prisoners in jail. They preached and educated jailed debtors whenever possible, and cared for the sick. Given the low ebb of spirituality in Oxford at that time, they were considered to be religious "enthusiasts" (fanatics). University wits styled them the "Holy Club".

With his brother Charles and fellow cleric George Whitefield, John Wesley is credited with founding  Methodism and inspiring evangelical revivals such as the Holiness movement and Pentecostalism. A key decision that Wesley's made in 1639 was to follow Whitefield’s example and travel and preach outdoors. In contrast to Whitefield's Calvinism, however, Wesley embraced the Arminian doctrines of  Dutch Reformed theologian Jacobus Arminius, 1560-1609, who accepts Calvinist teaching except on issues relating to predestination, which they reject. John Wesley’s interpretation of Arminianism is a major theological position of its own, making Methodism a distinct religion.

Wesley expressed his understanding of humanity's relationship to God as utter dependence upon God's grace. Wesley's appointing itinerant, unordained evangelists to travel and preach was a key departure from parish-based Anglican practice. Methodists became leaders in many social issues of the day, including prison reform and abolition of slavery.

Wesley argued for the notion of Christian perfection and for respect of sacramental theology. He preached that the sacraments were the manner by which God sanctifies and transforms the believer, encouraging people to experience Jesus Christ personally. Although he created a new church, John Wesley himself remained during his entire life within the established Anglican church, insisting that the Methodist movement lay well within its tradition. By the end of his life, he was described as "the best loved man in England".

John Wesley and his brother were invited by the Governor of Georgia, John Oglethorpe, to assist him with governance and the spreading of Christianity. On the voyage to Georgia, the Wesleys first came into contact with German Moravian settlers. Both Wesleys were influenced by their deep faith and spirituality, rooted in pietism.

At one point in the voyage a storm came up and broke the mast off the ship. The English panicked, while the Moravians calmly sang hymns and prayed. This experience led John Wesley to believe that the Moravians possessed an inner strength which he lacked. They reached Savannah on February 8, 1736, eager to make use of Oglethorpe's offer by spreading Christianity to the Native Americans. This mission, however, was unsuccessful. In addition, John Wesley had a disastrous relationship with Sophia Hopkey, whom he met on the ship from England.  Wesley broke off the relationship, only to find Hopkey announcing to others in the town that Wesley had promised to marry her. Wesley retaliated by refusing Hopkey communion. She and her new husband, William Williamson, then filed suit against Wesley. Wesley stood trial. While he was not convicted - the proceedings ended in a mistrial - John Wesley's reputation was tarnished and he personally was exhausted by it. Like his younger brother, who had left before him, Join Wesley returned to England demoralized.

Back in England, John Wesley turned for guidance to a Moravian missionary, Peter Boehler, temporarily in England awaiting permission to depart for Georgia. He went to a Moravian meeting in May 1738 and had his famous "Aldersgate experience", which moved his method of ministry toward a more evangelical spirit.

Meanwhile, Wesley's Oxford friend, the evangelist George Whitefield, was, like Wesley, excluded from the churches of Bristol upon his return from America. In a neighboring village, Kingswood, in February 1739, Whitefield preached out in the open to a group of miners. Wesley was inspired by this and in April 1739 he preached the first time at Whitefield's invitation a sermon in the open air, near Bristol.

This turned out to be an act with major consequences. Once he succeeded in the open-air preaching, Wesley decided that it was a good way to reach men and women who would not enter most churches. For the next 50 years, John Wesley continued preaching both in churches and in fields and halls.

Late in 1739 Wesley broke with the Moravians in London because he believed they fell into heresy by supporting quietism. He therefore decided to split his followers off into the Methodist Society in England. From then on, Wesley and the Methodists were persecuted by clergy, magistrates and even mobs. Many Methodist leaders had not received ordination and Wesley flouted many regulations of the Church of England concerning parish boundaries and who had authority to preach. This was seen as a social threat that disregarded institutions.

Starting in 1739, Wesley started approving local preachers who were not ordained by the Anglican Church to preach and do pastoral work. This expansion of lay preachers was one of the keys to the rapid growth of Methodism. At the local level, numerous societies of different sizes were grouped into circuits to which traveling preachers were appointed for two-year periods. As Methodist societies multiplied, they adopted the elements of an ecclesiastical system. The divide between Wesley and the Church of England widened. The question of division from the Church of England was urged by some of his preachers and societies. It was opposed by his brother Charles, and John Wesley said that Anglicanism was "with all her blemishes” is “nearer the Scriptural plans than any other in Europe”.

In 1784, John Wesley played an important role in the new nation of the USA. He gave up waiting for the Bishop of London to ordain someone for the American Methodists, who were without sacraments after the American Revolution. The Church of England disestablished in the United States - the Anglican clergy were cut off from the Church of England, which was the state church in most southern colonies. The Church of England had not yet appointed a U.S. bishop to what would become the Protestant Episcopal Church in America.

Wesley ordained Thomas Coke by the laying on of hands, although Coke was already a priest in the Church of England. Wesley appointed him superintendent of U.S. Methodists. Coke was to ordain others in the new Methodist Episcopal Church in the United States. Wesley replied that he had not separated from the church, nor did he intend to, but he must and would save as many souls as he could while alive, "without being careful about what may possibly be when I die." Although Wesley rejoiced that the Methodists in America were free, he advised his English followers to remain in the established church and he himself died within it.

Later in his ministry, Wesley was a keen abolitionist, speaking out and writing against the slave trade. He published a pamphlet on slavery in 1774 - Thoughts Upon Slavery.  He said: "Liberty is the right of every human creature, as soon as he breathes the vital air; and no human law can deprive him of that right.” Wesley was a friend of abolitionists John Newton and William Wilberforce.

John Wesley married unhappily at the age of 48 to a widow, Mary Vazeille, and had no children. Vazeille left him 15 years later, to which Wesley reported in his journal, "I did not forsake her, I did not dismiss her, I will not recall her."

In 1770, at the death of George Whitefield, Wesley wrote a memorial sermon which praised Whitefield's admirable qualities and acknowledged their differences: "[On] many doctrines of a less essential nature ... We may 'agree to disagree.' But, meantime, let us hold fast the essentials..."Wesley was the first to put the phrase 'agree to disagree' in print.

John Wesley died at 86 on March 2, 1791. On his deathbed, with friends around him, Wesley grasped their hands and said repeatedly, "Farewell, farewell. The best of all is, God is with us.” He was entombed at Wesley's Chapel, which he built in City Road, London, in England.

Wesley continues to be the primary theological interpreter for Methodists worldwide. Wesley’s teachings also serve as a basis for the holiness movement, which includes denominations like the Wesleyan Church, the Free Methodist Church, the Church of the Nazarene, the Christian and Missionary Alliance, and several smaller groups, and from which Pentecostalism and parts of the Charismatic Movement are offshoots.

In 1831, Wesleyan University in Middletown, Connecticut, was the first institution of higher education in the United States to be named after Wesley. About 20 colleges and universities in the US were also independently named after him. Movies were made about John Wesley in 1954 (J.Arthur Rank) and in 2009 (Foundery Pictures).

Charles Wesley

The hymn writer and Methodist Charles Wesley, was like his brother John born in Epworth, England where their father was rector. Charles was educated at Westminster School and Christ Church, Oxford. At Oxford, Charles in his first year was distracted by the diversions of the university. His elder brother John said that Charles "pursued his studies diligently, and led a regular, harmless life; but if I spoke to him about religion, he would warmly answer, 'What, would you have me be a saint all at once?' and would hear no more."

Then Charles had a spiritual awakening. He wrote to John:
It is owing, in great measure, to somebody's prayers (my mother's most likely) that I am come to think as I do; for I cannot tell myself how or why I awoke out of my lethargy.
Charles formed a prayer group along with three fellow students in 1727. They devoted their days to studying the Bible and praying and were a subject of mirth among their fellow students. John Wesley wrote: "From the very beginning — from the time that four young men united together — each of them was a man of one book. They had one, and only one, rule of judgment." They were reproached for this, and were called "Bible Bigots" and "Bible Moths", feeding on the bible like moths on cloth. They were also called "Methodists," and that name stuck.

John Wesley returned to Oxford in 1729, and took over as the group's leader. After Charles graduated from Oxford, John convinced him to become ordained and accompany him as a missionary to the Colony of Georgia. Charles agreed, and about two weeks after his ordination, the brothers set sail.

En route to Georgia, the Wesley brothers befriended a group of German Moravians, and were inspired by their simplicity and faith. They were also amazed at how they sang together, and how during some of the worst storms at sea, when everyone else was frightened, the Moravians stayed calm and sang peacefully.

John went to Savannah, where for a time he was secretary to Governor James Oglethorpe, and Charles continued on further south to the new Georgia settlement of Frederica on St. Simons Island.

Like his brother, Charles ran into trouble over his unmarried status. His strict religious habits were unwelcome to the settlers. He was 28, a handsome bachelor and a magnet for gossip. Two married women told Charles Wesley that Governor Oglethorpe had tried to seduce them and meanwhile told Oglethorpe that Charles Wesley had tried to seduce them. As gossip spread, the women's husbands became angry. Both Oglethorpe and Wesley at first believed the rumors about each other. By the time they realized that the women had invented the stories, Wesley was demoralized and couldn't wait to get back England.

While John continued to travel and preach, Charles returned to Britain, demoralized by the gossip and sick of travel. On Charles Wesley's departure, Oglethorpe advised him to marry. Charles married a woman named Sarah on his return, and their marriage and parenthood was a happy one.

Charles brought back with him to England the inspiration he got from the German Moravians in Savannah, i.e., congregational singing. This was a new idea for Anglicans, because only choirs sang in their churches, not the congregation. Charles Wesley did not intend that his hymns be sung in a high-church setting, but rather outside or in a plain meeting house.

In 1738, he had a second religious awakening, one he had been waiting for, and a few days afterward John Wesley, by now back in England, had a similar conversion and said: "I felt my heart strangely warmed."

With their newfound conviction, the brothers were determined to bring their religion to regular people. They traveled around the countryside on horseback, preaching to coal miners at mines, to prison inmates, and to anyone who gathered in the open air to see them.

Charles published more than 4,400 hymns during his lifetime, and left behind several thousand more. They include "O for a Thousand Tongues to Sing," and "Love Divine, All Loves Excelling," which are in most hymnals. He wrote the popular Christmas carol "Hark! the Herald Angels Sing." Another favorite is "Come, O Thou Traveler Unknown" [originally "Wrestling Jacob"], which goes as follows in hymnals today:
'Tis Love! 'tis Love! Thou diedst for me! /  I hear thy whisper in my heart; / The morning breaks, the shadows flee, / Pure Universal Love thou art; /To me, to all, thy mercies [originally "bowels"] move / Thy nature, and thy name, is Love.
Charles Wesley lived happily to be 80 years old.

Sources

Georgia Rodney M. Baine, ed., The Publications of James Edward Oglethorpe (Athens: University of Georgia Press, 1994).

Harvey H. Jackson and Phinizy Spalding, eds., Forty Years of Diversity: Essays on Colonial Georgia (Athens: University of Georgia Press, 1984). Forty Years of Diversity: Essays on Colonial Georgia

Edwin L. Jackson, University of Georgia, Georgia Encyclopedia http://www.georgiaencyclopedia.org/articles/history-archaeology/james-oglethorpe-1696-1785 12/02/2003

Herbert E. Bolton and Mary Ross, The Debatable Land: A Sketch of the Anglo-Spanish Contest for the Georgia Country (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1925).

"Georgians and the War of Jenkins' Ear," Georgia Historical Quarterly 78 (fall 1994). War of Jenkins' Ear.

Larry E. Ivers, British Drums on the Southern Frontier: The Military Colonization of Georgia, 1733-1749 (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1974).

John Tate Lanning, Diplomatic History of Georgia: A Study of the Epoch of Jenkins' Ear (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1936).

Swarthmore College, Plan of Trustees for the Colony of Georgia.  Trustees founding vision.

Wikipedia entries on Oglethorpe, John Wesley and Charles Wesley. Also Yamacraw chief Tomochichi. Masonic Lodge -  Solomon's Lodge No. 1. Battle of Bloody Marsh.

More Oxford bios.