Thomas Allin (Methodist)

Thomas Allin (1784–1866) was an English ordained minister in the Methodist New Connexion,[1][2] a breakaway denomination of the Methodist Church, which was established in Hanley, Stoke-on-Trent in 1797. Thomas Allin was born in Shropshire, England, on 10 February 1784. He died on 6 November 1866.

Works (selected)

  • To the Wesleyan Methodist delegates assembled in Manchester 1834
  • Vindication of the Methodist New Connexion 1841
gollark: I prefer CB, but for a lunar herald any copper works. I'd like green, though.
gollark: Er... coppers?
gollark: If you have anything good to trade, I happen to have one lying around.
gollark: There are various ways to breed leetles:kill TJ09 and take his place, then make it possible for you to breed leetlespay TJ09 and/or ask him nicely to make your leetles breedablemind-control TJ09hack into DC and make your leetles breedable/give yourself a bred leetle
gollark: Or at least under 5d.

References

  1. George John Stevenson, Methodist Worthies: characteristic sketches of Methodist preachers; Vol. 4 1885 "After Alexander Kilham, no man, perhaps, has influenced the New Connexion so much as Thomas Allin. He was the Richard Watson of that body, but he had a far more ardent nature"
  2. Edwin Warriner Old Sands Street Methodist Episcopal Church, of Brooklyn, N.Y. 1885 "J. Lowe, of the Episcopal Church. In his eighteenth year he began to labor as a local preacher on the Glossop circuit, in the Manchester district. After attending the Rev. Thomas Allin's theological school in Altringham.."



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