HARRIES (HARRIS, HARRY), JOHN (1722 - 1788), 'of Ambleston', Pembrokeshire, early Methodist exhorter

Name: John Harries
Date of birth: 1722
Date of death: 1788
Child: Evan Harries
Gender: Male
Occupation: early Methodist exhorter
Area of activity: Religion
Author: Robert Thomas Jenkins

Not to be confused with John Harris (1704 - 1763) 'of S. Kennox.' Considering Harries's fame, it is curious how very few definite facts about him are available. He was at an early date in charge of a group of Societies in north Pembrokeshire, and became Howel Davies's right-hand man; it is by no accident that Woodstock, the oldest Calvinistic Methodist chapel in Pembrokeshire, is in Ambleston parish. On the death of Howel Davies (1770), Harries (who was a well-to-do farmer) superintended the whole Methodist work in the county until the arrival of Nathaniel Rowland; according to William Gambold, 'he was one of the strictest and most approved of men, universally beloved'; and Rowland Hill thought very highly of him. He strove hard to stem the Moravian tide in Pembrokeshire: we find him in 1768 accusing the Brethren of 'taking away Mr. Howell Davies's people,' and Edward Oliver reports that Harries remonstrated vigorously with him in 1770 'for coming among their people, as he called them' - though the two men lodged together at Treddafydd after preaching together, amicably enough, 'in the Methodist Meeting House.' He died at Newport, Pembrokeshire, 7 March 1788, when (according to his tombstone) 66 years of age. He had a son, EVAN HARRIES, who began to exhort in 1784, and was one of the thirteen South Wales exhorters ordained in 1811; he died 1819. Several of John Harries's descendants became ministers.

Author

Published date: 1959

Article Copyright: http://rightsstatements.org/page/InC/1.0/

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