Joseph Stennett, Jr., the eldest living son of Joseph and Susanna Guill Stennett, was born in London 6 Nov. 1692. BN1 When he was about fifteen years of age, he made a profession of religion, he was baptized and joined his father's Pinner's Hall Seventh Day Baptist Church in London. BN2 His father, in his last illness (1713) which was at the "house of his brother-in-law, Mr. [William] Morton" (Knaphill, Buckinghamshire) "in a particular manner gave his dying advice to his eldest son [Joseph, Jr.], with respect to the management of his studies, and the conduct of his future life. BN3
Joseph, Jr., has recorded his marriage to "Rebekah ... Daughter of Nathanael Morgan of Uske Castle in Monmouthshire, Gent., to whom I was married at Radnage ... Bucks ... on the eight day of April 17l4. BN4 This is confirmed in the Radnage Parish Register, "Joseph Stennet of Hitchendon and Rebecka Davies were married with a license of the 8 th of April l7l4 BN5
"In the year 1714, Providence called him into Wales, where he first entered upon his public ministry, and spent about four years at Abergavenny in Monmouthshire."BN6 Rebecka bore "eleven children in thirteen years." She died 24 June 1744.BN7 A later writer is mistaken in giving her name as "Mary." BN8
Joseph Stennett "preached with great acceptance to the Baptist congregation at Abergavenny. There was a poor man belonging to that meeting ... he ... walked seven or eight miles every Lord's-day to hear the Doctor [Joseph, Jr.]." This account goes on to tell how a voice at night persuaded a non-church doctor to send food to that poor man and his family. This narrative from Joseph, Jr., and related by Dr. Samuel Stennett had been sent in to the Baptist annual register. III (1798-1801), by J. S., presumably Dr. Samuel's son, Joseph. BN9 This incident from around Abergavenny shows him as a very active pastor. Joseph Stennett, Jr., from Abergavenny provided on 28 Jan. 1718 Monmouthshire information for John Evans' list of Dissenting congregations. BN10 A letter from Joseph Colet, an English government official in India, was addressed to him in Abergavenny on 28 Aug. 1718. BN11 Among Joseph and Rebecca's children, Sarah was born 18 Jan. 1714 at Uske Castle, Joseph (III) was born 8 Nov. 1717 at Abergavenny, and Susanna Maria was born 26 Dec. 1719 at Abergavenny. BN12
Joseph Stennett "by recommendation" was received as a member of the Baptist church in Leominster in Oct. 1717, though it is believed he lived largely at Abergavenny at this time. Joshua Thomas in his history of the Leominster Church wrote (as late as 1769) that "I heard it said that he preached his first sermon at Abergavenny, and others that he began his Ministry at Leominster, But however that was, it is certain he preached at both places in the Beginning of his Ministry." There has been uncertainty as to when he moved to the Particular Baptist Church in Exeter. One source (written about 1772) says he that it was in July 1720 when he preached his first sermon at Exeter. BN13 In a 24 ~ month [Sept.] 1721 letter from the Exeter (Particular) Baptist Church to the Baptist Church in Leominster the Exeter Church relates that "(after ... a Solemn day of fasting & Prayer) wee unanimously called [Joseph Stennett] to take the Pastoral Care of us." Stennett accepted. Exeter asks Leominster to release him to Exeter since he "is a Member in Comunion With you". Exeter also requested that Thomas Holder the Leominster pastor would come to assist in Stennett's ordination even though the distance is considerable. Stennett added his approval of the letter in a postscript. The next day ("Sept. 25 th ) Stennett wrote another letter to Holder "my Pastor" urging him to come for the ordination. The "extremity of this Church's circumstances seem to call for a speedy settlement." Stennett is concerned about the Arian heresy--a controversy about the Trinity had begun in Exeter in 1718, resulting in the Salters' Hall controversy in London in 1719 BN14
The Mill Yard Seventh Day [General] Baptist Church in London at its 5 March 1721, business meeting decided to contact Joseph Stennett, Jr., since "its thott might bee usefull: for the promotion of ye Sabbath: [for him] to come & preach amongst ye Sabbath Keepers & yt its agreed by the Church to invite him in Love: Trusting to his Moderation hee knowing our principles abt ye Generall point." Stennett was a Particular (Calvinistic) Baptist. His answer is not known but it is clear that he remained at Exeter. BN15
While the Old Meeting (Nonconformist) in Wrexham, Denbighshire, Wales, was between pastors "Mr. Stennett" (believed to be Joseph, Jr.) supplied twice for which he was paid 12 Dec. 1728 and 12 Jan. 1736 for his services and/or horse and journey. BN16 Wrexham is a considerable distance from Exeter.
Stennett preached at Broadmead Bristol Church 11 Aug. 1732 at the ordination of deacons. BN17 He preached a sermon at Broadmead Bristol which resulted in Hugh Evans feeling a personal call to ministry. BN18 Stennett was called to become pastor of the Little Wild Street [Particular] Baptist Church in London. By a letter of 26 March 1737, he accepted; he was "in the chair" at that church's 30 June 1737, business meeting. BN19
At the ordination of Benjamin Beddome at the Baptist church in Bourton-on-the-Water, on 23 Sept. 1743, Stennett preached the ordination sermon.BN20
Stennett's wife, Rebekah Morgan Stennett, died 24 June 1744, after ten years of declining health. BN21 She was buried at Bunhill Fields in a grave, 1 July 1744. BN22
In a marriage announcement in The Gentleman's magazine, 14 (March 1745), 164, the format gives the place of residence of the persons being married--not the place of the marriage ceremony. Thus "Mr Stennet, an eminent baptist preecher, at Cote, Oxfordshire,--to Miss Robarts of Abingdon, Berks." refers to Joseph III, not Joseph Stennett, Jr. When Joseph, Jr., did the funeral sermon for Mary Robarts [Roberts] at Abingdon, and he said, "my near relation to the deceased", though it furnishes me with a more intimate acquaintance with her character, will yet the more restrain that liberty I might otherwise have taken"--in praising her. BN23 Presumably this Mary Robarts was one of the sisters of Rebecca Morgan Stennett, Joseph, Jr.'s late wife. BN24 In turn, a daughter of Joseph, Jr., married a Robarts: "Mrs. Anna Robarts ... a daughter of ... Dr. Joseph Stennett" died on Jan. 15, 1771 ..." in the "45th year of her age." BN25
Joseph, Jr., in 1748 preached the funeral sermon for the Rev. David Rees; Joseph reminisced that at Rees' ordination (19 Feb. 1705/6) "the public work ... fell chiefly on my honoured Father [sermon], and the late reverend Mr. John Piggott. I was present on that occasion, and, tho' very young, I shall not easily forget the solemnities of it BN26
There is a marriage record for "Joseph Stennett and Elizabeth Haley" for 25 April 1750 in an Allhallows London Wall parish record book. BN27 This is probably Joseph Stennett, Jr. This inference is strengthened by (1) a letter from Dr. Samuel Stennett of 15 Aug. 1770, from Watford: "I write from my mother's [presumably his step-mother's], who lives at the distance of nearly twenty miles from London. Her health being in a declining state, I think it my duty to be with her as much as possible." BN28 (2) The Bunhill Fields registers record the burial 5 July 1771, of "Mrs. Eliz Stennet from Watford ... in a vault." BN29
Joseph, Jr., in 1754 was honored with the degree of D. D.--Doctor of Divinity--by the College of St. Andrews in Scotland.
There are several glimpses of Joseph, Jr.'s involvement with Seventh Day Baptists in London late in his ministry at Little Wild Street. (1) In the Pinner's Hall Seventh Day Particular Baptist record book (the church now meeting at Cripplegate), a woman proposed for membership on 17 June 1753; on "the Wednesday following shee was baptized by Mr. Stennett." The officiant was likely Joseph, Jr., though possibly his younger son Samuel. BN30 (2) A money raiser for the College of New Jersey (now Princeton University), Samuel Davies, visited the Stennetts. On Saturday, 23 March 1754, Davies "Preached ... P. M. for Dr. Stennet in a small Congregation of seven-Day Baptists, who seem very serious People." This is presumably the Cripplegate Church of which Joseph Stennett, Sr., had been pastor when they met at Pinner's Hall. Though the congregation had Edmund Townsend as its pastor that quotation suggests that Joseph Stennett, Jr., sometimes preached there. BN31 Perhaps at this time Townsend preached in the mornings and Stennett in the afternoons.
On 16 July 1755, Joseph, Jr. was one of those who participated in the ordination of Samuel Bowen to the pastorate of the Shortwood Baptist Church. BN32
Joseph, Jr., died 6 or 7 Feb. 1758 in the city of Bath. His funeral was elaborate and expensive, costing what a London craftsman would make in about two and a half years. The receipt for the payment is dated 3 May that year. BN33 The Bunhill Fields register for 24 Feb. 1758, records: "The Revd. Dr. Stennett from Charterhouse Square for the ground to Bilid a vault seven foot by 7 For his family & Selfe l0-10-0." BN34 The commemorative sermon for him was preached by the well known pastor Dr. John Gill on Feb. 26. BN35
1738. Gods awful Summons ... 1737 ... Wind ... (London. 1738; second edition, London, 1738).
1738. The Christian strife for the faith ... before a Society of Ministers, and Gentlemen ...
(London. 1738, xii, 84 p.; second edition, London, 1739, vi, 42 p.).
1741. National Ingratitude ... Gideon ... Little-Wild-Street November 5. 1740. (London,
1741; second, third, fourth, and fifth editions, all (London, 1741).
1741. The Nature, and Reward of true Liberality. A Sermon ... Decease of Mr. Samuel Burch ...
Little-Wild-Street, London. (London, 1741).
1742. The Happiness and Glory of Heaven ... Death of the Reverend Mr. Joseph Collet ...
1741 ... Preach'd at Coat in the County of Oxford. (London, 1741) Since Joseph
Stennett III was pastor at Coat, it is easy to assume that he preached the sermon,
but it is in Joseph Stennett, Jr., Sermons on several subjects and occasions (London,
1742), so it is clear it is by J. Stennett, Jr., later D. D.
1742. [A book with a preface by Joseph Stennett: Joseph Collet [of Coat].
The unsearchable depth of Gods judgments ... (London, 1742).
1743. A Sermon ... For the late glorious Victory ... at Dettingen. (London, 1743; second
edition, London, 1743). There is a quotationfrom this sermon in The church and war,
ed. by W. J. Sheils ([Oxford?] Basil Blackwell, 1983), 247.)
1744. [A book with a preface by Joseph Stennett: Mrs. [Hannah] Housman. The power and
pleasure of the Divine life . ...(London, 1744; second edition, London, 1755.)]
1745. Rabshaketh's Retreat ... December 18, 1745. (London, 1745; second edition,
London, 1745). There is a discussion of this book in BQ 36 (1995-96), 213-5.
1746. The LORD was there ... October 9, 1746. (London, 1746). the above except for the
Housman book,were reprinted in his Sermons on several subjects and occasions
(London: Aaron Ward, 111742)
1748. The everlasting Covenant ... Funeral of the Reverend Mr. David Rees .. (London. 1748).
1749. A sermon preach'd at Little-Wild-Street on ... April 25, 1749 ... Peace. (London, 1749)
1750. A funeral oration ... Interment of the Reverend Mr. Samuel Wilson ... (two printings:
London, 1750). Also in S. Wilson, Sermons on various subjects (London, 1753)
Ivimey, 3.548, says Stennett edited the latter volume for publication;
Stennett also provided the preface.
1752. Ivimey, 3.271, says Stennett edited Alverey Jackson, The question answered
(London, 1752)
1753. The Complaints of an unsuccessful Ministry ... preached to the Ministers and
Messengers ... met in Association in the West of England, June 9, 1752 Messengers ...
(London, 1753; second edition1 London. 1753).
1753. The Importance of Religious knowledge ... November 15, 1753. to the Society for
promoting Religious Knowledge among the Poor (London, 1754).
1754. Christ's Care ... preached at Abingdon ... Decease of Mrs. Mary Robarts ... 1754
(London, 1754). Stennett spoke of my near relation to the deceased ... TI (36).
The deceased had the same name as a sister of Stennett's wife Rebekah Morgan
Stennett (d. 1744) (Joseph A. Bradney.A history of Monmouthshire, 3.2.135
(London, 1923).
Stennett gave a sermon before the Western [Particular Baptist] Association in 1734;
quotations from it are in the BQ, 32, no. 8 (Oct. 1988), 413. He wrote that Association's
letter to its churches in 1734 and 1736 (in its manuscript minutes
(Regents Park College Library) , 24-35, 56-62)
Several Stennett letters are extant. One is to Daniel Booth, 8. Feb. 1749 asking to use a coach as he is going "to wait on the King" tomorrow.JB1 Another is to Rev. John Waldrond in Exeter, 22 March 1750.JB2 A third was dictated (in his last illness) at Bath (written by his son Samuel) to his London congregation, 30 Nov. l757. JB3 There is also a 19 Aug. 1789 letter by [Joshua] Thomas which gives information on Stennett's career at Exeter. JB4
Just before his death (1758) he was briefly a trustee of Dr. John Ward's Trust (for ministerial students). JB5
There is a small book addressed to him: The fall of the old serpent called the devil ... explained in a third letter to Doctor Joseph Stennett ... (London, 1757).
The funeral sermon for Joseph Stennett, D. D. was by John Gill, The mutual gain of Christ ... (three editions1 all London, 1758). There is a description of his elaborate funeral: BQ, 25.12-3.
Biography: Baptist magazine , 11 (1819), [501]-4 from John Gill, Sermons and tracts , 1 . 531) ; Ivimey, 3 . 580-8 ; Albert W. Light, Bunhill Fields , 2nd ed. (London, 1915), 181-2.
The five children named below are listed in Miscellanea Genealogica et Heraldica, ed. by Joseph Jackson Howard, Third series, III (London: Mitchell and Hughes, 1900), 87. The date of the register of these births is 27 Feb. 1747, which is probably the legal year, 1747/48=1748; these are presumably their children who are alive at that time. Joseph Stennett attests that he and Rebekah, daughter of Nathanael Morgan of Uske Castle in Monmouthshire, were married at Radnage, Buckinghamshire, 8 April 1714, which agrees with the parish register except that her surname is given in the register as Davies. The funeral sermon for her, Rebekah Stennett, was preached by Samuel Wilson in 1744, and reported that she had borne "eleven children in thirteen years." Jb1
Sarah Stennett
b. 18 Jan. 1714 which is presumably the legal year 1714/15=1715, at Uske Castle, Monmouthshire. There is a marriage record (Hughenden, Buckinghamshire, parish records) of Sarah Stennett to Francis Nicholls, 17 June 1737. Sarah Stennett was the third wife of Dr. Joseph Mason (born 1711) ; he died in 1779, she having died four years earlier. In the Bristol Record Office are three relevant documents: (1) "Legend on back of portrait of Dr. Joseph Mason," "Sarah was born in 1709 and died 15 Dec. 1775." (2) Information Box IX, 48: "Sarah Stennett, b. 1709, d. July 15, 1775." (3) Will of Dr. Joseph Mason, 1779 (proved 1780), " ... bequeath unto my Brother in Law the Reverend Doctor Samuel Stennett ten Guineas." The birth year of Sarah seems to be incorrect in the Bristol Information Box--obviously one should trust the information provided by her father.
b. 8 Nov. 1717, Abergavenny, Monmouthshire. Assistant to his father who is pastor at Little Wild Street Particular Baptist Church, London. Then to Coate, Oxfordshire, as Baptist pastor. Died 22 May 1769, in his 52nd year. Daniel Turner preached the funeral sermon for him. There is a separate biography of him.
b. 26 Dec. 1719, Abergavenny, Monmouthshire. (Presumably moved with her parents and Joseph and Samuel, at least, to London when her father became pastor of the Little Wild Street Particular Baptist Church in 1737.) Her marriage record is: "William Straphan of the Parish of St Anne, Blackfryars, London, Widower, and Susannah Maria Stennett of the Liberty of the Rolls, Spinster, were married July 2, l740."--Chapel registers of The Records of the Honorable p. 615.) There is also a marriage record for Susannah Maria Stennett and William Straphan, Lincoln's Inn Chapel, Holborn, London, for 2 July 1740. This is also attested in the Miscellanea Genealogica et Heraldica volume cited above, pp. 87-88; this source attests the birth of a son, Jos. Straphan, 7Oct. 1746; "Sarah Stennett" was a witness of the birth.
A "M r [Samuel] Stennetts Sister" was buried at the Mill Yard Seventh Day Baptist cemetery, London, in July 1768. Jb2 Since Anna died in 1771 and Sarah in 1775, by the process of elimination this burial was of Susanna Maria Straphan.
b. 2 Apr. 1725, Exeter, Devon. Her married name was "Mrs. Anna Robarts." "She was a daughter of the late Rev, and truly excellent Dr. Joseph Stennett." She died Jan. 15, 1771; "A sermon occasioned" by her death was preached at Broad-mead, Bristol [Baptist Church] by Caleb Evans on Jan. 20. She died in the "45th year of her age." Jb3
b. 1 June 1727, Exeter, Devon. Died 1795. Assistant to his father and followed him as pastor (1758-1795) of the Little Wild Street Particular Baptist Church, London. There is a separate biography for him.
In 1765 or 1766 a sister of Dr. [Samuel] Stennett was a "mistress" "in a family" at Wrexham. Jb4
As a young man, Joseph Jenkins lodged with a "pious family" in London, the mother being a sister of [Dr.] Samuel Stennett; Jenkins taught their son. Jenkins in 1766 was baptized by Dr. Stennett and joined Little Wild Street Church.Jb5
Since his father was born in 1717, a birth date of 1737 is about the earliest likely time.
He succeeded his father as pastor of the Baptist Church at Coate, Oxfordshire, after his father's death which was May 22, 1769. It is possible he preached some before that date as his father died in London at the home of Dr. Samuel Stennett, the deceased's younger brother. Joseph [IV] "carried on the work for two years after his father's death, and probably during his father's illness. ... He apparently stayed for a time after his father's death, and later went to London with his mother. There was a "Rev. Joseph Stennett [who] left Warwick [Baptist Church] in 1779."Jiv1 He was buried as 'The Reverend Mr. Stennett, of Hackney, " a year before his mother in the family vault at Bunhill Fields.Jiv2 In the Bunhill Fields records there is a record for Sept. 10, 1783, "The Revd. Mr Joseph Stennet from Hackney in a Grave." Then there is what appears to be his mother"s record (Sept. 9, 1784) : "M Mary Stennett from Mile end in a Grave."Jiv3
This is presumably the Joseph Stennett who is a pastor at Cirencester, Gloucestershire, in 1772 or 1773, presumably at the Baptist Church.Jivi
Apparently this Joseph Stennett was pastor of the Baptist Church at Warwick 1777-1779--Whitley gives these datesJiv5 A Rev. Joseph Stennett left the Warwick church in 1779.Jiv6
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BN1 Much of the information in this sketch comes from John Gill, The mutual gain of Christ ... A sermon occasioned by the decease of the Rev Mr. Joseph Stennett, D. D. . . . (London, 1758), 43-47. Biographical material has been reprinted in the Baptist magazine , XI (Dec. 1819), 501-504.
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BN2 Pinners' Hall record book, p. 268.
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BN3 Joseph Stennett (1663-1713) , Works, I (London, 1732) , first seq., p. 34
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BN4 Miscellanea genealogica et heraldica , ed. by Joseph Jackson Howard, ser. 3, III (London, 1900), 87.
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BN5 Radnage Parish Register (Aylesbury, Buckinghamshire Record Office, 173/1/1-10); cp. note by Thomas Woodcock, Baptist quarterly , 5.2 (April 1930) , 85.
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BN6 Samuel Wilson, God the portion of his people; a sermon occasioned by the death of Mrs. Rebekah Stennett, late wife of the Reverend Mr. Joseph Stennett . . . (London, 1744), especially pp. 25-42. That "one of the Stennetts . . . began to preach in Abergavenny about 1706" appears to be a mistaken date for about 1716; ?One of his children was buried in Llanwenarth in 17l7?--E. A. Payne, "More about the Sabbatarian Baptists, " Baptist guarterly , XIV, no. 4 (Oct. 1951), pp. 161-166, p. 164.
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BN7 Wilson, op. cit., title page and pp. 29, 36.
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BN8 Joshua Thomas (1719?-1797), "A brief history of the Baptist Church at Leominster," 2 (National Library of Wales, Minor Deposit 614A), 97, and "The Baptist Church at Leomirister," Baptist magazine, 12 (1820), 136-8, 182-4. Indeed Thomas discovered very little about Mrs. Stennett: "Mary Stennett was the wife of D r Stennett . . . Tis reasonable to suppose that she was a member here [Leominster] only while her husband was . . . I can give very little account of her. She was the mother of the two Ministers . . . I do not~know when she died, nor where? ("A brief . . .," 97).
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BN9 Baptist annual register , ed. by John Rippon, III (1798-1801), pp. 1097-1099.
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BN10 Part of Evans' manuscript in Dr. Williams?s Library (and on microfilm)
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BN11 Collet, The private letter books of Joseph Collet . . . ed. by H. H. Dodwell . . . (London: Longmans, Green, 1933), p. 190.
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BN12 Miscellanea . . . , ser. 3, III, p. 87.
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BN13 Josiah Thompson manuscript, [History of congregations] (Dr. Williams's Library) : Devonshire: Exeter. His being received as a member at Leominster is from that church's record book according to Thomas, "A brief . . .," p. 95.
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BN14 These letters are referred to by Thomas; Bryan Ball located them at the National Library of Wales (MS l1095E), but apparently has misread the word "month" as "March" (Ball, The seventh-day men (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1994), 157); the manuscript letters are clearly dated as in the text above.
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BN15 M111 Yard record book, 234-5.
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BN16 Alfred N. Palmer, A history of the older Nonconformity of Wrexham . . . (Wrexham [1888] , 98-9, 145-6.
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BN17 G. Sidney Hall and Harry Mowvley, Tradition and challenge (Bristol: Broadmead Baptist Church, 1991), 18.
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BN18 Roger Hayden, Evangelical Calvinism . . . (Ph. D. dissertation, Univ. of Keele, 1991), 184.
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BN19 Little Wild Street Church Book, 1736-1805.
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BN20 Joseph Ivimey, A history of the English Baptists ' 4 (London,1830), 461; Beddome, Sermons printed from the manuscripts (London, 1835), xvi-ii.
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BN21 Wilson, op. cit. , title page and 29.
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BN22 Bunhill Fields' Registers (Public Record Office, London), 7.141.
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BN23 J Stennett, Christ's care of the future blessedness . . . (London, 1754), title page and 36.
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BN24 Joshua Thomas, "A history of the Baptist Association in Wales . . .," 41, appended to John Rippon, Baptist annual register . . . (1798-1801)
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BN25 [Caleb Evans] A sermon occasioned by the death of Mrs. Anna Robarts . . . (Bristol: W. Pine [1771]
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BN26 Joseph Stennett [Jr.], The everlasting covenant . . . (London,1748) , 42-3; Joseph Lvimey, A history of the English Baptists , 3 (London, 1823), 527.
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BN27 That record book from Guildhall (London) is on Mormon microfilm 374335.
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BN28 An account of the life . . . and writings of the late Rev. John Fawcett (London, 1818), 159-61.
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BN29 Register 12.27 (Public Record Office, London)
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BN30 Pinner's Hall record book, p. 126.
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BN31 Davies, The Reverend Samuel Davies abroad . . . , ad. by George William Pilcher (Urbana, IL: University of Illinois Press, 1967), pp. 81-83, 85. The assertion by A. C. Underwood ( A history of the English Baptists (London: Carey Kingsgate Press, 1947), pp. 147- 148, that Joseph, Jr., conducted the Mill Yard Saturday morning services for some years is simply a mistake--it was his son Samuel who conducted the Cripplegate Saturday morning services for more than twenty years.
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BN32 lvimey, 4.475.
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BN33 L. G. Champion, "The social status of some Eighteenth century Baptist ministers," Baptist quarterly , 25, no. 1 (Jan. 1973), 10-4, 11-3. Gentleman?s magazine , Feb. 1758, 94.
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BN34 Register 9.141.
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BN35 Gill, The mutual gain of Christ (London, 1758)
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JB1 Isaac Mann collection. NLW
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JB2 In John Rippon's Baptist annual register , [III] (1798-1801), 520-521; also Ivimey, III, 581-583, which omits the first paragraph .
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JB3 The 1757 letter manuscript is at Yale University, Osborn Collection, Mann box; reprinted with slight changes in Ivimey, III. pp. 583-586.
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JB4 Yale University, Osborn Collection1 Mann box.
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JB5 Tongue, op . cit . , 9-10.
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Jb1 Samuel Wilson, God the portion of his people, a sermon occasioned by the death of Mrs. Rebekah Stennett, late wife of the Reverend Mr. Joseph Stennet ... (London, 1744), pp. 29, 36. Society of Lincoln? s Inn, II ([London - Lincoln's Inn, 1896),
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Jb2 Public Record Office, London, RG 4/4505, p. 62.
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Jb3 [Caleb Evans] A sermon occasioned by the death of Mrs. Anna Robarts . . . (Bristol: W. Pine 11771]), title page and p. 21.
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Jb4 Alf red N. Palmer, A history of the older Nonconformity of Wrexham and its Neighbourhood (Wrexham [preface 1888), p. 104.
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Jb5 . Vernon Price, The ?Old Meeting? ... Wrexham (Wrexham: Edwin Jones [1931], 191-2.
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Jiv1 BQ, 16 (1955-6), 61.
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Jiv2 John Stanley, The church in the hop garden (London: Kingsgate Press, 1935?) , p. 127.
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Jiv3 Bunhill Fields registers, in the Public Record Office, Chancery Lane, London.
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Jiv4 [Josiah Thompson] , "A list of the Ministers who concurred in the Application to Parliament . . . An: 1772 & 1773," manuscript in the Dr. Williams's Library, on "Early Baptist publications" microfilm, reel 29.
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Jiv5 W. T. Whitley, Baptist bibliography , II (London, Kingsgate1 1922), p. 243.
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Jiv6 W T. Goodwin, ?Warwick Baptist Church,? Baptist guartely , XVI, no. 1 (Jan. 1955), pp. 58-66, p. 61. William Stokes, The history of the Midland Association of Baptist churches . . . (London, 1855) , p. [94] : 1779 ?Mr. J. Stennet, minister at Warwick.?
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