PROMfNENT PERSONS
3^5
from twenty to less than fifty .dollars. In
the great revival of those years, out of
which grew the Cumberland Presbyterian
Church, he was a directing spirit, and it is
claimed that he, more than any other man,
saved that g^eat work from degenerating
into a wild and ruinous fanaticism. He con-
tinued to preside over this work till the
spring of 1808, when he was elected and
ordained bishop. His first episcopal tour of
fifteen hundred miles extended through Vir-
ginia. Tennessee. Missouri and Illinois. At
the general conference of 1816 he found him-
self left, by th*e death of Bishop Asbury, the
only bishop of the church, but two addi-
tional bishops were then chosen. He con-
tinued to labor till 1835, when his health
failed. He was never married, never re-
ceived a collegiate diploma, nor left even a
brief record of his eventful life. He died in
Sumner county, Tennessee, March 5. 1835.
Lcc, Jesse, born in Prince George county, Virginia, March 12. 1758; at the age of nineteen he removed to North Carolina, en- tered the ministry of the Methodist church, and preached his first sermon in 1779. In 1780 he was drafted into the militia to repel the British in South Carolina, and, refusing to do military duty, was made to serve as a chaplain. His first pastoral appointment was near Edenton, North Carolina; in 1783 he was received into the conference ; was ap- pointed to the Salisbury circuit in 1784, and accompanied Bishop Asbury on a tour ex- tending from Norfolk, \'irginia. to the ex- treme southwest of North Carolina. To- gether they reorganized the various circuits that nearly had been destroyed by the war. After three years in North Carolina, Vir- ginia. New Jersey, and Maryland, he went
to Stamford circuit, Connecticut, visiting
and establishing classes in Norwalk, New
Haven, and elsewhere. He reached Bos-
ton in 1790, and preached his first sermon
en the common. For six years he traveled
throughout New England, preaching in
barns, private houses, and on the highway,
forming new circuits and directing the labors
of his assistants. He became an assistant to
Bishop Asbury in 1796, and held confer-
ences and superintended churches. His
later life was passed in the South as pastor
and presiding elder. In 1808 he advocated
a delegate general conference plan that
he had urged fourteen years before, and on
its adoption the general conference became
the supreme authority of the Methodist
Episcopal church. He was chaplain of the
United States house of representatives in
1S07-12-13, and from 1814 until his death
was chaplain of the United States senate.
His labors earned him the title of the
- Apostle of Methodism.-' He published **A
History of Methodism," which was the first work on the subject. He died in Baltimore, Maryland, September 12. 1816. The will of John Lee, dated June 17, 1800, and proved a^ Petersburg, December 7. 1801. mentions his brother, Jesse Lee, to whom he gives all "my library of books.'* and his brothers, Ed- ward. Nathaniel and Abraham Lee, and his sister. Nancy Perkins.
Leftwich, Joel, son of Augustine Left- wich, who died in Bedford county, Virgfinia, about 1795. »^0" i^ 5^'d county, Virginia, '" ^759- During the revolutionary war he fought at Germantown and at Camden, and was wounded at Guilford Court House. In the war of 1S12 he commanded a brigade under Gen. Harrison. He was afterward
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