<f 



606 Appendix. 



BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCHES, 



Asbury, Daniel (see Chapter XL). 



Andrews, Lemuel was admitted on trial into the South Carolina 

 Conference in 1787, and traveled the Pedee, Saluda, Edisto, and 

 San tee circuits ; was attentive to the work, of a steady, upright walk . 

 died in peace, and was buried in Santee, where he last preached. 



Andrews, Wyatt entered the Conference in 1789, and was ap- 

 pointed to Washington in Georgia ; the next year on Cherokee Circuit 

 in South Carolina, where he died and was buried. As long as he 

 could ride he traveled, and while he had breath he praised the Lord. 



Bingham, Henry a native of Virginia, admitted on trial in 1785, 

 and traveled the Yadkin, Salisbury, Pedee, and Edisto circuits; 

 serious, faithful, zealous, humble, and teachable ; died at Cattle Creek 

 Camp-ground in Edisto Circuit in 1788 ; fervent in exhortation during 

 his sickness and resigned in death. 



Bass, Henry was born in Berlin in Connecticut, December 9, 

 1786 ; removed to Fayetteville in North Carolina, where he was con- 

 verted and joined the Church in 1807 ; admitted on trial in 1812 ; was 

 ordained deacon by Bishop Asbury in January, 1814, and elder by 

 Bishop McKendree in December, 1815 ; always a laborious, attentive, 

 and useful preacher, filling the office of presiding elder eighteen 

 years, on circuits and stations nineteen years, and superannuated a 

 little more than eleven years. He died of cancer May 13, 1860, at 

 Cokesbury, and was buried at Tabernacle Church. His expressions 

 of faith and holy joy amid extreme and protracted sufferings, "How 

 good the Lord is," "I trust in God above all," presented a true 

 spectacle of moral sublimity. 



Belin, James L. was born in All Saints' Parish in South Caro- 

 lina in 1788; admitted on trial in 1812, with Henry Bass and Nicho- 

 las Talley, and after a ministerial life of about forty-seven years, 

 died by a fall from his buggy, May 19, 1859, and was buried on Wac- 

 camaAV Neck. He was a pure-hearted man, very devotional in spirit, 

 an experimental preacher, and remarkably charitable to the poor. 

 He opened the way for missions by preaching in 1819 on the plan- 

 tations of Kobert Withers and Major Ward ; with Theophilus Hug- 

 gins formed the Waccamaw Mission in 1836, and bequeathed well- 

 nigh the whole of his property to the support and advancement 

 of its interests. 



