612 Appendix. 



Dunwody, Samxel was born in Chester county, Pennsylvania, 

 August 3, 1780; converted in his twenty-second year ; recommended 

 by the Quarterly Conference of Ogeechee Circuit, Georgia, with 

 William M. Kennedy, and admitted on trial in the South Carolina 

 Conference in 1806, and appointed to Bladen and Brunswick, North 

 Carolina; in 1807, to Savannah, Georgia; in 1808, to Wilmington, 

 North Carolina; in 1809, to Fayetteville; in 1810, to Georgetown, 

 South Carolina; in 1811, to Charleston; in 1812, presiding elder 

 of Mississippi District, but changed to Charleston ; in 1813, St. 

 Mary's, Georgia; in 1814, to Charleston; in 1815 and 1816, to 

 Columbia; in 1817 and 1818, to Augusta, Georgia; in 1819, to 

 Camden; in 1820, to Sandy Eiver ; in 1821, to Wilmington ; in 1822, 

 to Fayetteville; in 1823, to Georgetown; in 1824. to Charleston; in 

 1825, to Augusta; in 1826, Santee; in 1827, Liberty, Georgia; 1828, 

 Newberry; in 1829, to Santee; in 1830 and 1831, to Sandy Kiver; 

 in 1832 and 1833, to Orangeburg ; in 1834, to Cooper Kiver; in 1835, 

 to Black Swamp; in 1836, to Columbia Circuit; in 1837, to Cypress; 

 in 1838 and 1839, to Cokesbury; in 1840, to Orangeburg; in 1841, 

 to Laurens; in 1842 and 1843, to Edgefield; in 1844 and 1845, to 

 Newberry; in 1846, superannuated, after a term of nearly forty 

 rears' service. As a preacher, he was original both as to matter 

 aid manner, and his sermons were masterpieces of their kind ; as a 

 controversionalist, he drew his arguments and illustrations from the 

 word of God, and they did wonderful execution ; as a student, he 

 was eminently a man of one book — the Bible; as a Christian, his 

 experience was scriptural and his example irreproachable. He 

 died of paralysis July 8, 1854, and sunk gently into the arms of 

 death as a child would fall asleep on the bosom of its mother. "Let 

 me die the death of the righteous, and let my last end be like his." 

 Dickenson, Charles was born in Moore county, North Carolina, 

 about the year 1784; soon after his conversion commenced traveling 

 with his brother Thomas, who was received on trial in 1811 and sent 

 to Cypress Circuit, and was employed to succeed him after his death 

 in the early part of the year; was admitted on trial at the ensuing 

 Conference, 1812, and appointed to Little River ; 1813, to Cedar Creek ; 

 3814, to Grove Circuit; 1815, to Deep River; 1816, to Washington, 

 Georgia; 1817, to Oakmulgee; 1819, to Washington; 1820, to Louis- 

 ville, where he labored successfully for about six months. In August, 

 he went to his residence in Washington county; was attacked with 

 bilious fever, accompanied with bilious colic, and on the first day 

 of September, perceiving his end was near, he said, "The Lord is 



