634 Appendix. 



cern for the welfare of souls characterized his effort?. Almost the- 

 last word he uttered was "Glory;" and thus died this man of God, 

 " called, and chosen, and faithful." 



Ogburn, Hugh E. was a native of South Carolina; received on 

 trial in the Conference in January, 1S3S, and appointed to Wacca- 

 maw Circuit; 1839, Black Eiver; 1840, Bladen; 1841, South Santee 

 Mission; 1842, Center; 1843, Lenoir; 1844, Charlotte Circuit; 

 1845-46, Conwayboro"; 1847, Laurens; 1848, Pleasant Grove; 1849, 

 Morganton; 1850, allowed to rest on account of ill health; 1851, 

 supernumerary; 1852, superannuated; 1853-54, Black River Cir- 

 cuit; 1855, "Wateree Mission; 1856, Cooper River Circuit; after 

 which he held a superannuated relation until his death, January 

 19, 1860. He was a good preacher, sound in doctrine, and labored 

 with zeal and success in winning souls to Christ. His dying-words 

 were, "Religion is good to live with — it is good now." 



Ogburn, Daniel A. was born in Chesterfield District, South 

 Carolina, June 5, 1833; converted May 10, 1847; admitted on trial 

 in the Conference in November, 1853, and appointed for 1854 to 

 Black River and Pedee Mission; from 1855-57, Savannah River 

 Mission; 1858-59, Orangeburg Circuit; 1860, Walterboro Circuit; 

 after which he served the Society Hill Mission until early in 1865, 

 when he found it impracticable to preach longer on the work, and 

 accepted a chaplaincy in the South Carolina State service. In a 

 few weeks his health failed under the hardships of army life, and 

 after four or five days of severe illness, during which he was utterly 

 unconscious, he passed away to that state where the smoke and din 

 of battle are never known. He was a good missionary and a good 

 man, quiet and unassuming in his deportment, and secured the re- 

 gard and affection of the people among whom he labored. 



Pierce, Reddick was born in Halifax county, North Carolina, 

 September 26, 1782; converted in 1802 in Barnwell District, South 

 Carolina, whither his father had brought his family, and settled on 

 Tinker Creek ; entered the Conference on trial in January, 1805, 

 and appointed to Little River Circuit, in Georgia; 1806, Sparta; 

 1607-8, Augusta ; 1809, Columbia, South Carolina ; 1810, presiding 

 elder of Saluda District ; 1811, superannuated; 1812, located ; 1829, 

 reentered, and sent to Sandy River Circuit; 1830, Enoree; 1831, 

 Abbeville; IS 32, supernumerary on Abbeville Circuit; 1833, super- 

 numerary at Charleston; 1834, again superannuated on account of 

 increasing deafness, and continued to hold that relation to the Con- 

 ference until his death. Although without pastoral charge, his 



