640 Appendix. 



ing abilities, laboring acceptably and usefully in the various fields as- 

 signed him by the Church. He was calm, peaceful, and resigned in 

 death. 



Spain, Hartwell was born in Wake county, North Carolina, 

 February 10, 1795; converted in August, 1810; admitted on trial in 

 the South Carolina Conference in December, 1816, and appointed 

 for 1817 to Bush Kiver Circuit, Georgia; 1818, Oakmulgee; 1819, 

 Sugar Creek; 1820, Fayetteville ; 1821, superannuated; 1822, lo- 

 cated; 1828, reentered, and appointed for two years to Lincolnton 

 Circuit; 1830-33, presiding elder of Lincolnton District; 1834, Co- 

 lumbia; 1835, Cokesbury Circuit; 1836, agent for Cokesbury School; 

 1837, again superannuated; 1S38-41, presiding elder of Columbia 

 District; 1842, Charleston; 1843, Santee Circuit. This closed his 

 active and effective itinerant career, and from that time to his de- 

 parture hence he sustained a superannuated relation. He was an 

 able and successful preacher, and greatly honored by the Conference. 

 Almost the last thing he said was, "I am not afraid to die, foi I 

 have a bright hope of rest in heaven." He breathed his last March 

 9, 186S, at the residence of his son-in-law, Dr. Thomas W. Briggs, 

 in Clarendon, South Carolina, in the seventy-fourth year of his age ; 

 and his remains rest at Summerton, in rear of the pulpit in which 

 he so long and faithfully preached Christ. 



Stacy, James was born in Lincoln county, North Carolina, No- 

 vember 18, 1S07; converted in September, 1822; admitted on trial 

 in the South Carolina Conference in January, 1830, and appointed 

 to Quincy Circuit, Florida; 1831, Morganton Circuit, North Caro- 

 lina; 1832, Enoree Circuit, South Carolina; 1833, Laurens; 1834, 

 Pendleton; 1835, Cheraw; 1836, Camden; 1837, Georgetown; in 

 1838-39, Fayetteville; 1840, agent for Cokesbury School and Ban- 

 dolph-Macon College; 1841, Charleston; 1842, Wilmington; in 

 1843-44, Trinity, Charleston; 1845-46, presiding elder of Cheraw 

 District; 1847-48, presiding elder of Fayetteville District; 1849. 

 Columbia; 1850, Trinity, Charleston; 1851-52, Georgetown; in 

 1853-54, Marion Station; 1855-56, Camden; 11-57, Charlotte; in 

 1858-59, Cumberland, Charleston; 1860, presiding elder of Orange- 

 burg District; 1861-62, Spartanburg Station; 1863, Bethel and 

 Spring Street, Charleston; 1864, Concord Station; 1865, Charlotte; 

 1866, Pineville; 1867-68, Sumter Station, where he closed his long 

 and effective career on the 1st day of May. A nobler, more self- 

 possessed, and sincerely pious man and minister is rarely found. 

 He had a high sense of personal and ministerial propriety; his 



