644 Appendix. 



1848-49, Union; 1850-51, Laurens; 1852-53, Greenville Circuit; 

 1854, Newberry Circuit; 1855-56, agent for tract cause; 1857, Ches- 

 terville Circuit; 1858, agent for tract cause; 1859, St. Matthew's 

 Mission; 1860-61, supernumerary; 1862, Richland Fork Mission; 

 1863, Marion Street, Columbia; 1864, Columbia Circuit; 1865, 

 Lower Saluda River Mission. He was an earnest, sound, and prac- 

 tical preacher, and it was often said of him that he always left his 

 charge improved. In his regular itinerant work he acquired a 

 ruling desire for the circulation of books, and while acting as agent 

 for the Tract Society he laid the foundation of what afterward be- 

 came an extensive bookstore in Columbia. He was on his way 

 from the North, where he had been on business, when he was ar- 

 rested by disease, and died in Philadelphia, July 31, 1865. Several 

 ministers and friends soothed him in his dying-hours; and an at- 

 tached Jewish rabbi wrote that he said at the last, " I confide in 

 my Saviour, and put my trust entirely in him." 



Waiters, Nicholas was born in Anne Arundel county, Mary- 

 land, November 20, 1839; supplied the Kent Circuit, in Maryland, 

 in 1776; entered the traveling connection on trial in 1777, and 

 filled the following appointments: 1777-78, Hanover, Virginia; 

 1794, Union, South Carolina; 1799, Saluda; 1800, Harford, Mary- 

 land; 1801, Winchester, Virginia; 1802, Lancaster, Pennsylvania; 

 1803, Broad River, Georgia; 1804, Charleston, South Carolina, 

 where he died in peace and triumph on the 10th of August, in the 

 sixty-fifth year of his age. He had his difficulties in his passage 

 through life, both in his first and second marriages. As the cares 

 of the first prevented his going sooner into the traveling connection, 

 so his last called him into a close domestic life, and interfered with a 

 plan of ministerial labor which he heartily approved. (See Chap- 

 ter X.) 



Wilson, Moses was admitted on trial in the traveling connec- 

 tion in 1795, and appointed to Richmond Circuit, Georgia; 1796, 

 Edisto; 1797, Union; 1798-99, Bladen, North Carolina; 1800, 

 Bush River ; 1801, St. Mary's, Georgia ; and died in peace in Ker- 

 shaw District, South Carolina, in 1803. 



Wilson, Charles was born in Barnwell District, South Caro- 

 lina, November 21, 1802; admitted on trial in the Conference in 

 February, 1831, and appointed to Black Swamp; 1832, Brunswick; 

 1833, Waccamaw ; 1834, Combahee and Pon Pon Mission ; 1835-36, 

 Combahee, Ashepoo, and Pon Pon Mission; 1837-38, Combahee 

 and Ashepoo Mission; 1839^3, Pon Pon Mission; 1844, Edisto 



