Appendix. 649 



OMISSIONS IN OKIGINAL LIST. 



[ The following sketches were omitted in the first edition through hurry of 

 publication— to which one has been since added.] 



Daniel, Thomas Sumter was born in Edgefield county, South Caro- 

 lina, in 1814 ; educated at the Cokesbury School, and in February, 1835, 

 was received on trial in the Conference and sent to Montgomery Circuit ; 

 1836, Kockingham; 1837-39, Combahee and Ashepoo; 1840, Union; 

 1841, Newberry; 1842, Greenville Circuit; 1843, Black Kiver and 

 Pedee; 1844, Deep Kiver; 1845, Charlotte; 1846-47, Lincolnton; 1848, 

 Lenoir; 1849, Cheraw, and located in December; 1857, readmitted, 

 and sent to Butler Circuit ; 1858, Anderson; 1859, Laurens; 1860-61, 

 Pickensville; 1862-63, Pickens; 1864-66, Mapleton; 1867, Savan- 

 nah Kiver; 1868-69, Abbeville Circuit ; 1870, supernumerary; 1871, 

 located; 1874, readmitted, and sent to Abbeville Circuit; 1875, Cokes- 

 bury Circuit; 1876, superannuated, and died in Abbeville county, 

 August 27, 1877. He was a man of sterling character; his mental 

 endowments above the ordinary ; and his preaching was, at times, in 

 demonstration of the Spirit and of power. He fell suddenly, but at 

 his post. He preached with unwonted power at a protracted meet- 

 ing in Laurens, and left the church on Monday cheerful and happy, 

 but had scarcely reached his home when he was smitten with sun- 

 stroke, and died in thirty minutes. No one was present except his 

 old servant, who reports that he passed away w r ith a shout of tri- 

 umph. He was buried at Salem church, in the Greenwood Circuit, 

 by the side of his sainted mother, who had not long preceded him to 

 the spirit-land. 



Danner, Archibald Kogerson was born in Walterboro, South 

 Carolina, 1809; converted in 1830, and for many years labored with 

 unusual success as a local preacher in the counties of Charleston and 

 Colleton. He was received into the traveling connection in the 

 South Carolina Conference in 1871, and sent to St. George's Circuit; 

 1872, Lower St. George's; 1873-76, Upper Orange Circuit; 1877, 

 Yemassee Circuit. He was a holy man of God, and inspired confi- 

 dence and love wherever he went. As a preacher he was plain, 

 earnest, and eminently spiritual. He would often rejoice while 

 preaching. His manly form, godly counsels, and expressions of 

 tenderness and sympathy, drew everybody to him. After protracted 

 sufferings, when he felt that the time of his departure w r as at hand, 

 he said, "I expect to start for heaven from this place" (Early 



