91³Ô¹ÏÍø

Event    From 24/5/1738  To 24/5/1738

Wesley's second conversion

Categories: Religion

Event

Wesley attended a meeting convened by James Hutton in Nettleton Court, off Aldersgate Street or at 28 Aldersgate Street. Here he felt a "warming of the heart".

Three memorials all erected in slightly different locations by different organisations.

Comments are provided by Facebook, please ensure you are signed in to see them

This section lists the memorials where the subject on this page is commemorated:
Wesley's second conversion

Commemorated ati

Aldersgate Flame

{On the west face:} Wednesday May 24 1738 "What occurred .......law of sin an...

91³Ô¹ÏÍø

John Wesley - Aldersgate Street

The probable site, where, on May 24, 1738 John Wesley "felt his heart strange...

91³Ô¹ÏÍø

Wesleys at Postmans' Park

IHS This tablet is erected to the glory of God in commemoration of the evange...

91³Ô¹ÏÍø

Other Subjects

Katherine Anne Egerton Warburton

Katherine Anne Egerton Warburton

Mother Superior of St Saviour's Priory at the time that the community moved from East Grinstead onto the Dunloe Street site, in 1866. When she died in 1923 a memorial fund was created to help compl...

Person, Religion, Social Welfare

1 memorial
Lesnes Abbey

Lesnes Abbey

Pronounced Lez-ness. Founded by Richard de Lucy, as a penance for his role in the murder of Thomas Becket. It never grew to any great size, and was closed by Cardinal Wolsey under a licence to supp...

Place, Architecture, Religion

1 memorial
Rev. Dawson Burns

Rev. Dawson Burns

Baptist minister and lifelong temperance activist. Born Southwark to Jabez Burns also a Baptist minister and temperance advocate from 1836. Died Battersea.

Person, Religion

2 memorials
George Burder

George Burder

Non-conformist minister. Born in Islington. One of the founders of the British and Foreign Bible Society. Died in Brunswick Square in his son's home. Buried in Bunhill burial ground.

Person, Religion

1 memorial
Rodney Smith

Rodney Smith

Evangelist. Born in a gipsy tent in Epping Forest, Wanstead. He began to hawk clothes pegs and tinware made by his father and became known as 'The Singing Gipsy Boy' because of his eagerness to sin...

Person, Religion, USA

1 memorial