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Newman Hall

Christopher Newman Hall (1816–1902) was an English preacher and Nonconformist divine whose dynamic ministry and social activism made him one of the most celebrated religious figures of 19th-century Britain. Born on May 22, 1816, in Maidstone, Kent, he was the son of John Vine Hall, a printer and publisher of the Maidstone Journal, and Mary Teverill. Educated at Totteridge School and Highbury College, London, he graduated with a B.A. from the University of London in 1841, later earning an LL.B. in 1856. Ordained in 1842, he began his preaching career as pastor of Albion Church in Hull, serving until 1854, before taking charge of Surrey Chapel in London, succeeding James Sherman. In 1876, he oversaw the congregation’s move to Christ Church, Westminster Bridge Road, where he ministered until his retirement in 1892. Hall married twice—first to Charlotte Gordon in 1846, ending in a rare and controversial divorce in 1880, and then to Harriet Knipe later that year—though he had no children from either marriage. Hall’s preaching career was distinguished by his evangelical fervor and wide-reaching influence, earning him the nickname "Dissenter’s Bishop." Known for his eloquent sermons, he penned the tract Come to Jesus (1848), which sold over four million copies in 40 languages, cementing his fame. He chaired the Congregational Union of England and Wales in 1876 and was a vocal advocate for social causes, including temperance, Chartism, and the abolition of slavery during the American Civil War, notably supporting Abraham Lincoln with works like The American War (1862). His ministry blended preaching with action, establishing schools and charities at his churches, and he remained active in evangelical work post-retirement, publishing an autobiography near the end of his life. Hall died on February 18, 1902, in London, leaving a legacy as a preacher whose powerful voice and commitment to justice resonated far beyond the pulpit.