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Devereux Jarratt

Devereux Jarratt (January 17, 1733 – January 29, 1801) was an American preacher and Anglican priest whose ministry sparked a significant evangelical revival in Virginia and North Carolina during the 18th century. Born in New Kent County, Virginia, to Robert Jarratt, a carpenter, and Sarah Bradley, he lost his parents early and was raised by an older brother, receiving little formal education but teaching himself enough to work as a schoolmaster by age 19. Converted in his mid-20s through Presbyterian influences while tutoring in Albemarle County, he traveled to England in 1762, where he was ordained a deacon and priest in the Anglican Church. Jarratt’s preaching career began upon his return to Virginia in 1763, when he became rector of Bath Parish in Dinwiddie County, a role he held until his death. His emotive, Methodist-inspired sermons ignited the Great Awakening in the region, notably during the 1775–1776 revival, converting thousands alongside Methodist allies like Francis Asbury. He authored A Brief Narrative of the Revival of Religion in Virginia (1778) and his autobiography, The Life of the Reverend Devereux Jarratt (1806), emphasizing personal conversion and holiness. Married to Martha Claiborne, with whom he had several children, he died at age 68 in Dinwiddie County from a tumor near his ear, leaving a legacy as a key figure in Virginia’s evangelical awakening.