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Rice Haggard

Rice Haggard (c. 1769–1819) was an American preacher and Restoration Movement pioneer whose ministry bridged Methodism and the early Christian Church, advocating for a return to biblical simplicity in naming and practice. Born around 1769 in Norfolk County, Virginia, to Edmund Haggard and an unnamed mother, he grew up during the American Revolution, a period that shaped his early life in a colony transitioning to independence. Little is known of his formal education, but by age 18, influenced by the Methodist revival sweeping the region, he joined the Methodist Episcopal Church and was ordained as a traveling preacher by 1790, serving circuits in Virginia under Bishop Francis Asbury. In 1792, he married Nancy Grimes, daughter of Revolutionary War Captain William Grimes, and they had at least three children, including James O’Kelly Haggard and David Rice Haggard. Haggard’s preaching career took a significant turn during the 1792 Methodist Conference in Baltimore, where he supported James O’Kelly’s protest against Asbury’s episcopal authority, leading to their secession and the formation of the Republican Methodist Church. On August 4, 1794, at a meeting in Surry County, Virginia, Haggard proposed that the group adopt the name "Christian" exclusively, rejecting denominational labels—a suggestion embraced by O’Kelly’s followers, marking the birth of the Christian Church. By 1804, he connected with Barton W. Stone’s movement in Kentucky, reinforcing this name at the dissolution of the Springfield Presbytery, thus linking two streams of the Restoration Movement. Haggard moved to Kentucky around 1812, continuing his itinerant ministry until his death in 1819 near Xenia, Ohio, likely from illness during a preaching trip. Buried in an unmarked grave, possibly in the Rice Family Cemetery near Burkesville, Kentucky, he left a legacy as a preacher whose vision for unity and scriptural authority influenced the Stone-Campbell Movement’s development.