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George Whitefield

George Whitefield (1714–1770). Born on December 27, 1714, in Gloucester, England, to Elizabeth Edwards and Thomas Whitefield, George Whitefield was the youngest of seven children raised in the Bell Inn after his father’s death when he was two. A gifted actor in youth, he skipped school to practice performances but excelled academically at St. Mary de Crypt and entered Pembroke College, Oxford, in 1732 as a servitor. There, he joined the “Holy Club” with John and Charles Wesley, embracing their methodical piety, and experienced a “new birth” in 1735 after reading Henry Scougal’s The Life of God in the Soul of Man. Ordained a deacon in the Church of England in 1736, he began preaching with dramatic flair, drawing thousands in London. Barred from pulpits for his fervor, he pioneered open-air preaching, delivering over 18,000 sermons to an estimated 10 million people across Britain and America. In 1738, he joined the Wesleys in Georgia, founding Bethesda Orphanage near Savannah, and by 1740, his American tours sparked the First Great Awakening, preaching Calvinist doctrines of regeneration despite tensions with Arminian Wesleys. Married to Elizabeth James in 1741, their only son died in infancy, and the union remained distant. Whitefield’s vivid oratory, heard by figures like Benjamin Franklin, moved crowds—once, 23,000 gathered at Boston Common—though his support for slavery, including owning enslaved people for his orphanage, stains his legacy. He authored A Short Account of God’s Dealings and journals, shaping evangelicalism. Exhausted by asthma, he died on September 30, 1770, in Newburyport, Massachusetts, saying, “I’d rather wear out than rust out.”