George Keith (missionary)
George Keith (1638/9 – March 27, 1716) was a Scottish missionary.
Life
Born in Peterhead, Aberdeenshire, Scotland, to a Presbyterian family, he received an M.A. from the University of Aberdeen. Keith joined the Religious Society of Friends (Quakers) in the 1660s, accompanying George Fox, William Penn, and Robert Barclay on a mission to the Netherlands and Germany in 1677.
In 1685, three years after Barclay had been made the nonresident governor of the Province of East Jersey (part of the present-day American state of New Jersey), Keith traveled there to take the post of Surveyor-General. In 1686 he ran the first survey to mark out the border between West Jersey and East Jersey. He moved to Philadelphia in 1688 to serve as headmaster at the Friends School there.
For his survey work, the Proprietors gave him large grants of land including seven hundred acres in Monmouth County where he founded the town of Freehold (which broke off and became Marlboro). He established his home in a Quaker settlement near Topanemus where he helped to build a meeting house in which he preached to the people on the Quaker faith.[1]
Around 1691 Keith decided that Quakers had strayed too far from orthodox Christianity and began to have sharp disagreements with his fellow believers. He first broke with Philadelphia Yearly Meeting to form a short-lived group called the Christian Quakers in the colonies. In 1693, he and his fellow Keithians published An Exhortation & Caution to Friends Concerning Buying or Keeping of Negroes,[2] one of the earliest printed antislavery tracts in British North America. David Brion Davis, a leading scholar of abolition and slavery, argues that Keith's Exhortation foreshadowed "the major religious themes of nineteenth-century abolitionism."[3] After returning to England, he was disowned by London Yearly Meeting in 1694. In 1699 he attacked William Penn and other Quakers as "Deists". He was ordained to the Church of England ministry in May 1700.[4]
Sponsored by the Society for the Propagation of the Gospel in Foreign Parts, Keith returned to the American colonies as a missionary from 1702 to 1704, trying to win over Quakers and others. Keith invigorated Anglican congregations in Perth Amboy and Burlington. He preached in Williamsburg, Virginia in 1703, and left behind his daughter, Anne, who had likewise returned to the Anglican fold, unlike her husband, Quaker George Walker of Old Point Comfort.[5] Upon returning to England, Keith served as rector at the parish of Edburton, Sussex until his death on March 27, 1716.
Sources
- Bowden, James. The history of the Society of Friends in America. [n. p.] 1850.
- Encyclopædia Britannica, 1911 edition, http://www.1911encyclopedia.org/ accessed May 23, 2003.
- Pomfret, John Edwin, The Province of East New Jersey, 1609-1702, the rebellious proprietary. Princeton, N.J., Princeton University Press, 1962.
- Chamberlain, J. S. "Keith, George (1638?–1716)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/15264. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.). The first edition of this text is available as an article on Wikisource: "Keith, George (1639?-1716)". Dictionary of National Biography. London: Smith, Elder & Co. 1885–1900.
- Episcopal Church Liturgy & Music website - Biography of George Keith
- Claus Bernet (2009). "George Keith (missionary)". In Bautz, Traugott. Biographisch-Bibliographisches Kirchenlexikon (BBKL) (in German) 30. Nordhausen: Bautz. cols. 752–787. ISBN 978-3-88309-478-6.
Further reading
- Kirby, E. W. (1942) George Keith. New York: American Historical Association (includes a full bibliography)
- Sonne, Niels Henry. 1942. "George Keith, 1638–1716. New York: Appleton-Century, 1942. Vi, 177 Pages." Church History. 11, no. 04. ISSN 0009-6407.
References
- ↑ Carhart, Lowell (March 2000). "Cemeteries: Topanemus Burying Ground: Freehold, Monmouth Co, NJ". USGenWeb Archives. USGenWeb. Retrieved April 7, 2015.
- ↑ Keith, George (1693). An Exhortation & Caution to Friends Concerning Buying or Keeping of Negroes.
- ↑ David Brion Davis, The Problem of Slavery in Western Culture (Oxford, 1966), 311.
- ↑ Montgomery, Thomas Harrison (1900). A History of the University of Pennsylvania from Its Foundation to A. D. 1770. Philadelphia: George W. Jacobs & Co. p. 42.
- ↑ Alonzo Thomas Dill, George Wythe, Teacher of Liberty (Williamsburg, 1979), pp. 5-6.
External links
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