- John Dickins
John Dickins (1746 - 1798) was an early Methodist
preacher in the United States. Born inLondon in 1746 and educated inEton College , he came to America and was appointed a Methodist preacher in 1774. He served circuits inVirginia andNorth Carolina , then went toNew York in 1784. He was one of the founding members of theMethodist Episcopal Church (actually it was he who suggested the name) at the Christmas Conference inBaltimore in 1784. He had been one of the greeters of Thomas Coke who had arrived as Wesley's emissary to the new American Church.In 1789 he set up the
Methodist Book Concern with $600 of his own money and began to publish books and other literature.Methodist circuit riders from then on carried his materials on their travels and distributed them widely. His first book was "Christian Pattern" by
Thomas à Kempis . He also published the Methodist hymn book, the "Arminian Magazine" and later "The Methodist Magazine".In time his publishing concern grew into "The Methodist Publishing House", which in the mid-twentieth century was the largest religious publishing house in the world.
As the principal provider of literature for the growing Methodist movement, he must take a significant amount of credit for its growth into the largest American church by the mid 20th century.
References
Pilkington, James Penn. "The Methodist Publishing House". New York: Abingdon Press, 1968. Vol 1.
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