Dorothy Ripley

Dorothy Ripley
Born
Dorothy Ripley

1767
Died1831 (aged 64)
NationalityBritish
OccupationEvangelist
ReligionMethodist

Dorothy Ripley (1767–1831)[1] was a British evangelist, who went to America in 1801 and died in 1831 in Virginia. She was a Quaker by confession, but had been raised a Methodist. She traveled thousands of miles in the United States and Britain as an effective evangelist on the camp meeting circuit. She ministered to many of the disenfranchised, including the Oneida people, men and women in prison, and African slaves in the Southern United States. She self-published six times; three of her books received a second printing. Ripley crossed the Atlantic Ocean at least nine times, mostly traveling alone. At her death a newspaper obituary termed her "perhaps the most extraordinary woman in the world."[2]

  1. ^ Religion and the Federal Government, from the Library of Congress
  2. ^ Christian Advocate and Journal and Zion's Herald, 10 February 1832.

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