1802-1804, Autobiographies & Biographies, Methodists, Millsaps College, William Winans
“While we resided in Fayette County, I think in 1802, there was a very great Religious excitement among the Baptists and Presbyterians, in that part of Pennsylvania…. The Jerks was a prevailing exercise throughout the whole of this excitement….”
1802-1804, American Antiquarian Society, Autobiographies & Biographies, Dancing Exercise, Falling Exercise, Methodists, Running Exercise
“[P]ersons who were not before known to be at all religious…would suddenly fall to the ground, and become strangely convulsed with what was called the jerks; the head and neck, and sometimes the body also, moving backwards and forwards with spasmodic violence, and so rapidly that the plaited hair of a woman’s head might be heard to crack….”
1802-1804, Autobiographies & Biographies, Laughing Exercise, Methodists
“I saw one old lady spring from her seat, and pass a dozen times across the house in every direction, by a succession of leaps from two to six feet; and, to my astonishment, she never failed to light squarely and firmly upon a bench! “
1802-1804, American Antiquarian Society, Dancing Exercise, Diaries & Journals, Methodists
“I had heard about a singularity called the jerks or jerking exercise, which appeared first near Knoxville, in August last, to the great alarm of the people….”
1802-1804, American Antiquarian Society, Diaries & Journals, Methodists
Camp-meeting commenced at Liberty: here I saw the jerks; and some danced: a strange exercise indeed….
1802-1804, Dancing Exercise, Diaries & Journals, Methodists, Millsaps College
“[M]et with…Lorenzo Dow at a meeting at Liberty Hill on Nashville. There I saw much of the dancing and jerking exercises among those of the best standing in society. This was and still is in many respects an unaccountable exercise to me….”