• Facebook
  • Home
  • Archive
  • History
  • Map
  • Teaching
  • Contact
History of the Jerks: Bodily Exercises and the Great Revival (1803–1967)
  • All
  • Authors
  • Chronology
  • Collections
  • Denominations
  • Exercises
  • Genres
  • States & Territories
Select Page

Excerpt from the Minutes of the General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church (May 25, 1808)

1805-1809, Anonymous/Unknown, Church Records, Other Bodily Exercises & General References, Presbyterians

“In the southern parts of our bounds, the extraordinary revivals of religion have considerably declined; bodily agitations are gradually disappearing….”

Excerpts from Joseph Thomas’s Life of the Pilgrim  (November 10, 1810–May 5, 1811)

Excerpts from Joseph Thomas’s Life of the Pilgrim (November 10, 1810–May 5, 1811)

1810-1815, Christians/Disciples of Christ, Dancing Exercise, Diaries & Journals, Falling Exercise, Laughing Exercise, Other Bodily Exercises & General References, Union Presbyterian Seminary

“[T]he subjects of this work receive no damage or injury whatever, and the most of them are exceedingly happy when they are thus exercised…. One may ask…, can they not be happy in religion and have the jirks?”

Next Entries »

Search the Archive

Browse by Category

Popular Tags

African Americans (10) Baptists (17) barking (23) Barton Warren Stone (8) Benjamin Seth Youngs (9) bodily exercises (33) camp meetings (29) convulsions (16) dancing (56) diseases (11) exhorting (10) falling (32) Issachar Bates (9) jerker tales (16) jerking (98) jumping (12) Kentucky (51) laughing (17) Lexington (Ky.) (8) Methodists (47) nerves/nervous affection (15) New Lights (22) New York (10) North Carolina (16) Ohio (22) Pennsylvania (20) Philadelphia (Pa.) (18) praying (13) preaching (39) Presbyterians (66) revivals (43) Richard McNemar (9) Rockbridge County (Va.) (8) running (17) sacrament (17) Shakers (19) shouting (22) singing (26) society meetings (10) sympathy (15) Tennessee (43) Turtlecreek Township (Ohio) (10) Virginia (26) Warren County (Ohio) (8) West Virginia (8)

For more information or to report technology issues, contact Douglas Winiarski, Religious Studies Department, University of Richmond, at dwiniars@richmond.edu.

Designed by Elegant Themes | Powered by WordPress