Memoirs of the Life, Religious Experience, Ministerial Travels, and Labours of Mrs. Elaw

Zilpha Elaw author Kimberly D Blockett editor

Format:Paperback

Publisher:West Virginia University Press

Published:30th Dec '21

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

Memoirs of the Life, Religious Experience, Ministerial Travels, and Labours of Mrs. Elaw cover

The remarkable autobiography of a Black woman evangelist.

As a young Black orphan indentured to a Quaker family in Bristol, Pennsylvania, Zilpha Elaw (c. 1793–1873) decided to join the upstart Methodists in 1808. She preached her first sermon a decade later, ignoring her husband and the many church leaders, clergy, and laity who tried to silence her. Elaw's memoir chronicles the first twenty years of her forty-year itinerant ministry during massive Protestant revivalism in the United States and England.

Elaw preached from Maine to Virginia, attracting multiracial and multidenominational audiences that included powerful men, wealthy White women, poor families, and enslaved communities. She moved from Bristol to Burlington, New Jersey, then to Nantucket, Massachusetts, and finally, in 1840, to London's East End. In England, Elaw's celebrity expanded, and at least twice she drew crowds so large they caused human stampedes and multiple injuries.

Blockett's introduction and extensive annotations draw on newly unearthed information about the entirety of Elaw's evangelism to provide context for this remarkable story of an antebellum Black woman's personal and professional mobility.

ISBN: 9781952271274

Dimensions: 228mm x 152mm x 11mm

Weight: 294g

264 pages