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Christopher Hopper (Methodist)

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Christopher Hopper
President of the Methodist Conference
In office
1780–1780
Preceded byJohn Wesley
Succeeded byJohn Wesley
Personal details
Born25 December 1722
Ryton, Durham
Died5 March 1802(1802-03-05) (aged 79)
Bolton
Known forPresident of the Methodist Conference in Wesley's absence

Christopher Hopper (1722–1802) was the President of the Methodist Conference in John Wesley's absence, at the Bristol conference in 1780.[1]

Life

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Hopper was born in 1722 at Ryton, Durham in the north of England.[1] He entered the Wesleyan itinerancy in 1748.[1]

Hopper became a member of the society at Low Spen, near Newcastle, after Wesley's visit there in July 1743.[1] He had been a schoolmaster before becoming an itinerant.[1] Hopper was Wesley's travelling companion in England, Wales and Scotland (being the first Methodist itinerant venturing north of the border).[1] Hopper was an itinerant for forty-seven years and regularly corresponded with Wesley.[1] Wesley appointed him 'Lord President of the North' in 1768 giving him jurisdiction over the Methodist Societies from Cumberland to Lincolnshire.[1]

Hopper wrote "The plain man's epistle to every child of Adam" in 1766.[2]

Hopper was one of the veteran preachers named in Wesley's Deed of Declaration.[1]

Hopper retired to Bolton in 1792, where he built a house next to the chapel, continuing to preach there.[1] Hopper died at Bolton on 5 March 1802.[1]

References

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  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k McGonigle, Herbert. "Hopper, Christopher". A Dictionary of Methodism in Britain and Ireland. Retrieved 25 December 2021.
  2. ^ "Christopher Hopper". Open Library. 1766. Retrieved 25 December 2021.
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