On this page
-
Text (2)
-
Untitled Article
-
Untitled Article
Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
-
-
Transcript
-
Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
Additionally, when viewing full transcripts, extracted text may not be in the same order as the original document.
Untitled Article
Feb . lly at Gelligron , in the county of Glamorgan , Mrs . Mary Bees Bey an , having- on the second of the same month completed her hundreth year , and retained to the last all her intellectual powers unimpaired . She was first , married to the '
eminently pious and reverend Owen Rees , who was for some time minister of ^ vvhat was then , the Presbyterian Congregation , of Pentie-ty-gwyn , near Llandovery , in Caermarthenshire , out afterwards removed to ^ berdarej in Glam organshire , and continued to officiate to the Presbyterian Congregation of that place jintil his death in
the spring of 1767 . 3 Of the issue of this marriage only one son survived the period of infancy : this was the Rev . Josiah Rees , of Gelligron , who died in September 1804 , * after officiating to the Presbyterian Congregation of Gel lion lien , for upwards of forty years , having statedly supplied them during the last two years of his academical course at Caermarthen . He was the father
of Mr . Owen Rees , of the house of Longman and Co . Paternoster-Row , Mr . Josiah Rees , late of Malta , the Rev . Thomas Rees , of St . Thomas ' s , &c . &c . C Some years after the decease of her first husband , Mrs . Rees married Mr . Rees
Bevan , a respectable surgeon , who resided in the village of AberdareJ whom she survived about twenty years . Her neighbours bad been so long accustomed to call her Mrs . Rees , that they could not bring themselves to address her by the name of her second husband , except occasionally ; and she continued to be so designated so very generally , that it has been thought almost necessarv to insert above both her
names , in order to identify her to her acquaintance . On the decease of her second husband , having no relations residing in her neighbourhood , and being then about eighty years of age , her son , with the view of having her under his own care , and providing the more effectually for the comfort of her declining years , prevailed upon her to remoye to his own residence at
Gelligron , where , she remained to the time Q fjier death . IMrs . Bevan ' s maiden name was Howell . Her father was a highly respectable yeoman , residing between Neaih and Swansea , on a tenement which had been cultivated by his ancestors through many generations . The family were strict and zealous
Presbyterians ; j and in the civil contentions which agitated the kingdom in the middle of the seventeenth century , and wherein the county of ' Glamorgan very largely participated , Ithey took a decided part with the Parliament and the Protector $ and after the settlement of the latter at the ¦ " 1 -- ¦ - ij-ij-t- ... vt . - .-n- --ur-u - . - rii m mini Y- — < : - . ¦¦* !¦ ' - - - --- *• - ' f * See the Universal Theological Magazine , X 804 , Vol H . fp . 228 .
Untitled Article
head of the government , received from him some testimonies of hi 8 gratitude for the assistance they had rendered to his cause . From these ancestors she inherited a spirit of independence , and a love of freedom , especially in respect to religious
matters , which she retained in fall vigour to the close of her life . ~ J This spirit and temper , the connexion in which she was placed , and the society with-which she most intimately mingled after her first marriage and for the long interval of eighty years , tended to cherish and confirm . Mr .
Owen Rees was no less distinguished by his attachment to religious liberty and the sacred rights of conscience , than he was by his unaffected piety and the amiable virtues of his private life . And her son , in this , as in other respects , trod in the
footsteps of his father , whom he lost at an early age , but whose memory he cherished with the warmest affection and respect . In the time of her first husband , their hospitable dwelling was the frequent resort of that constellation of eminent Christian
ministers in the Presbyterian connexion , who were then the great supporters of the cause , and whose praise is still in all the churches . That age beheld a Bavies , a
Perrott , a Samuel Thomas and a Jenkins at Caermarthen ; a David Lloyd * in Cardiganshire ; a Philips at Coed-y-Cymmer 5 a Samuel Da vies at Merthyr ; a Williams at Watford and Cardiff ; and a Solomon Harries at Swansea : —all of them men
whose names are associated with every quality that can command for them the admiration and esteem of every friend to religious freedom , rational piety and exemplary virtue . To these eminent persons
succeeded a generation imbued with the same enlightened principles , and with tKe same catholic spirit—some uf whom yet survive , as pillars and ornaments of the church .
£ * In early life , Mrs , Bevan had embraced the Arminian sentiments of her husband ;~ - ~ and Atminianism was esteemed the great heresy of that day . With him she relinquished the doctrine of the Trinity , of hereditary depravity , of vicarious atonement and satisfaction , and embraced tenets ,
which may perhaps be called Arian . These , with some unimportant variations , . she retained till she was eighty years of ageD After lier removal to Gelligron , f having then no establishment « if her own , f . w - ^^ V v ¦ » « m Aq ^ ^ — ^^ —— — - — - - — — — «
nor any other secular cares to occupy her attention , she devoted herself to reading , with all the eagerness and ardour of youth . Her favourite volume was the Bible , of which she read some portion every day ; and with the contents of which she was so familiarly acquainted , that she could at any * The father of Dr . Charles tloyd , of London . ¦
Untitled Article
A Obituary * - ± Mrs * Mary Rees Bevan . 14 S tt ? A £ ..-1 /¦ i \ « C A ) \ Ai \ \ ir- \ * T
-
-
Citation
-
Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), Feb. 2, 1818, page 143, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2473/page/63/
-