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PHOTOS
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| The Whitefield Chapel at Bethesda | ||||||
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| Bust of Whitefield held at Rodborough Tabernacle. Some busts were painted. The one in the Gloucester Museum has particularly rosy cheeks. |
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| Part of the Preaching Braes, Cambuslang, where 30,000 people attended Whitefield's preaching. | ||||||
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| This chair, believed to have belonged to Whitefield, owned by the Congregational Memorial Hall Trust, sits behind the communion table of the Quinta Congregational Chapel, Weston Rhyn, Shropshire. |
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| The pulpit of St. Mary de Crypt, Gloucester, from which Whitefield preached his first sermon and sent 15 people "mad". | ||||||
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| The Whitefield Memorial Church, Tottenham Court Road, London, rebuilt on the site of the Tottenham Court Road Chapel following the destruction of its predecessor by the last V2 attack of the Second World War. |
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| Pulpit Rock, near Ipswich, north of Boston, Massachusetts. The sign-writer changed Whitefield to Whitehouse towards the end of the text. |
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| The chapel of the Tower of London where Whitefield briefly ministered. |
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| The font of St. Mary de Crypt, Gloucester, where Whitefield was baptized. Behind it is a chapel commemorating Robert Raikes, also a Gloucester man who lived opposite, who is credited with the founding of the Sunday School movement. | ||||||
| The Parish Church of All Saints, Dummer, near Basingstoke, where Whitefield ministered in late 1736 for his friend Charles Kinchin. | ||||||