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202:. The marriage was conducted by John Wesley, who had encouraged the union and guaranteed his brother an income of £100 per annum from book sales to reassure the Gwynne family of Charles financial position. This reassurance contrasted with the £600 a year that her mother had as her private income when she married Marmaduke Gwynne.
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By 1747 her father was offering accommodation to evangelical travellers and for five days in August he offered a place to stay to
Charles and his brother John Wesley. The age gap between Sarah and Charles Wesley was nearly twenty years but they were both attracted to each other. Charles returned in
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The Wesley family were not known for their happy marriages but the marriage between
Charles and Sarah seems to have been very happy. In 1753 Sarah suffered from smallpox. Although she survived the disease, the effects left her difficult to recognize. Wesley took her own line on her religion and
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and Sarah Wesley. The two sons were musically gifted and made this their careers. Their mother was known for her musical abilities including her singing voice which she was still using to entertain in her old age. Sarah senior had performed musically for King George III.
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for stirring up sedition, but while listening to Harris' sermon was converted to his beliefs. He brought Harris back to his house where his wife refused to see him. The only member of Gwynne's family who did listen was his daughter, Sarah.
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which was his place of worship. The churchyard holds the remains of five of Wesley's children (John, Martha Maria, Susannah, Selena and John James) who died as infants during the 22 years they lived in
Bristol.
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In
September 1749 the Wesleys moved into 4 Charles Street in Bristol which remained their main residence until 1771. This house is now preserved as "
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Henry D. Rack, 'Wesley, Charles (1707–1788)', Oxford
Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004; online edn, May 2012
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269:, London has now been demolished. Ironically the blue plaque that records the location of this couple's house, who were part of the
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The place where Sarah Wesley and
Charles Wesley lived and died is commemorated by a plaque on a pub in Marylebone in London.
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the following April and proposed marriage. Sarah's mother had been unenthusiastic about her husband's interest in the
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Sarah and
Charles Wesley had a number of children but only three survived to be adults. The surviving children were
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After the death of her husband, Wesley was maintained by other
Methodists and Evangelicals including
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265:; who also painted other members of her family. The house that Charles and Sarah (aka Sally) had in
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that was taking place, but she was happy to see
Charles Wesley become her son-in-law.
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and passed this talent onto two of her sons, both of whom were musical prodigies.
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Charles and Sarah were married in 1749 at the small and lonely parish church at
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Wesley was painted in her lifetime and she has a 20th-century portrait by
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249:. She died on 28 December 1822 and she was interred with her husband at
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who she would have met as a child when he stayed at her father's house.
133:. The daughter of a wealthy family, Wesley once performed musically for
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who employed his own chaplain. A local magistrate, he went to arrest
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328:, Clwyd Powys Archaeological Trust, retrieved 28 September 2013
121:(1726 – 28 December 1822) was the wife of itinerant Methodist
209:". Charles was described as a "preacher at the horsefair" by
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301:, National Library of Wales, retrieved 28 September 2013
369:, University of Texas Library, Retrieved 1 October 2013
357:, englandschristianheritage, retrieved 1 October 2013
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381:, Charles Wesley House, retrieved 1 October 2013
157:. Marmaduke was a wealthy man and a committed
218:continued to attend the Calvinist church of
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273:Methodist movement, is now attached to a
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198:, which is 6 miles (10 km) west of
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65:28 December 1822 (aged 95–96)
409:, Geolocation, retrieved 1 October 2013
461:Burials at St Marylebone Parish Church
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316:, ArchiveHub, retrieved September 2013
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407:File:Charles Wesley (4368240967).jpg
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314:The Wesley Family Papers 1685–1883
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367:Charles Wesley Family Collection
391:Artworks by or after David Keal
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251:St Marylebone Parish Church
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153:, to Sarah (née Evans) and
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436:People from Brecknockshire
451:19th-century Welsh people
441:18th-century Welsh people
379:Clock and the Harpsichord
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145:Sarah Wesley was born in
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456:19th-century Welsh women
446:18th-century Welsh women
55:Kingdom of Great Britain
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207:Charles Wesley's House
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129:, the main founder of
16:Wife of Charles Wesley
344:accessed 29 Sept 2013
235:Charles Wesley junior
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82:Charles Wesley junior
247:William Wilberforce
172:evangelical revival
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220:George Whitefield
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125:, brother of
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119:Sally Wesley
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106:Sarah Wesley
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25:Sarah Wesley
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431:1822 deaths
426:1726 births
127:John Wesley
70:Nationality
420:Categories
281:References
267:Marylebone
263:David Keal
135:George III
271:temperant
131:Methodism
93:Parent(s)
53:, Wales,
178:Marriage
159:Anglican
78:Children
73:British
395:Art UK
257:Legacy
115:Gwynne
196:Garth
194:near
147:Garth
47:Garth
397:site
141:Life
62:Died
43:1726
40:Born
111:née
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