|
The first minister after
the Revolution was James Lyons, who graduated from the College of
New Jersey (also known as Princeton College, which is now known
as Princeton University) in 1759. He was licensed to preach by the
Presbytery of New Brunswick in 1762. In December, 1764, Lyons went
to Nova Scotia, where he preached for several years. In 1771 he
moved to Maine, where he became pastor of a Congregational church
in 1782.
He was quite a patriot.
Being the pastor of a church in Machias, Maine in June 1775, he
wrote a letter to the Massachusetts Provincial Congress, requesting
help, telling of his town's capture of a threatening British schooner
and the subsequent battle in which four died and 11 were wounded.
This was a year before the Revolution started, but there had been
troubles with the British for some time.
In another letter to
the Provincial Congress about the same time, he urged the invasion
of Nova Scotia, Canada. He and many others from New England had
been granted land there in the 1760s, and American residents were
being forced to swear allegiance to the king. A Nova Scotian history
book speaks of Rev. Lyons. During the Revolutionary War, Rev. Lyons
had a very hard time, supporting his family only by digging clams.
Lyons came to Newtown
in 1783 and remained at FPCN for two years. He is spoken of as a
man of sincere piety and faithful labors. During his pastorate at
Newtown, he published a small Manual of Devotion. Lyons left Newtown
in the spring of 1785. Nobody knows what happened to him afterwards.
Marjorie Melikian contributed to this article. |