Monday, September 11, 2017

Find out about the First Great Awakening in Kent Sept. 17

The Kent Historical Society is presenting a special Sunday lecture series that will be held at the Kent Town Hall located on 41 Kent Green Blvd. just off Rte. 7 in the center of Kent. On September 17 at 2 p.m. the Sunday Series will bring guests a program titled, "The First Great Awakening — Fervor and Ferment". 

In the 1730s, a wave of religious revivals, sponsored by the established clergy of the Reformed Churches, swept the Thirteen Colonies. The fervor disrupted the connection between church and state in New England. These revivals involved extreme emotional displays by the thousands of people who heard the sermons of Jonathan Edwards and various itinerant preachers. Though there was little lasting impact on the religious commitment of the colonies, the ideas presented probably moved the colonies closer to declaring independence from Great Britain.
Tom Key, the presenter studied engineering, was a flight officer in the US Navy and retired as a Commander in the US Naval Reserves. His professional career was with an international engineering firm, designing and constructing nuclear and fossil power plants, steel mills, and chemical plants. He's also had a career as a landscape painter exhibiting in over thirty galleries and invitational/juried shows from Delaware to Maine.
This lecture, as well as future Sunday Series events in 2017, helps give context to the Kent Historical Society's exhibit in the summer of 2017, "The Founders of Kent," on the emergence of one New England town in the 18th century. 
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