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CHRISTOPHER NEWMAN HALL (1816—19oz)

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Originally appearing in Volume V12, Page 846 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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CHRISTOPHER NEWMAN HALL (1816—19oz)  ,
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English
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Nonconformist divine, was born at
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Maidstone on the 22nd of May 1816 . His
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father was John
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Vine Hall, proprietor and printer of the Maidstone Journal, and the author of a popular evangelical
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work called The Sinner's Friend . Christopher was educated at University College,
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London, and took the London B . A. degree . His theological training was gained at Highbury College, whence he was called in 1842 to his first pastorate at the Albion Congregational Church, Hull . During the twelve years of his
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ministry there the membership was greatly increased, and a branch
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chapel and school were opened . At Hull Newman Hall first began his active work in
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temperance reform, and in defence of his position wrote The Scriptural Claims of
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Teetotalism . In 18J4 he accepted a call to Surrey chapel, London, founded in 1783 by the Rev . Rowland Hill . A considerable sum had been bequeathed by Hill for the perpetuation of his work on the expiration of the lease; but, owing to some legal flaw in the will, the
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money was not available, and Newman Hall undertook to raise the necessary funds for a new church . By weekly offertories and donations the money for the beautiful
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building called Christ Church at the junction of the
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Kennington and Westminster
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Bridge Roads was collected, and within four years of opening (1876) the
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total cost (£63,000) was cleared . In 1892 Newman Hall resigned his charge and devoted himself to general evangelical work .

Most of his writings are small booklets or tracts of a distinctly evangelical

character . The best known of these is Come to Jesus, of which over four million copies have been circulated in
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forty different
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languages . Newman Hall visited the
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United States during the
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Civil War, and did much to promote a friendly understanding between England and
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America . A Liberal in politics, and a keen admirer of John Bright, few preachers of any denomination have exercised so far-reaching an influence as the " Dissenters' Bishop," as he came to be termed . He died on the 18th of
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February 1902 . See his Autobiography (1898) ; obituary
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notice in The Congregational
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Year
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Book for 1903 .

End of Article: CHRISTOPHER NEWMAN HALL (1816—19oz)
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