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WATTERS, William, clergyman, born in Baltimore, Maryland, 16 October, 1751; died in Fairfax county, Virginia, 29 March, 1829. His parents were Episcopalians, but he became a convert to Methodism in 1771, and in the following year began to preach. In 1773 he was received on trial by the Philadelphia conference, thus becoming the first native Methodist itinerant in this country. He preached in New Jersey, Maryland, and Virginia till 1805, when he retired to his farm on Potomac river. His seven brothers were among the first in that region to open their house to Methodist preachers, and his home was looked upon as the headquarters of Methodism in that region.
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