PREFACE AND ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
INTRODUCTION
1
A Quest for Order:
The German Reformed Congregation, 1733–1775
2
Growth and Disruption: Lutherans and Moravians
3
The English Churches of Colonial Lancaster
4
Religious Pluralism in an Eighteenth-Century Town
5
Lancaster’s Churches in the New Republic
6
The Transformation of Charity, 1750–1820
Conclusion
BIBLIOGRAPHY
INDEX
Mark Häberlein is Professor of Early Modern History at the University of Bamberg, Germany.
“Thorough and persuasive. The people of Lancaster come across as
devoted and essentially conservative, supporting their churches and
attached to their ways of worship, even if individuals among them
occasionally changed their minds. Häberlein persuasively shows that
the laity provided the true continuity of the church.”—Ned
Landsmann, Stony Brook University
“No other recent scholarly study provides as thorough an account of
the diversity of religious practice in a single community in
eighteenth- and early nineteenth-century America.”—Scott Paul
Gordon Journal of Moravian History
“One of the book’s major strengths is its research. Häberlein has
meticulously assembled biographic and economic data on a large
portion of the pastors, deacons, elders, vestrymen, and other lay
leaders in Lancaster during this period. This excellent book adds
much to the understanding of religion in the early mid-Atlantic and
the maturation of backcountry American society.”—Steve Longenecker
The Catholic Historical Review
“This meticulously researched book explores the complex religious
landscape of Lancaster, Pennsylvania, during the long eighteenth
century.”—S. E. Imhoff Choice
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