tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1033015240460437200.post5121046103317216207..comments2024-02-23T23:18:26.582-08:00Comments on Remembering Baltimore and Beyond: History from the Bottom Up: Clementina Grierson Rind (1740?-1774) & James Hamlet (1822-?)ecpcliohttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01498580508411177787noreply@blogger.comBlogger1125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1033015240460437200.post-8598608119113753772023-11-25T07:55:04.568-08:002023-11-25T07:55:04.568-08:00There is a serious confusion in this article betwe...There is a serious confusion in this article between 'non-juring' and 'nonconformist' - they are very far from identical, indeed almost opposite. The non-jurors were those members of the Anglican church who felt unable to take the oath to William III and later Queen Anne and George I. Nonconformists were not members of the Anglican church, though Methodists like Wesley did so think of themselves. Non-jurors were under suspicion as Jacobites, supporters of the Stuarts in exile; Nonconformists most certainly did not, they might well lose their freedom to worship in the event of a Stuart restoration. Clementina is a Jacobite name. Vane was simply her mother's maiden name. Oh, and by the way it is "piqued" not peaked!Cliff Webbhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/07996114984114575852noreply@blogger.com