Rep. John Kerr, Sr.

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Rep. John Kerr, Sr.

Also Known As: "(I-VA)"
Birthdate:
Birthplace: Caswell County, North Carolina, United States
Death: September 29, 1842 (60)
Danville, Pitttsylvania County, Virginia, United States
Place of Burial: Yanceyville, Caswell County, Virginia, United States
Immediate Family:

Son of John Hosea Kerr and Mary Kerr
Husband of Elizabeth Kerr and Sophia Eliza Schley
Father of Nathaniel Washington Williams Kerr; Sarah Lanier Lanier; Mary Williams Graves; Rep. John Kerr, Jr. (W-NC); Frances Lewis Connally and 1 other
Brother of Nancy Lea; William Kerr; Mary Lea; Barzillai Kerr; Alexander Kerr and 4 others

Occupation: Congressman, U.S. Congressman, VA 14th and 15th
Managed by: Private User
Last Updated:

About Rep. John Kerr, Sr.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Kerr_%28Virginia_Congressman%29

John Kerr, Jr. (August 4, 1782 – September 29, 1842), father of John Kerr, III., cousin of Bartlett Yancey, and grand-uncle of John H. Kerr, was a member of the U.S. House of Representatives representing Virginia from March 4, 1813 to March 3, 1815 and again from October 30, 1815 to March 3, 1817.

A native of the Yanceyville, North Carolina area, Kerr was licensed as a Baptist minister in 1802 and moved to Halifax County, Virginia in 1805; he later lived in Pittsylvania County, Virginia as well.

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https://www.ncpedia.org/biography/kerr-john

John Kerr, Baptist minister and congressman, was born in Gloucester District, southern Caswell County, of Scottish and English ancestry. He was the son of Mary Graves and John Kerr, a planter. Young Kerr was first employed as a teacher in the common English school begun by his uncle, General Azariah Graves, in Caswell County. In 1801, after attending a revival at Crossroads Presbyterian Church, he was converted, baptized, and began to preach. His first pastorate was in 1805 near Halifax, Va., at Arbor and Mary Creek churches. Elected to Congress as a Democrat from Virginia, he served from 1813 to 1815; although an unsuccessful candidate in the next election, he was subsequently elected to fill a vacancy and served again from 1815 to 1817. He was not a candidate for reelection.

Kerr seriously considered leaving the ministry for a legal and political career. While on a preaching mission, however, he was thrown from his gig and almost died from his injuries. Believing that his complete recovery was due to divine intervention, he cast aside his political ambitions.

Early in 1825 he was invited to preach for two weeks at the First Baptist Church in Richmond, Va. That February the church offered him the position of pastor at an annual salary of $1,000, which he accepted. His preaching drew great crowds, and it is said that he "took Richmond by storm." A deliberate, forceful, and emotional speaker, his sermons often lasted for two hours. During his tenure, he served as first agent of the Roanoke Baptist Association, first president of the Virginia Baptist Education Society, and president of the Baptist General Association of Virginia. In 1830 he presided over the meeting of the Education Society out of which the University of Richmond was born.

Kerr's desire to engage in evangelistic preaching caused him to resign the Richmond pastorate in 1832 and settle on a farm near Danville. From then until his death, Elder Kerr, as he was called in Baptist churches, was a leader in the establishment of missionary Baptist churches, preaching at camp meetings in Virginia and North Carolina. At one camp meeting in Northumberland County, Va., it was reported that 150 people joined the church. His crusades in Caswell County led to the founding of the First Baptist Church in Yanceyville and the Sycamore Church in southern Stony Creek township. In 1845, the latter church was renamed Kerr's Chapel in his honor.

In 1805 Kerr married Mrs. Elizabeth Williams of Halifax, Va., and they became the parents of six children: John, III., Nathaniel W. Williams, Sarah Lanier, Mary Graves, Martha (m. Dr. James Martin of Mocksville), and Frances (m. Thomas Dickson Connally of Milton). He died at his home near Danville and was buried in the Baptist church cemetery, Yanceyville. The Reverend J. B. Jeter, who succeeded him as pastor in Richmond, preached the funeral service on 25 June 1843, nine months after his death. Kerr's portrait was owned by a great-grandson, John Motley Morehead of New York City.

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Rep. John Kerr, Sr.'s Timeline

1782
August 4, 1782
Caswell County, North Carolina, United States
1801
October 7, 1801
Augusta, Virginia, United States
1807
August 26, 1807
1808
1808
1809
1809
Halifax, Virginia, United States
1811
February 10, 1811
Danville, Pittsylvania County, Virginia, United States
1815
March 15, 1815
Caswell, North Carolina, United States
1842
September 29, 1842
Age 60
Danville, Pitttsylvania County, Virginia, United States