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Annie Florence Evans known as Florrie Evans (15 December 1884 – 11 December 1967) was a Welsh revivalist, and later missionary, who was credited with starting the 1904–1905 Welsh revival. Life [ edit ]
During a meeting in February 1904, Florrie Evans is quoted as having said, "I love Jesus Christ with all my heart," a statement which is recognized as having made an impression on the attendees. This event supposedly initiated the revival. [ 3 ]
His arrival shocks Florrie's friends and neighbours, who had believed she was widowed. Norman works overseas as an engineer and has returned to the country to ask Florrie for a divorce. Whilst in the area he takes a fancy to Elsie Tanner and they date, but when Florrie confesses she still has feelings for Norman, Elsie gallantly breaks it off ...
Florrie Evans (1884–1967), Welsh revivalist and missionary; Sir Francis Evans, 1st Baronet (1840–1907), British MP for Southampton 1888–1895, 1896–1900 and Maidstone 1901–1906; Francis Thomas Evans Sr. (1886–1974), pioneer aviator; Francis Evans (diplomat) (1897–1983), British ambassador to Israel and to Argentina
One boy said, “Jesus is the light of world,” to which Jenkins is reputed to have replied, “Yes, but what does He mean to you?” 20-year-old Florrie Evans rose to her feet and declared, “Rydw i'n caru Arglwydd Iesu Grist a'i holl galon” in Welsh (“I love the Lord Jesus Christ with all of my heart”). Contemporary witnesses claim ...
11 December – Florrie Evans, revivalist and missionary, 82 [62] 12 December – Tommy Bamford, footballer, 62; 30 December – Ronald Lewis, operatic baritone, 51 (cancer) [63] 31 December – Watkin William Price, historian and activist, 94 [64] date unknown. Len Apsey, footballer, 57; Colin Jones, artist, 38 [65]
Theranos founder Elizabeth Holmes married William "Billy" Evans secretly in 2019. The couple had their son, William, in 2021 and daughter, Invicta, in 2023. Elizabeth Holmes’s Husband Billy ...
Music Hall, Britain's first form of commercial mass entertainment, emerged, broadly speaking, in the mid-19th century, and ended (arguably) after the First World War, when the halls rebranded their entertainment as Variety. [1]