Background
Mary Evans was born around 1740-1741 in Bristol, Buckinghamshire County, Pennsylvania to Thomas and Diana Evans. Her mother remarried James Mills in 1767. After his death, she relocated with her mother to Philadelphia.
Mary Evans was born around 1740-1741 in Bristol, Buckinghamshire County, Pennsylvania to Thomas and Diana Evans. Her mother remarried James Mills in 1767. After his death, she relocated with her mother to Philadelphia.
She was appointed class leader, a layperson who performed pastoral duties, by Joseph Pilmore in Philadelphia in about 1770. Her parents, who were of Welsh heritage, moved to New Bern, North Carolina, where Thomas died. New to the city, she sought a place of worship found a Methodist service conducted by Joseph Pilmoor, which was more to her liking than the Baptist faith.
Around the age of 30, she joined the Methodist church, against the wishes of her mother.
Within 2 years of her conversion, according to a letter from Thorne, she had three classes and two Methodist bands meeting weekly under her tutelage. She was the first woman class-leader of Philadelphia, having been appointed to lead a class of women by Pilmore and she may have been the first woman in the American Colonies to hold the position.
Another letter, dated 7 February 1770 from Richard Boardman, confirmed that she had two classes in her charge. Class leaders in this era were spiritual laity, who were accountable for the pastoral needs of their class members.
Thorne supported herself by teaching and taking in sewing and visited hospitals tending to and praying for the sick and dying.
Her devotion continued even after the British took over the Methodist Chapel, as she then held services in her home at the early part of the Revolutionary War. Around this same time, she met Captain Samuel Parker, a ship captain from England, who was entrusted with taking some of the injured soldiers back to Britain. Her husband served as a steward in London and she served as a class leader and later when they were living in Scarborough, North Yorkshire, they held the same positions.
According to letters from Thomas Rankin, their distress occurred by 1798.
Parker died in England after 1813 and later, she and Parker"s son moved to Philadelphia.