Barbara Heck

BARBARA (Heck), Bastian Ruckle and Margaret Embury had a daughter, Barbara (Heck) born 1734. In 1760, she got married to Paul Heck and together they have seven children. Four survived into adulthood.

In most cases, the subject has participated in significant events, and expressed unique thoughts or ideas which are documented on paper. Barbara Heck, on the other hand, left no written statements or letters. The evidence of such items as her date of wedding is not the only evidence. There are no surviving original sources that could reconstruct her motivations or her actions throughout most of her lifetime. She has nevertheless become a heroic figure in early North American Methodism history. The biographer's task is to define and justify the myth and, if it is possible, to identify the actual person featured in it.

Abel Stevens, Methodist historian from 1866. The progress of Methodism within the United States has now indisputably made the modest names of Barbara Heck first on the list of women who have a place in the history of the church of the New World. In order to understand the significance of her name, it is important that you examine the lengthy history of the movement with which she'll always be linked. Barbara Heck played a lucky part in the founding of Methodism and Methodism, both in North America as well as Canada. She is famous for the way that successful organizations and movements are prone to celebrating their origins.

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