Lydia Andrews Finney
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Lydia Andrews Finney | |
|---|---|
| Born | March 8, 1804 New Britain, Connecticut, U.S. |
| Died | December 17, 1847 (aged 43) |
| Resting place | Oberlin, Ohio, U.S. |
Lydia Andrews Finney (March 8, 1804 – December 17, 1847), born Lydia Root, was an American social reformer and evangelical revivalist during the Second Great Awakening.[1] She was most notably a founder of the New York Female Moral Reform Society.
Finney was born in New Britain, Connecticut, the fifth child of Nathaniel Andrews and Sarah Marcy.[2] She grew up with her family in the then religiously vibrant Whitestown, New York, where she lived until she married her husband, Charles Grandison Finney, in 1824.[3] When she first met her would-be husband, he was not Christian and she prayed for his conversion, which would ultimately occur a few months after they first met in Adams, New York.[4][5] They were married on October 5, 1824.