of; indeed they were savage warriors who engaged in constant warfare during his stay. Most of Wesley’s Georgia labors were therefore among the whites in and near Savannah. The Indians he found generally degraded and were uninterested in his theology. Even the whites disliked him, accusing him of being too strict, cold, and formal. On one occasion, in the town of Frederica, he was falsely accused and insulted. Eventually he was hauled into court in Savannah for refusal to serve the sacraments to a
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