Samuel Davies

1723–1761

Samuel Davies (1723–1761) was an influential evangelical Presbyterian pastor and educator who played a key role in spreading the Great Awakening in colonial Virginia, where he built licensed meetinghouses and attracted large congregations with his powerful preaching. He also traveled to London to raise funds for the College of New Jersey and later became its fourth president, strengthening the institution before his early death at age thirty-seven. Davies was one of the first colonial Americans to compose hymns and was buried in the presidents’ plot at Princeton Cemetery.

Works by Samuel Davies

See all works in the Library

Photo Gallery

Samuel Davies is buried at Princeton Cemetery, Princeton, New Jersey (photo credit: R. Andrew Myers).
The Samuel Davies statue by Alexander Stirling Calder, located at the Presbyterian Historical Society, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
Historical marker for the Old Briery Presbyterian Church in Briery, Virginia.
The Byrd Presbyterian Church in Goochland, Virginia was organized by Samuel Davies in 1748 (photo credit: R. Andrew Myers).
Providence Presbyterian Church in Gum Spring, Virginia was organized by Samuel Davies in 1747 (photo credit: R. Andrew Myers).
Paper communion token used at Polegreen Church, Hanover, Virginia. Source: Presbyterian Historical Society
This historical marker near the historic Polegreen Church in Mechanicsville, Virginia, marks the area where Samuel Davies’ “dissenters’ glebe” was located.
The historic Polegreen Church as it looks today.
Birthplace of Samuel Davies near Bear, Delaware (photo credit: R. Andrew Myers).

Confessional Intelligence

Search through theological documents with AI-powered semantic search.

Try:

Cart

Your cart is empty.

Shop