In 1813 the
Methodist's British Conference approved the establishment of
missions in
Ceylon,
Java and the
Cape of Good Hope. On 30 December 1813 Dr
Thomas Coke, seven
missionaries (William Ault, Benjamin Clough, George Erskine, Martin Harvard, James Lynch, Thomas H. Squance) and two of the missionaries' wives left
Portsmouth and sailed to Ceylon. Mrs Ault and Coke died on the journey. When the arrived in
Bombay they had little money but they were helped by Governor
Evan Nepean and W. T. Money, a merchant. Five of the missionaries (Ault, Clough, Erskine, Lynch and Squance) sailed from Bombay on 20 June 1814 and arrived in
Galle on the south coast of Ceylon on 29 June 1814. On 11 July 1814 the missionaries gathered together to decide who would be stationed where – Lynch and Squance were to go to
Jaffna in the north; Ault was to go to
Batticaloa in the east; Erskine was to go to
Matara in the south; and Clough was to remain in Galle. Clough was later joined by Harvard and his wife. Lynch and Squance left Galle on 14 July 1814 and arrived in Jaffna on 10 August 1814 where they established the
Wesleyan Methodist Mission, North Ceylon. On 1 August 1816 the mission purchased from the government the former orphanage situated opposite the esplanade in Jaffna. In the period of 1816 - 1817 the
Jaffna Wesleyan English School was founded with Rev. Lynch as principal. The school transferred to the Vembadi site in 1825. ==Crest==