Following the
American Revolution, most of the
Anglican clergy who had been in America came back to England. Wesley asked the
Bishop of London to ordain some ministers for the
New World, but he declined. At this point Wesley still considered only a canonically consecrated bishop capable of conferring
Holy Orders. However, in September 1784, in
Bristol, Wesley consecrated Coke as Superintendent, a title replaced in 1787 in America by that of Bishop (Greek
episkopos) in spite of Wesley's strong disapproval ("superintendent" is etymologically equivalent to
episkopos). Since Coke was already a
priest (Greek
presbuteros) or
presbyter in the Church of England, some interpret this consecration as the equivalent of episcopal consecration. Wesley's action took place two months before the consecration in
Aberdeen of
Samuel Seabury as bishop of the Protestant Episcopal Church of the USA. Coke set sail for New York; during the voyage he read
Augustine's Confessions,
Virgil's
Georgics, biographies of
Francis Xavier (
Jesuit missionary to India) and
David Brainerd (
Puritan missionary to North American aboriginals), and a treatise on episcopacy. A conference of Methodist preachers was held at
Baltimore, starting on Christmas Day 1784, at which Coke and
Francis Asbury were elected superintendents, and the Church was constituted as an independent body under the name of the Methodist Episcopal Church. On 27 December Coke ordained deacons and presbyters and consecrated Asbury as Superintendent; Coke and Asbury are regarded as having been jointly the first superintendents of the Methodist Church in America (the American Methodist Conference formally endorsed the title of Bishop in 1787). ==Other voyages==