, by Frances Benjamin Johnston Although he had attended
Methodist prayer meetings as a youth, Wilmer decided that his life's work was to preach the gospel through the established
Episcopal Church. He accordingly studied privately, and in 1808 was ordained a
deacon by Bishop
Thomas Claggett. Wilmer's first assignment was his home parish in Chestertown, and during his four years there, he established what had been the
Chapel of Ease in the town's center as the parish's main church, as the previous parish building five miles out of town went to ruin. In 1812, shortly after the death of his first wife as he himself reached the age of 30 and after his ordination as a
priest, Wilmer accepted the joint invitation of Bishop Claggett and
William Meade, a newly ordained deacon and who later became the third Episcopal Bishop of Virginia, moved to
Alexandria, Virginia, and took charge of the recently organized
St. Paul's Church. For a year, Wilmer also served as the first rector of
St. John's Church, on Lafayette Square across from what was then called the
President's House in the newly created and laid out national capital of
District of Columbia, but resigned that position to concentrate on his ministry in Alexandria. After the
First Great Awakening, the disestablishment of the Episcopal Church in Virginia after the
Revolutionary War, and the death of Bishop
James Madison as the
War of 1812 with Britain began in 1812, the Episcopal Church was at such a low ebb in Virginia that its priests had not convened since 1805 and Madison's preferred successor, John Bracken, rector of
Bruton Parish Church in
Williamsburg, declined the offer. Meade had crossed the Potomac River to study for ordination under Rev.
Walter Addison (who succeeded this priest's uncle Rev.
James Jones Wilmer and Rev.
Obadiah Bruen Brown as
Senate Chaplain), but weak eyes had forced him to pause his studies for a time. By that date only about half of Virginia's Episcopal parishes had priests (most serving several churches), and the diocese of Maryland was little better off. Wilmer and the
Second Great Awakening revitalized the Episcopal Church in the
Chesapeake Bay and
Potomac River region. Wilmer helped Virginia's second bishop
Richard Channing Moore, who he, Meade,
Edmund Lee, and
Bushrod Washington convinced to accept the position headquartered at
Monumental Church in
Richmond) reinvigorate it more broadly. The Evangelical Anglicanism movement of
William Wilberforce as well as the moderation of Calvinist doctrine advanced by
Charles Simeon influenced all these clergymen. In 1814, Virginia's Episcopal priests and laity convened and formally elected Bishop Moore. During the diocesan convention, Wilmer delivered the first sermon at the newly rebuilt Monumental Church, followed the next Sunday by then Rev. Meade. In June 1817, Wilmer's Alexandria congregation having outgrown its building, the cornerstone was laid for a new building, designed by
Benjamin H. Latrobe of Baltimore and with an interior patterned after a
Christopher Wren building (St. James Church, Piccadilly, London) and which would seat 600. Through that summer and winter, Wilmer and
Richard Baxter (a leading
Jesuit of
Georgetown University published a total of 53 learned letters under pseudonyms in the 'Alexandria Gazette' debating
Evangelical Lutheran doctrine, which were collected and published together in 1818. Despite his own congregation's growth, Wilmer remained concerned about the continued shortage of educated Episcopalian priests. In June 1818, a year after the national general convention approved the creation of the
General Theological Seminary in
New York City, Wilmer became the first President of the Society for the Education of Pious Young Men for the Ministry of the Protestant Episcopal Church in Maryland and Virginia, a position he held until leaving Alexandria for
Williamsburg, Virginia, in 1826. The previous year, Wilmer had been one of three men delegated to raise funds for the
General Theological Seminary in New York, with particular responsibility for fundraising in the southern dioceses, and he served on the GTS board of trustees from 1820 until his death. Another Education Society founder was Reuel Keith (1792-1842), rector of the newly founded
Christ Church (in the District of Columbia but part of the Diocese of Maryland), who had studied at
Middlebury College and the recently founded
Andover Theological Seminary (mostly
Congregational) in Massachusetts before being ordained by Bishop Moore in 1817. In 1819, Wilmer began publishing and editing the 'Washington Theological Repertory'. and the following year received a doctor of divinity degree from
Brown University. The journal was designed to "disseminate the principles of religion and piety," and Wilmer also became involved in several tract and prayer book societies. In 1822 Wilmer published in Baltimore (with the
imprimatur of the clerk of the Diocese of Maryland),
The Episcopal Manual: A Summary Explanation of the Doctrine, Discipline, and Worship of the Protestant Episcopal Church of the United States of America. The manual may have first been published as early as 1815, and was republished at least four times, including in 1829, shortly after the author's early death. Meanwhile, in 1821, the Virginia convention of the Episcopal church pledged its support for a regional seminary. Acquiescing to lobbying by the
College of William and Mary since at least 1815, the Virginia convention recommended the seminary be located in Williamsburg, to involve the
Diocese of North Carolina, as well as those men from the District of Columbia and Diocese of Maryland who had been working together through the Education Society. However, the convention of the Diocese of Maryland failed to concur. Meanwhile, Keith had moved from Georgetown to Williamsburg in 1820 to teach history and classics at the College of William and Mary, as well as to lead
Bruton Parish Church—but his classes seemed unpopular and he never had more than one theological student at a time. In 1823 he left for his native Vermont. Moreover, enrollment had so declined at the College that its president,
John Augustine Smith recommended it be moved to Richmond, which led to considerable controversy, Smith's resignation and move to New York. The committee appointed by the Virginia convention changed its mind about the proposed seminary's location—and accepted Alexandria after
Hugh Nelson arranged significant funding and Wilmer offered space and persuaded Rev. Keith to return and become its first professor and dean. Thus, Wilmer and Meade (and Bishop Moore) helped found
Virginia Theological Seminary(VTS), where Wilmer taught theology and church history from 1823 to 1826. The first class included thirteen candidates for holy orders, and three years later 23 men were studying at VTS. In 1826, after lobbying by Moore (but refusing his offered position in Richmond), Wilmer moved to Williamsburg to become professor of
moral philosophy and rector of Bruton Parish Church. He served as the historic College's interim president from June 1826 to October 1826, when he was elected its eleventh president. He served until his death the following July of "bilious fever"—a two-week illness after a long journey in driving rain. His successor was
Adam Empie. Wilmer also served five times as President of the House of Deputies at the General Convention (1817–26), somewhat to the dismay of those with High Church predilections. ==Slavery==