In 1739, he was called to Fagg's Manor, Pennsylvania but deferred to the Presbytery which advised him to accept.[3] He returned to Pennsylvania 1739 and founded the Faggs Manor Presbyterian church and associated classical school in Londonderry Township. Many prominent Presbyterian clergy were trained there, including Samuel Davies who became the fourth President of the College of New Jersey (now Princeton University).[3]
It was during this time that Blair participated in the "New Side" of the division of the Presbyterian Church in Pennsylvania during the Great Awakening, embracing the revivals.[3]. Blair's sermons, such as "A Perswasive to Repentance" are full of dense expressive figures, balanced argumentation and dialogic interludes. In his revival preaching, Blair aims at evoking negative emotions towards sinful laxness and presenting the Great Awakening as a breakthrough in the history of colonial America.[5]
Blair became ill while traveling to meet with the trustees of the College of New Jersey. He died in Faggs Manor on July 5, 1751, and is buried in the church cemetery.[6][7][3]
Legacy
In 1754, his principal writings (seven important sermons), an elegy by Samuel Davies, and eulogy by Reverend Samuel Finley (fifth President of the College of New Jersey) were published in Philadelphia by his brother, John Blair who took over at the Faggs Manor church.
^TURNER, J. D. EDMISTON (1951). "Reverend Samuel Blair, 1712—1751". Journal of the Presbyterian Historical Society (1943-1961). 29 (4): 227–236, at 229. JSTOR23324747. Retrieved July 25, 2020.