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1823 Journal of General Convention
Journal of the Proceedings of the Bishops, Clergy, and Laity of the Protestant Episcopal Church in the United States of America in a General Convention 1823 Digital Copyright Notice Copyright 2017. The Domestic and Foreign Missionary Society of the Protestant Episcopal Church in the United States of America / The Archives of the Episcopal Church All rights reserved. Limited reproduction of excerpts of this is permitted for personal research and educational activities. Systematic or multiple copy reproduction; electronic retransmission or redistribution; print or electronic duplication of any material for a fee or for commercial purposes; altering or recompiling any contents of this document for electronic re-display, and all other re-publication that does not qualify as fair use are not permitted without prior written permission. Send written requests for permission to re-publish to: Rights and Permissions Office The Archives of the Episcopal Church 606 Rathervue Place P.O. Box 2247 Austin, Texas 78768 Email: [email protected] Telephone: 512-472-6816 Fax: 512-480-0437 JOURNAL .. MTRJI OJr TllII "BISHOPS, CLERGY, AND LAITY O~ TIU; PROTESTANT EPISCOPAL CHURCH XII TIIJ! UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, Xif A GENERAL CONVENTION, Held in St. l'eter's Church, in the City of Philadelphia, from the 20th t" .the 26th Day of May inclusive, A. D. 1823. NEW· YORK ~ PlllNTED BY T. lit J. SWURDS: No. 99 Pearl-street, 1823. The Right Rev. William White, D. D. of Pennsylvania, Pre siding Bishop; The Right Rev. John Henry Hobart, D. D. of New-York, The Right Rev. Alexander Viets Griswold, D. D. of the Eastern Diocese, comprising the states of Maine, New Hampshire, Massachusct ts, Vermont, and Rhode Island, The Right Rev. -
The Thomas Jefferson Memorial, Washington
JL, JLornclt ),//,.,on Wn*ooio/ memorial ACTION PUBLICATIONS Alexandria, Va. JL" llo*oo )"ff",.", TLln^o,io/ This great National Memorial to the aurhor of the Declaration of Indepen- dence and the Virginia Statute for Religious Freedom, First Secretary of State and Third President of the United States, possesses mlny of the qualities ascribed to the brilliant revolutionary leader in whose memory it has been dedicated by a grateful Nation It is magnificent-as Jefferson's chrracter was magnificent. Simple as his Democracy. Aesthetic as l.ris thoughts. Courageous as his chempion- ship of the righrs of man. The memorial structure is in itself a tribute to Jefferson's artistic tastes and preference and a mark of respect for his architectural and scientific achievements. A farmer by choice, a lawyer by profession, and an architect by avocation, JelTer- son \r,as awed by the remarkable beauty of design and noble proportions of the Pantheon in Rome and foilou,ed irs scheme in the major architectururl accom- plishments of his oq,n life Its inlluence is evident in his ovu'n home at Monticello and in the Rotunda of the University of Virginia at Cl.rarkrttesville, which he designed. The monumental portico complimenrs Jellerson's design for the Yir- ginia State Capitol at Richmond. h But it is not alone the architectural splendor or the beiruty of its settir,g ',irhich makes this memcrial one of the mosr revered American patriotic shrines. In it the American people find the spirit of the living Jefferson and the fervor which inspired their colonial forbears to break, by force of erms, the ties which bound them to tyrannical overlords; to achieve not only nltional independence. -
William Augustus Muhlenberg and Phillips Brooks and the Growth of the Episcopal Broad Church Movement
W&M ScholarWorks Dissertations, Theses, and Masters Projects Theses, Dissertations, & Master Projects 1994 Parties, Visionaries, Innovations: William Augustus Muhlenberg and Phillips Brooks and the Growth of the Episcopal Broad Church Movement Jay Stanlee Frank Blossom College of William & Mary - Arts & Sciences Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarworks.wm.edu/etd Part of the History of Religion Commons Recommended Citation Blossom, Jay Stanlee Frank, "Parties, Visionaries, Innovations: William Augustus Muhlenberg and Phillips Brooks and the Growth of the Episcopal Broad Church Movement" (1994). Dissertations, Theses, and Masters Projects. Paper 1539625924. https://dx.doi.org/doi:10.21220/s2-x318-0625 This Thesis is brought to you for free and open access by the Theses, Dissertations, & Master Projects at W&M ScholarWorks. It has been accepted for inclusion in Dissertations, Theses, and Masters Projects by an authorized administrator of W&M ScholarWorks. For more information, please contact [email protected]. P a r t ie s , V i s i o n a r i e s , I n n o v a t i o n s William Augustus Muhlenberg and Phillips Brooks and the Growth of the Episcopal Broad Church Movement A Thesis Presented to The Faculty of the Department of History The College of William and Mary in Virginia In Partial Fulfillment Of the Requirements for the Degree of Master of Arts hy Jay S. F. Blossom 1994 Ap p r o v a l S h e e t This thesis is submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts Jay S. -
Maryland Historical Magazine, 1986, Volume 81, Issue No. 2
Maryland Historical Masazine & o o' < GC 2 o p 3 3 re N f-' CO Published Quarterly by the Museum and Library of Maryland History The Maryland Historical Society Summer 1986 THE MARYLAND HISTORICAL SOCIETY OFFICERS, 1986-1987 William C. Whitridge, Chairman* Robert G. Merrick, Sr., Honorary Chairman* Brian B. Topping, President* Mrs. Charles W. Cole, Jr., Vice President* E. Phillips Hathaway, Treasurer* Mrs. Frederick W. Lafferty, Vice President* Samuel Hopkins, Asst. Secretary/Treasurer* Walter D. Pinkard, Sr., Vice President* Bryson L. Cook, Counsel* Truman T. Semans, Vice President* Leonard C. Crewe, Jr., Past President* Frank H. Weller, Jr., Vice President* J. Fife Symington, Jr.,* Richard P. Moran, Secretary* Past Chairman of the Board* The officers listed above constitute the Society's Executive Committee. BOARD OF TRUSTEES, 1986-1987 H. Furlong Baldwin Hon. Charles McC. Mathias, Jr. Mrs. Emory J. Barber, St. Mary's Co. Robert G. Merrick, Jr. Gary Black Michael Middleton, Charles Co. John E. Boulais, Caroline Co. Jack Moseley Mrs. James Frederick Colwill (Honorary) Thomas S. Nichols (Honorary) Donald L. DeVries James O. Olfson, Anne Arundel Co. Leslie B. Disharoon Mrs. David R. Owen Jerome Geckle Mrs. Brice Phillips, Worcester Co. William C. Gilchrist, Allegany Co. J. Hurst Purnell, Jr., Kent Co. Hon. Louis L. Goldstein, Calvert Co. George M. Radcliffe Kingdon Gould, Jr., Howard Co. Adrian P. Reed, Queen Anne's Co. Benjamin H. Griswold III G. Donald Riley, Carroll Co. Willard Hackerman Mrs. Timothy Rodgers R. Patrick Hayman, Somerset Co. John D. Schapiro Louis G. Hecht Jacques T. Schlenger E. Mason Hendrickson, Washington Co. Jess Joseph Smith, Jr., Prince George's Co. -
Genealogy of the Page Family in Virginia. Also, a Condensed Account
u,. ^ " Wv «j^_ w* ».>,,..... P,a GENEALiOGY OF THE PAGE FAMILY IN VIRGINIA. ALSO A CONDENSED ACCOUNT OJ- THE NELSON, WALKER, PENDLETON AND RANDOLPH FAMILIES, WITH REKERENCES TO THE BLAND, BURWELL, BYRD, CARTER, GARY, DUKE, GILMER, HARRISON, .RIVES, THORNTON, WELLFORD, WASHINGTON, AND OTHER DISTINGUISHED FAMILIES IN VIRGINIA. BY RICHARD CHANNING MOORE PAGE, M,D., Life Member of the American Historical Association ; of the Neiv York Historical Societij ; and Member of the Virginia Historical Society, etc. SECOND EDITION. NEW YORK: PRESS OF THE PUBLISHERS' PRINTING CO., 120 & 122 East 14th Street. 1893. 1 3 J } 3o^'y THE MEMORY OF COL. JOHN PAGE, FIRST OF HIS FAMILY IX VIRGINIA, AVHOSE TEMPERATE AND INDUSTRIOUS HABITS, INDOMITABLE ENERGY, AND STRICT INTEGRITY, WON FOR HIM A HIGH PLACE IN THE CONFIDENCE OF THEIR MAJESTIES, WILLIAM AND MARY, AS A MEMBER OF THEIR COUNCIL IN THE DOMINION OF VIRGINIA, AND ARE WELL WORTHY OF IMITATION BY HIS DESCENDANTS, THIS LITTLE BOOK IS IPiousIv? 5)cMcatc&. * V ^m. 'V' THE WASHINGTON MONUMENT, RICHMOND. VA TJE iSW y04l PUBLIC Li^*<;iikY PREFACE TO THE SECOND EDITION. " Ten years have elapsed since the first edition of the Genealogy " of the Page Family in Virginia was issued. During that time ad- ditional facts have been ascertained and minor errors corrected. There is also continued demand for the book. For these reasons the author has determined to issue a second edition. The following is a revised list of those who have furnished valuable information : 1. Prof. William Allen, deed., McDonough Institute, Maryland. 2. Miss Isabella Nelson Atkinson, Gonzales, Texas. -
The Protestant Episcopal Church in the South, 1760-1865
University of Mississippi eGrove Electronic Theses and Dissertations Graduate School 1-1-2013 Christ and Class: The Protestant Episcopal Church in the South, 1760-1865 Ryan Lee Fletcher University of Mississippi Follow this and additional works at: https://egrove.olemiss.edu/etd Part of the History Commons Recommended Citation Fletcher, Ryan Lee, "Christ and Class: The Protestant Episcopal Church in the South, 1760-1865" (2013). Electronic Theses and Dissertations. 1417. https://egrove.olemiss.edu/etd/1417 This Dissertation is brought to you for free and open access by the Graduate School at eGrove. It has been accepted for inclusion in Electronic Theses and Dissertations by an authorized administrator of eGrove. For more information, please contact [email protected]. CHRIST AND CLASS: THE PROTESTANT EPISCOPAL CHURCH IN THE SOUTH: 1760-1865 A Dissertation presented in partial fulfillment of requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in the Department of History The University of Mississippi by RYAN LEE FLETCHER MAY 2013 Copyright © 2013 by Ryan Lee Fletcher All rights reserved ABSTRACT This dissertation examines the emergence, practices, religious culture, expansion, and social role of the Protestant Episcopal Church in the American South from 1760 to 1865. The dissertation employs three major research methodologies by: (1) centralizing the role of social class in the Episcopal Church's history, (2) seriously considering the Episcopal Church's distinctive theology, and (3) quantifying the connections that linked the Episcopal Church to the South's economic structures prior to the Civil War. Archival research, periodicals, and published records related to the Protestant Episcopal Church provided the primary evidence used in the formulation of the dissertation's interpretations and conclusions. -
Nomination Form WHITE POST HISTORIC DISTRICT, CLARKE COUNTY, VA Cont~Nuat~Onsheet 112 Item Number 7 Page 1
DM5 No. 1024-~)18 Exp, 10-31-84 United States Department of the Interior National Park Service For NPS use only Netioaaa! Registes aB Nbstoaic POacces received Iinwentcry-Wasmiiinatiooa Form date entered See Instructions in How to Complete National Register Forms Type all entries-complete applicable sections 1. Name historic WHITE POST HISTORIC DISTRICT (VHLC File No. 21-65) -- and'or common n/A street & number Intcrscction a£ VA rouecs 658 and 628 not for publication - -+- city, town hThite Post EL!% vicinity of - state Virginia code 51 county elarke code 043 Category Ownership Status Present Use .X district public L occupled -agrjculture . museum -bujlding(s) IX- private X unoccupied -cornrnerclal -park -structure -both -work in progress educational tJ- private residence A -site Public Acquisition Accessible entertainment . .- religious -object -in process ,Lyes: restricted government -scientific -being considered - yes: unrestricted -industria! transportation N/A -no -military other: 4. OW~~E"~FQR~Q~Y isec continuation Sheet "1) name Multiple Owners - see attackcd - - - street & number N/h h%ite Post: N/!Lvicinity of state Vit-gLniu 22663 city, town - - courlhocrse, registry of deeds, etc. Clarke County Cour chouse street & number- N/h city, town Berr~ville Virginia 22611 6. Weprretsenatatihsa, in Existiwg Sao~lreyscz,(See Continuation Sllcee 11) - -- -.- - . -- - -- - - -. (1) Virginka Historic Landmnrks Commission title Survey (FiJe 21-66] ---- has this property been determined eligible? ---yes no date February 1983 -federal 2- state -county -local .- - depasifary for survey records Virgj.ni a Historic Landmrks Commissio~22 1 Governor Street elty, town Richmond state Virginia 23219 - 7. Description Condition Check one Check one X_ excellent 2deteriorated L unaltered _li_ original site 2~-good -ruins 2Laltered -moved date a.4 X_ fair -unexposed Describe the present and original (if known) physical appearance SWRY DESCRIPTION White Post is a small crossroads village located in southwestern Clarke County at the intersection of state routes 658 and 628. -
Genealogy of the Page Family in Virginia. Also a Condensed Account
Gc M. L. 929.2 Pl43pa 1583001 R^Yh^C- X>S HISTORICAL GENEALOGY COLLECTION y^ ALLEN COUNTY PUBLIC L|BRARY 3 1833 01415 2588 : GENEALOGY " ^/^< /y'i^''-^>;-':/U-^^J->^ u' PAGE j^AMILY IN VIRGINIA ALSO A CONDENSED ACCOUNT OF THE Nelson. Walker, Pendleton and Randolph Fami'ies, V/ITH REFERENCES TO THE BYRD, CARTER, GARY, DUKE, GIL:\IER, HARRISON; RIVES, THORNTON, WELLFORD, WASHINGTON, And other distinguished Families in Virginia. ONE OF THE FAMILY. NEW YORK Jenkins & Thomas, Printers, 8 Sprcce Street. 1883. Bl-fN^ V.i-.^>>: ^-v. 1583001 TO THE MEMORY OF COL. JOHN PAGE, ESQ., FIRST OF HIS FAMILY I.V VIRGINIA, WHOSE TEMPERATE AND INUUSTRIOL'S HABITS, INDOMITABLE ENERGY AND STRICT INTEGRITY, WON FOR HIM A HIGH PLACE IN THE CONFIDENCE OF THEIR MAJESTIES, WILLIAM AND MARY, AS A MEMBER CF THEIR COUNCIL IN THE DOMINION OF VIRGINIA, AND ARE WELL WORTHY OF IMITATION BY HIS DESCENDANTS, THIS LITTLE BOOK IS PIOUSLY DEDICATED BY THE AUTHOR. THE WASHINGTON MONUMENT. RICHMOND, VA PREFACE. The Original Tombstone of Col. John Pag:e, the first of his from England about family in Virginia, was a marble slab imported broken, and for many the year 1695. In some unknown way it was Episcopal churchyard years the fragments were scattered about the Virginia. at Williamsburg, James City County, descendants of Col. For the purpose of restoring it, one of the and, on the 22d of Page visited Williamsburg in the summer of 1877, be found, collected June of that year, had the fragments, that could platform in the and placed, by the consent of the Vestry, on a brick vestibule of the church. -
The Right Reverend Richard Channing Moore, D. D., Second
BK E^95 mG(o THE LIBRARY OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA LOS ANGELES GIFT OF PROF. ROUND D. HUSSEY >ll\ttf)artr Cfjanning jMoore, B.B., anb Clje peginningss of tfie Cfjeological ^eminarp in "Virginia Pp Eeberentr ?!Sam. ^, 3^, (HoobtDin, p.B. The Right Ri:vi:hi:xi) Richard Chanmng Mookk, D, D. Ci)c Eigljt Eefaerenb ^icljartr Cfjannmg Jloore, B.3B. Second Bishop of Virginia AND ®f)e peginningsi of tfte ^fteological ^eminarp in "Virginia rr. Z2- An Address Delivered at the Alumni Meeting of the Virginia Theological Seminary, on June 4th, 1914. BY met). aHm. a. E. (goolitom, P. li. Pi^lished by Order of the Alumni Association 3X Contents I. The Rt. Rev. Richard Channig Moore, D. D 7 II. The Reginning of the Theological Seminary in Virginia 40 III. The Rt. Rev. William Cabell Rrown, D. D 45 \ X \ DEDICATED WITH AFFECTIONATE REGARD BY THE WRITER TO l^iUiam Cabell iBroUin, ®, B. Bishop Coadjutor OF THE Diocese of Virginia iSisftop Moovt History finds its best intcrj)retati()n in the biographies of epoch making men. In them we see the forces of the past put to test, the forces of their contemporaneous life struggling for the mastery, and the creative spirit which is prophetic of the future made incarnate. In order to know a man we must know the past out of which he came, the conditions under which he lived, and the influence of his life upon the future; for life is the spirit of the past flowing through the soul of man into the future, but ever meeting in the soul of man tlie great vital and creative forces of an eternal Spirit world, which are incarnate there, to transform and enrich the spirit of the past, as it flows through the souls of men, in order that days that are to be may be better than the days that have been. -
John Henry Hobart (1775-1830)
JOHN HENRY HOBART (17751830) 11th Bishop of the Episcopal Church “He was the first bishop to show the American Church how to run a diocese.” (Addison) Hobart was born September 14, 1775. His father was a business man. He attended the newly founded Episcopal Academy in Philadelphia, then spent two years at the University of Pennsylvania. As a Junior he entered Princeton and received his BA in 1793 with high honors. Eventually he became a tutor at Princeton and was highly respected by students and others. Supported by a friendship with Bishop White, and growing in his own interest in the Christian faith, Hobart was ordained deacon by his bishop in 1798. At first he served a small group of churches in Philadelphia, then went to New Brunswick. He married, and in mid 1800 moved to Long Island. Six months later he came to be an assistant at Trinity Church, NY. There he would remain for the rest of his life, as assistant, rector, and bishop. These movements in two and half years revealed a man of intense energy. He continued to demonstrate this energy all during his time at Trinity. He became secretary of the House of Bishops while a deacon, was elected secretary of the New York Convention and a deputy to General Convention, and became secretary of the General Convention. In 1801, 26 years old, he was made a member of the Board of Trustees of Columbia College, with such luminaries as Alexander Hamilton. During this year he was ordained a priest. Hobart was important for taking initiatives in both missionary work and education. -
Virginia Study.Pdf
Acknowledgements This version of the history of race relations in our Diocese is a work in-progress. The research and writing for this document was done by our committee member, Dr. John Chilton, who is our Lead for Research and Communication. He was assisted by Dr. Mildred W. Robinson, Professor of Law at the University of Virginia who served as editor. Simply to state that we are grateful for John’s work and Mildred’s aid is woefully inadequate. Words cannot express sufficiently the depth of gratitude we feel for the process and the result of their effort By submitting this current version of the Diocese’s race relations history, we now fulfill the obligation of the Diocese, as set forth in the resolution of the General Convention, to research and disclose it’s involvement the slave trade, and the perpetuation of racism. Additions will be made to the document in the future, as appropriate. Ellyn Lomack Crawford, Co-Chair Committee on Race and Reconciliation Meet Me in Galilee Beginning the Journey from Repentance to Reconciliation A History of Racism and Race in the Diocese of Virginia PUBLIC DRAFT – Subject to further revision. Version: 1/11/12 THE RESOLUTION The Diocese of Virginia is proud to trace its beginnings to the founding of Jamestown over 400 years ago. As the established church of the colony, the diocese can claim to share with our sister dioceses in the founding of the Anglican Church in English colonies which became the United States of America. It is due to this pride in our heritage that we call ourselves The Diocese. -
Centennial Ceremonies Held in Christ
«*5sSRlP Digitized by the Internet Archive in 2011 with funding from LYRASIS members and Sloan Foundation http://www.archive.org/details/centennialceremoOOchri in 0) D I T CO m < i Q. Q Z z < 2 C I a u u. rr -) 5 i LI u > H (Si a. i u State Library. North Carolina Raleigh Centennial Ceremonies HELD IN Christ Church Parish RALEIGH, NORTH CAROLINA A. D. 1921 INCLUDING HISTORICAL ADDRESSES * PUBLISHED BY ORDER OF THE VESTRY * RALEIGH Btnum Printing Company 1922 Z A 8 ,r (Jurist (Hljurtlj (Iljoxr WILLIAM H. JONES. A.A.G.O., Organist and Choirmaster g&aipxnnasi Mrs. Thomas M. Ashe Mrs. Ashby Lee Baker Mrs. Bessie White Bass Mrs. 0. Stedman Thompson Mrs. Clyde H. Hoppe Mrs. Archie Horton Mrs. Henry M. Wilson Miss Nancy Lee Miss Lucy Bayard Dortch Miss Lucy Moore Miss Florence Jones Miss Nora King Miss Helen Whitaker Mrs. Charles McKimmon Mrs. James A. Briggs, Jr. Mrs. Harry T. Adams Mrs. W. W. Stancill Miss Wilhelmina Sawyer Miss Lucile Thompson Wextats Harry T. Adams Harry Howell I. M. Porter jBSassna Archie Horton Caswell Riddle E. H. King Virgil St. Cloud T. J. Moore r 779, THE REV. MILTON AUGUSTUS BARBER SIXTH AND PRESENT RECTOR OF CHRIST CHURCH 1S21 * 1921 Glljmt (Hljurclj, ^aktglj, JL & * (tfetrtenmal $zsxnt£&, (Bktotar 0-12, 1921 * estrg 1821 Hon. John Haywood, Senior Warden De. Albridgton g. H. Burgbs Hon. John Louis Taylor, Dr. James M. Henderson Junior Warden William H. Haywood, Jr. ^jjBtrn. 1921 Dr. Richard H. Lewis, Senior Warden F. P. Haywood Charles Root, Junior Warden R.