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Slater V. Baker and Stapleton (C.B. 1767): Unpublished Monographs by Robert D. Miller
SLATER V. BAKER AND STAPLETON (C.B. 1767): UNPUBLISHED MONOGRAPHS BY ROBERT D. MILLER ROBERT D. MILLER, J.D., M.S. HYG. HONORARY FELLOW MEDICAL HISTORY AND BIOETHICS DEPARTMENT SCHOOL OF MEDICINE AND PUBLIC HEALTH UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN - MADISON PRINTED BY AUTHOR MADISON, WISCONSIN 2019 © ROBERT DESLE MILLER 2019 BOUND BY GRIMM BOOK BINDERY, MONONA, WI AUTHOR’S INTRODUCTION These unpublished monographs are being deposited in several libraries. They have their roots in my experience as a law student. I have been interested in the case of Slater v. Baker and Stapleton since I first learned of it in law school. I was privileged to be a member of the Yale School Class of 1974. I took an elective course with Dr. Jay Katz on the protection of human subjects and then served as a research assistant to Dr. Katz in the summers of 1973 and 1974. Dr. Katz’s course used his new book EXPERIMENTATION WITH HUMAN BEINGS (New York: Russell Sage Foundation 1972). On pages 526-527, there are excerpts from Slater v. Baker. I sought out and read Slater v. Baker. It seemed that there must be an interesting backstory to the case, but it was not accessible at that time. I then practiced health law for nearly forty years, representing hospitals and doctors, and writing six editions of a textbook on hospital law. I applied my interest in experimentation with human beings by serving on various Institutional Review Boards (IRBs) during that period. IRBs are federally required committees that review and approve experiments with humans at hospitals, universities and other institutions. -
EDITORIAL HE Editors of These Transactions Apologize for the Fact That No Number Has Appeared Since That Bearing the Date January 1952
EDITORIAL HE Editors of these Transactions apologize for the fact that no number has appeared since that bearing the date January 1952. T Members of our Society who attended the Annual Meeting on 14 May 1952 will know that our finances were then shown to be in a parlous state and that for the time being it was not possible to issue further Transactions. At the Annual Meeting held on 20 May 1953 the Rev. C. E. Surman, who for twelve months had acted as Treasurer, was able to report that the considerable sum of money which had been found to be owing to the Society had been recovered. For their labours during a long period in what has been a most difficult and distressing situation, and for their eventual success in restoring to the Society the sound financial basis which it ought never to have lost, we record most grateful acknowledgement to Mr. Surman and to the Chairman of Committee, the Rev. R. F. G. Calder. The address at our Annual Meeting this year was delivered by Dr. R. Tudur Jones, Vice-Principal of Bala-Bangor Independent College. Dr. Jones is an authority on that firebrand and " metropolitan of the itinerants ", Vavasor Powell, for a thesis upon whom he was awarded a D. Phil. by the University of Oxford; and from his special knowledge of the man and his interests he read the paper entitled "Vavasor Powell and the Protectorate" printed within. All present were impressed by the lecturer's learning and also charmed by the lightness with which he wore it and by his flashes of Celtic humour. -
Ken Spelman Rare Books of York
Ken Spelman Rare Books of York Catalogue One Hundred and One 17th and 18th century Philosophy & Theology Books from the Library of John Stephens Part One (A-J) November 2018 Tony Fothergill www.kenspelman.com please email orders to: [email protected] It is a pleasure to introduce this the first of two catalogues of the library of John Stephens (1948-2006). A few words about his life and work may be shed some light on the nature and range of John’s extensive collection. John was the only child of Welsh parents from Clydach in West Gla- morgan. They were Welsh speaking and Welsh was John’s first lan- guage until the age of five when his parents moved to Ashford. From his primary school in Ashford John gained a scholarship to the City of London School. From there he went to Sidney Sussex College, Cam- bridge, where he studied history, with an emphasis in Part 2 on the history of philosophy. He continued his studies at postgraduate level and was awarded an MLitt. Book collecting was in John’s blood for he had begun at the age of ten. On leaving Cambridge, He joined the John Rylands Library as a trainee in rare-book librarianship. He then had a short period of service with the Inland Revenue before joining, in 1977, Robin Waterfield’s Anti- quarian Booksellers as a cataloguer of rare books. John was always on hand there with helpful advice and encouragement especially for young scholars. Many a collection may have begun with a purchase from Waterfield’s, for John’s enthusiasm for book collecting was infectious. -
Immortality and Rasselas
IMMORTALITY AND RASSELAS ; A STUDY OF THE IDEA BEHIND JOHNSON'S APOLOGUE By ROBERT GARY WALKER A DISSERTATION PRESENTED TO THE GRADUATE COUNCIL OF THE UNIVERSITY OF FLORIDA IN PARTIAL FULFILLMENT OF THE REQUIREMENTS FOR THE DEGREE OF DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY UNIVERSITY OF FLORIDA 1974 UNIVERSITY OF FLORIDA ijilllililil 3 1262 08552 8551 ACKNOWLEDGMENTS Many people are responsible for whatever degree of success the following study enjoys. A decade ago Mrs. Ruthanna Wise not only taught me to read Latin but also introduced me to an intelligent appreciation and under- standing of literature. Later the English department at Washington and Jefferson College, especially Professors Gargano, Whiting, Branton, Keen, Laun, and Skutches, con- tinued the lesson she had begun. All of these were good teachers, and I thank them for it. My friend Michael Raymond and Professor Ben Pickard read and commented upon an earlier version of part of this study. My thanks to them as well as to Professors Gareth Schmeling, Walter Herbert, and Ira Clark, who read the final version and served on my committee. Professor Aubrey Williams led me to an understanding of the early part of the eighteenth century, read and commented at length on this dissertation, and always has given graciously to me of his time as long as I have known him; I am grateful to him for all these reasons. Finally, this dissertation would not have been begun, let alone completed, without the inspiration and guidance of Professor Melvyn New. Words cannot express my gratitude for his continual help and his continuous friendship. ^ TABLE OF CONTENTS ACKNOWLEDGMENTS. -
1934 Unitarian Movement.Pdf
fi * " >, -,$a a ri 7 'I * as- h1in-g & t!estP; ton BrLLnch," LONDON t,. GEORGE ALLEN &' UNWIN- LID v- ' MUSEUM STREET FIRST PUBLISHED IN 1934 ACE * i& ITwas by invitation of The Hibbert Trustees, to whom all interested in "Christianity in its most simple and intel- indebted, that what follows lieibleV form" have long been was written. For the opinions expressed the writer alone is responsible. His aim has been to give some account of the work during two centuries of a small group of religious thinkers, who, for the most part, have been overlooked in the records of English religious life, and so rescue from obscurity a few names that deserve to be remembered amongst pioneers and pathfinders in more fields than one. Obligations are gratefully acknowledged to the Rev. V. D. Davis. B.A., and the Rev. W. H. Burgess, M.A., for a few fruitful suggestions, and to the Rev. W. Whitaker, I M.A., for his labours in correcting proofs. MANCHESTER October 14, 1933 At1 yigifs ~ese~vcd 1L' PRENTED IN GREAT BRITAIN BY UNWIN BROTHERS LTD., WOKING CON TENTS A 7.. I. BIBLICAL SCHOLARSHIP' PAGE BIBLICAL SCHOLARSHIP 1 3 iI. EDUCATION CONFORMIST ACADEMIES 111. THE MODERN UNIVERSITIES 111. JOURNALS AND WRIODICAL LITERATURE . THE UNITARIAN CONTRIBUTI:ON TO PERIODICAL . LITERATURE ?aEz . AND BIOGR AND BELLES-LETTRES 11. PHILOSOPHY 111. HISTORY AND BIOGRAPHY I IV. LITERATURE ....:'. INDEX OF PERIODICALS "INDEX OF PERSONS p - INDEX OF PLACES :>$ ';: GENERAL INDEX C. A* - CHAPTER l BIBLICAL SCHOLARSHIP 9L * KING of the origin of Unitarian Christianity in this country, -
Early Dissenting Academies - Evangelical Library - 26 November 2012
Early Dissenting Academies - Evangelical Library - 26 November 2012 Soon after taking up the pastorate at New Park Street Baptist Church in Southwark in 1854, Charles Spurgeon came across a young street preacher by the name of Thomas Medhurst. Medhurst clearly had preaching gifts, but he also had very little education and a very shaky grasp of English grammar. Spurgeon took him under his wing and started to teach him. Out of this grew the famous Pastors’ College, started by Spurgeon in 1857 with Medhurst and one other student, and established to train men for pastoral ministry. The college continues today, though with rather different theological convictions, as Spurgeon’s College. Spurgeon’s Pastors’ College stood in a long tradition of colleges and academies established and run outside the University system for the benefit of dissenters who would not conform to the liturgy and standards of the Church of England. Several dissenting academies, as they are known, achieved considerable standing: Bristol Baptist College, still in existence, began in this way in 1720; New College, Manchester, founded in 1786, went through various incarnations before becoming Harris Manchester College, Oxford, as it now is; Philip Doddridge ran a well-known dissenting academy in Northampton between 1730 and his death in 1751. Less well-known are the academies of the late seventeenth century which preceded these more famous institutions but were in effect the originators and pioneers of this way of providing higher education and training ministers. I want in this paper to explore these early academies and, by means of examples, give you some feel for their character and influence, before drawing some conclusions. -
Editorial 127 Henry Rogers and the Eclipse of Faith by Alan P
THE 1 JOURNAL of the UNITED REFORMED CHURCH HISTORY SOCIETY (incorporating the Congregatioflal Historical Society, founded 1899, and the Presbyterian Historical Society of England, founded 1913) EDITORS: Revd. Dr. R. BUICK KNOX, M.A., B.D., and Dr. CLYDE BINFIELD, M.A. VOL. 2. NO.5. MAY 1980 CONTENTS Editorial 127 Henry Rogers and The Eclipse of Faith by Alan P. F. Sell, M.A., B.D., Ph.D. 128 New Light on Francis Johnson at Cambridge, 1589-1589/90 by Michael E. Moody, Ph.D. 144 "One of the finest pieces in the English Language": Henry Grove, a Note by Frances Hodgess Roper · 147 Ernest Alexander Payne, 19 February 1902-14 January 1980 by Geoffrey F. Nuttall, M.A., D.D., and John Huxtable, M.A., D.D. 150 Review Article: American Evangelical Protestantism and the Reform Impulse by Richard Carwardine, M.A., D.Phil. 153 Reviews by Anthony Fletcher, R. Buick Knox, David M. Thompson 161 Editorial The Revd. Dr. Ernest Payne, C.H., died on 14 January 1980. The international Christian statesmanship, denominational leadership and historical scholarship which characterised his life were inseparable. Indeed, they fed each other as his lecture in 1976 to our society on "Nonconformists and the American Revolution" [J. U.R.C.H.S., Vol. I., pp.210 ff.] recently testified and his book, The Free Church Tradition in the Life of England [1944], long ago ma9-e clear. Dr. Payne was President of the Baptist Historical Society; his family connexions included George Eliot's schoolmistresses and there were links with our own Abbey Chapel, Romsey. -
Porter Catalogue of Manuscripts in Harris
A CATALOGUE OF MANUSCRIPTS IN HARRIS MANCHESTER COLLEGE OXFORD DENNIS PORTER HARRIS MANCHESTER COLLEGE OXFORD updated version 2020 First published in 1998 by Harris Manchester College, Mansfield Road Oxford OX1 3TD Copyright Harris Manchester College, 1998 All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopy, recording, or any information storage or retrieval system without permission in writing from the publisher. A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library. ISBN 0-95087 15-4-0 Grateful acknowledgement is made to the Unitarian Historical Society to reprint The Manuscripts of William Shepherd, by Francis Nicholson and Ernest Axon, previously published in the Transactions of the Unitarian Historical Society, v. 2, no. 4, 1902. Copies of the book may be obtained in the UK direct from the publisher, Harris Manchester College, Mansfield Road, Oxford OX1 3TD Printed and bound in Great Britain by Antony Rowe, Bumpers Farm, Chippenham, Wiltshire SN14 6LH CONTENTS Preface Introduction MANUSCRIPTS George & Richard Acland Armstrong Papers Robert & Robert Brook Aspland Papers John Worsley Austin Lectures Samuel Bache Lecture Notes Thomas Belsham Papers Joseph Bretland Papers Joseph Estlin Carpenter Papers Lant & Russell Lant Carpenter Papers William Henry Channing Sermons Thomas William Chignell Papers College History Additional Papers Valentine David Davis Papers George Eyre Evans Papers Thomas Wesley Freckleton Papers -
THE JOURNAL of the UNITED REFORMED CHURCH HISTORY
THE JOURNAL of the UNITED REFORMED CHURCH HISTORY SOCIETY (incorporating the Congregational Historical Society, founded in 1899, the Presbyterian Historical Society of England, founded in 1913, and the Churches of Christ Historical Society, founded in 1979). EDITOR: PROFESSOR CLYDE BINFIELD, M.A., F.S.A. Volume 7 No 10 July 2007 CONTENTS Editorial and Notes . 575 Dissenters and the Slave Trade by John Handby Thompson . 577 Howell Harris: a Welsh Icon and the two Women Closest to him by Jean Silvan Evans . 593 "Adventures in Holidaymaking" -a Political Approach to Leisure: The Inspiration and Influence ofT.Arthur Leonard, 1864-1948 by Rosamund Ridley. 605 Reviews by David Allen, Jason Askew, Peter M. Brant, James Cook, Ruth Gouldbourne, Elaine Kaye, Robert Pope, Andrew C. Thompson. 621 EDITORIAL This i~sue, which completes the Journal's seventh volume, marks the bicentenary of the abolition of the slave trade, or rather the formal abolition of Britain's role in the transatlantic trade. Dr Thompson's paper explores the evolution of Dissenting attitudes to slavery as expressed by Richard Baxter, Philip Doddridge and - less of a household name - Henry Grove. Jean Silvan Evans's paper on Howell Harris, delivered at the society's summer school in Leeds in September 2005, is a welcome contribution to debate and to the history of women's studies signalled by Daughters of Dissent. Rosamund Ridley's paper combines the history of leisure with radical politics and introduces detective work that is still in progress. This is an appropriate point to draw attention to the Society's first Occasional Publication, David Bebbington's Congregational Members of Parliament in the Nineteenth Century (2007), delivered as the Society's Annual Lecture in September 2006, to which Professor Bebbington has appended a biographical list of 102 MPs who can reasonably be called Congregationalists and a further 28 whose denominational attribution is much less clear, but who certainly illustrate the remarkably wide hinterland of Congregational connexion.