997 resultados para First Methodist Episcopal Church (Akron, N.Y.)
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Held under the auspices of the Black River, Oneida, Genesee, East Genesee and Wyoming (all in New York state) conferences of the Methodist Episcopal Church.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Names of donors indicated.
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"Shoemaker 2884"
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Seal of "Aux. N.Y. Bible & Common prayer book soc." on verso of t.-p.
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Includes documents and letters signed by John Wesley, Thomas Coke, and others, concerning the origin of the Methodist Episcopacy in America.
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At head of title: Alabama Conference Historical Society, Methodist Episcopal Church, South.
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1st meeting held in Baltimore, Dec. 28, 1916- to Jan. 2, 1917; 2d, Traverse City, Mich., June 27, 1917; 3d, Savannah, Ga., Jan. 23, 1918.
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The Episcopal Church Home For Children Records are a valuable source on the Church’s historical effort to extend its services for the social improvement of South Carolina (in this case the Episcopal Diocese’s program for destitute children.) The Episcopal Church Home was established in 1850 in Charleston, S.C. for orphan girls and was chartered by the S.C. General Assembly in 1852. The collection consists of a history, minutes, reports of the annual meetings, general correspondence, superintendent’s records, health records, attendance registers, financial records, newsletters (both bound and unbound), and photographs.
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The first part of this paper will give a brief introduction to maritime missiology, the second section will trace the beginnings of the Boston Seaman’s Friend Society in the nineteenth century and the third will focus on the Vineyard Haven branch of that work well into the twentieth century. Using source material from the American Seamen’s Friend Society - there is a 5,000 document collection of the ASFS papers in the G.W. Blunt White Library at Mystic Seaport, the Boston Seaman’s Friend Society - whose papers are mostly in the Congregational House on Beacon Hill in Boston, and other secondary works from the nineteenth and twentieth century. I am especially indebted to George Wiseman’s book, They Kept the Lower Lights Burning, Wiseman was the pastor of Trinity Methodist Episcopal Church in Oak Bluff during WWII and the son-in-law of Austin Tower. This presentation will look at the many facets that made up religious work among seafarers.