James Patrick Shannon February 16, 1921 August 28, 2003 was a Roman Catholic bishop. Born in South St. Paul, Minnesota , James Shannon was ordained to the Roman Catholic priesthood on June 8, 1946 for the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Saint Paul and Minneapolis . On February 8, 1965, Pope Paul VI appointed him to be the auxiliary bishop for the archdiocese and he was ordained a Roman Catholic Bishop on March 31, 1965. On November 22, 1968, Bishop Shannon resigned as auxiliary bishop because of his opposition to Pope Paul VI s encyclical Humanae Vitae . ref http www.catholic hierarchy.org bishop bshannon.html Bishop James Patrick Shannon Catholic Hierarchy& 93 Bot generated title ref ref http www.encyclopedia.com doc 1G1 108551878.html James Shannon loved the church all his life Bishop who resigned over Humanae Vitae and married is laid to rest with honors. Appreciation Obituary National Catholic Reporter Encyclopedia.com Bot generated title ref ref http www.catholicculture.org news features index.cfm?recnum 26353 ref James Shannon died in Wayzata, Minnesota Notes reflist Published works Shannon, James P., Relunctant Dissenter An Autobiography , 1968 http www.mnhs.org library findaids 00085.html The Papers of James P. Shannon, Minnesota Historical Society Persondata Metadata see Wikipedia Persondata . NAME Shannon, James P. ALTERNATIVE NAMES SHORT DESCRIPTION Catholic bishop DATE OF BIRTH February 16, 1921 PLACE OF BIRTH DATE OF DEATH August 28, 2003 PLACE OF DEATH DEFAULTSORT Shannon, James P. Category 1921 births Category 2003 deaths Category People from Dakota County, Minnesota Category American Roman Catholic bishops Category Laicized Roman Catholic bishops Category Writers from Minnesota Category Participants in the Second Vatican Council Category Christianity in Minnesota RC bio stub pl James Shannon ... more details
For the writer Matthew Henry Barker Matthew Barker 1619, Great Cransley , Northamptonshire March 25 1698, London was an English Independent minister and parliamentarian, known for his work on natural theology and for his participation in English 17th century politics. Life Matthew Barker was born in arowe park hospital, but now in newferry uk to parents unknown. He attended plessington College, bebington , ref Venn BRKR634M ref working as a schoolmaster in Banbury , Oxfordshire until the outbreak of the English Civil War , at which point he became preacher to a London parish. Barker was an avid parliamentarian and was invited to preach a sermon before the House of Commons of England House of Commons on 25 October 1648. The new republic welcomed him, and his moderation earned him the favour of the Oliver Cromwell Cromwell regime, which made him an assistant to the London commission. After the English Restoration Restoration of the English monarchy, Barker became a nonconformist , forming his own London congregation. Following the Glorious Revolution , Barker worked to promote unity among Dissenter Dissenters . To this end he published a collection of advice for scholars entering the ministry, entitled Flores intellectuales . Barker s major published work was Natural Theology in which Barker sought to demonstrate the existence of God from the properties of nature. References reflist E. C. Vernon, http www.oxforddnb.com view article 1407 Barker, Matthew 1619 1698 , Oxford Dictionary of National Biography , Oxford University Press, 2004, accessed 23 Jan 2009 External links worldcat id lccn n84 121141 Persondata Metadata see Wikipedia Persondata . NAME Barker, Matthew ALTERNATIVE NAMES SHORT DESCRIPTION DATE OF BIRTH 1619 PLACE OF BIRTH DATE OF DEATH March 25 1698 PLACE OF DEATH DEFAULTSORT Barker, Matthew Category 1619 births Category 1698 deaths Category Alumni of Trinity College, Cambridge Category English naturalists Category Paleobotanists Category People from Welli ... more details
For his friend, the English political philosopher and author Thomas Hollis 1720 1789 Thomas Hollis disambiguation Thomas Hollis Refimprove date February 2008 Thomas Brand Hollis 1719 1804 , born Thomas Brand , was a British political radical and dissenter. Thomas Brand was born the only son of Timothy Brand of Ingatestone, Essex and was educated at Felsted School , Trinity College, Cambridge , ref Venn id BRNT735T name Brand, Thomas ref the Inner Temple and Glasgow University . In 1748 9 he toured Europe with the political philosopher and writer Thomas Hollis who, on his death in 1774, left his estate at Corscombe and Halstock in Dorset to Brand on condition that Brand added the name of Hollis to his own name. He was supportive of the revolutionary activity in the American colonies. In June, 1756 he was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society . ref cite web url http www2.royalsociety.org DServe dserve.exe?dsqIni Dserve.ini&dsqApp Archive&dsqCmd Show.tcl&dsqDb Persons&dsqPos 1&dsqSearch 28Surname 3D 27hollis 27 29 title Library and Archive Catalogue publisher Royal Society accessdate 20 November 2010 ref On his death he left Corscombe and his own property in Ingatestone to John Disney Unitarian John Disney , the father of John Disney . See also Thomas Hollis References reflist Colin Bonwick, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography External links worldcat id lccn nr90 26145 Persondata Metadata see Wikipedia Persondata . NAME Hollis, Thomas Brand ALTERNATIVE NAMES SHORT DESCRIPTION DATE OF BIRTH 1719 PLACE OF BIRTH DATE OF DEATH 1804 PLACE OF DEATH DEFAULTSORT Hollis, Thomas Brand Category 1719 births Category 1804 deaths Category People from Essex Category British political radicals Category Fellows of the Royal Society UK bio stub ... more details
The Doctrine of the Trinity Act 1813 53 Geo. III c. 160. sometimes called the Trinitarian Act 1812 was an Act of Parliament Act of the Parliament of the United Kingdom . It amended the Blasphemy Act 1697 in respect of its Trinitarianism Trinitarian provisions. The Act, passed July 21, was also variously known as the Unitarian Relief Act Trinity Act , The Unitarian Toleration Bill , and Mr William Smith s Bill , after Whig British political party Whig politician William Smith abolitionist William Smith . ref Maclear J.F. Church and state in the modern age a documentary history 1995 ref The Act granted toleration for Unitarianism Unitarian worship, as previously the Act of Toleration 1689 had only granted toleration to those English Dissenters Protestant dissenter s who accepted the Trinity . ref Dudley Julius Medley, A Student s Manual of English Constitutional History. Sixth Edition Oxford Basil Blackwell, 1925 , p. 653. ref It has been regarded as legalising the practice of Islam , which does not have a trinitarian doctrine ref http www.masud.co.uk ISLAM ahm british.htm British and Muslim? , Abdal Hakim Murad ref however as the Blasphemy Act applied only to those educated in or having made profession of the Christian religion, the amending Act would in theory have applied to converts only to Islam and even then would not have allowed them to deny the truth of the Christian religion. The Blasphemy Act was repealed in 1967, implicitly taking the Doctrine of the Trinity Act with it. Notes reflist UK legislation Category United Kingdom Acts of Parliament 1813 Category Islam in the United Kingdom Category 1813 in religion Category Trinitarianism Category History of religion in the United Kingdom Category Church and state law Category Repealed United Kingdom Acts of Parliament ... more details
Robert Andrews 1723 &ndash 1766 was an English Dissenter , known as a poet and translator of Virgil . Life He was descended from an eminent nonconformist family which had lived for nearly two centuries at Little Lever and at Rivington Hall , near Bolton , Lancashire . He received his theological education under Dr. Caleb Rotheram , at Kendal . He was chosen in 1747 minister of the presbyterian congregation at Lydgate, West Yorkshire Lydgate , in the parish of Kirkburton , Yorkshire . He continued to hold this charge till about 1753, when he became minister of Platt Chapel , a place of worship for Protestant dissenters in Rusholme , Lancashire. He stayed there about three years. He afterwards presided over a presbyterian congregation at Bridgnorth , where he remained till his health broke down and he became mad. Works In the earlier part of his life he sent to the press a criticism on the sermons of his friend, the Rev. John Holland, and some animadversions on Dr. John Brown essayist John Brown s Essays on the Characteristics. His Virgil Englished , 1766, was dedicated to the Hon. Booth Grey. It is in blank verse , and attempted to convey the sense of Virgil line for line. This was a rare book, printed by John Baskerville . Another work of his, called Eidyllia , is a volume of poems, 1757, dedicated to the Hon. Charles Yorke . The preface contains a polemic on rhyme . References DNB wstitle Andrews, Robert Persondata Metadata see Wikipedia Persondata . NAME Andrews, Robert ALTERNATIVE NAMES SHORT DESCRIPTION DATE OF BIRTH 1723 PLACE OF BIRTH DATE OF DEATH 1766 PLACE OF DEATH DEFAULTSORT Andrews, Robert Category 1723 births Category 1766 deaths Category English Dissenters Category English translators Category English poets ... more details
Emily Taylor born 17 April 1795 in New Buckenham , Norfolk died circa February 1872 in St Pancras, London ref http www.hymntime.com tch bio t a y taylor e.htm Emily Taylor , hymntime.com ref was an English author, poet and hymnwriter. Life She was the sister of Edgar Taylor , also a writer and translator, from a Norfolk family. In 1825 she published The Vision of Las Casas, and Other Poems . The title poem, about a vision of the dying Bartolom de las Casas , has an anti slavery theme. Las Casas vision ends with his being granted a prophetic glimpse of the abolitionist movement in Taylor s own time, with specific mention of Thomas Clarkson and William Wilberforce . Taylor wrote numerous historical tales, works of instruction for children, and popular biographies she was also the writer of many hymns. Her works appeared in the Monthly Repository , amongst other publications. ref cite web url http www.ncse.ac.uk headnotes mrp.html title Monthly Repository 1806 1838 publisher NCSE date accessdate 2012 03 11 ref Originally a dissenter, she joined the Church of England under the influence of Frederick Denison Maurice . References s Page Dictionary of National Biography volume 55.djvu 413 Reflist Persondata Metadata see Wikipedia Persondata . NAME Taylor, Emily ALTERNATIVE NAMES SHORT DESCRIPTION DATE OF BIRTH 1795 PLACE OF BIRTH New Buckenham DATE OF DEATH 1872 PLACE OF DEATH Pancras, London DEFAULTSORT Taylor, Emily Category 1795 births Category 1872 deaths Category English abolitionists Category English children s writers Category English hymnwriters Category English poets ... more details
Dania Virgen Garc a is a Cuban dissident, blogger, human rights activist and independent journalist. She is a native Cuban, having been born in the capital city, Havana . She has been an active dissenter in Cuban affairs since 1988. Originally writing for local self published newspapers, in 2009 she established her own blog. ref http www.daniavirgengarcia.com Dania s blog ref Her articles are also regularly published by the Cuban independent weekly newspaper Primavera ref http www.primaveradecuba.org Primavera ref and the internet news server Cubanet.org , ref http www.cubanet.org Cubanet ref a site which informs readers about the current political and social situation in Cuba . Affiliations Dania Virgen Garc a is a regular participant in Havana s Ladies in White marches, a street protest held on Sundays by wives and relatives of Cuban political prisoners. She also co operates with the Human Rights Defence movement. Trouble with Cuban Authorities On April 22, 2010, Dania Virgen Garc a was arrested and subsequently sentenced to a prison term of one year and eight months. ref http worldwomeninternational.com ?p 332 ref At the time of her sentencing, the charges against her had still not been made known. Her conviction was later quashed on appeal. ref http news.bbc.co.uk 2 hi americas 8684245.stm Cuban court quashes dissident Garcia s jail sentence, BBC ref According to her blog ref http www.daniavirgengarcia.com 2012 04 detenida y golpeada antes de la misa.html ref , on March 27, 2012, Dania Virgen Garc a was again arrested ahead of a papal mass celebrated by Pope Benedict XI in Jose Marti Square, Havana. ref http edition.cnn.com 2012 03 28 world americas cuba pope visit index.html ref She was held for 33 hours and later released without charge. References Reflist External links http www.humanrightscuba.com http www.humanrightsdefence.org http www.capitolhillcubans.com Category Living people cs Dania Virgen Garc a ... more details
Joseph Bretland 1742 1819 , was an English Dissenter dissenting Minister Christianity minister . Life He was the son of Joseph Bretland, an Exeter tradesman, was born at Exeter 22 May 1742. He was for several years a day scholar at the Exeter grammar school , and was placed in business in 1757, but shortly after left it for the ministry. For this work he received a special education, his course of study being finished in 1766. From 1770 to 1772 he was minister of the Mint Chapel , and from the latter year until 1790 kept a classical school at Exeter. He resumed his duties at the Mint Chapel in 1789, and continued there until 1793. For three years, 1794 7, he acted as minister at the George s meeting house in Exeter, and on the establishment in 1799 of an academy in the West of England for educating ministers among the protestant dissenters, he was appointed one of its tutor s. This position he retained down to its dissolution in 1805, and he then retired into private life. In 1795 Bretland married Miss Sarah Moffatt. He died at Exeter 8 July 1819. He is described as a believer in the unity of the Deity and in the simple humanity of Jesus Christ, and he is styled a scholar of extensive and solid learning. Works Many of his theological papers are in Joseph Priestley s Theological Repository and in the Monthly Repository . He composed sermons and prayers for the use of Unitarians, including a Liturgy for the Use of the Mint Meeting in Exeter, 1792. After his death there were printed at Exeter two volumes of Sermons by the late Rev. Joseph Bretland, to which are prefixed Memoirs of his Life, by Wm. Benjamin Kennaway, 1820. He was attached to Priestley, and edited a new edition of his Rudiments of English Grammar many of his letters are printed in J. T. Rutt s memoirs of Priestley. References reflist DNB wstitle Bretland, Joseph Persondata Metadata see Wikipedia Persondata . NAME Bretland, Joseph ALTERNATIVE NAMES SHORT DESCRIPTION DATE OF BIRTH 1742 PLACE OF BIRTH DATE OF DEATH ... more details
Antrobus Hall is a country house in the village of Mobberley , Cheshire , England. It was built in 1709, and a wing was added in about 1760. ref name nhl Citation url http list.english heritage.org.uk resultsingle.aspx?uid 1329643 title Antrobus Hall, Mobberley year 2011 work The National Heritage List for England publisher English Heritage accessdate 12  June 2011 ref It was built for John Antrobus, a dissenter from Knutsford . ref Citation last de Figueiredo first Peter author link last2 Treuherz first2 Julian author2 link publication date date year 1988 title Cheshire Country Houses edition volume series publication place Chichester place publisher Phillimore pages page 211 format id isbn 0 85033 655 4 doi oclc url accessdate ref The hall is constructed in brick, and has a stone flagged roof. The house, together with its garden walls and gatepiers, have been designated by English Heritage as a Grade II listed building . ref name nhl The house has five bay architecture bays on the ground floor, and four on its upper floor. The gatepiers are Rustication architecture rusticated . ref Citation last Hartwell first Claire last2 Hyde first2 Matthew last3 Hubbard first3 Edward author3 link Edward Hubbard last4 Pevsner first4 Nikolaus author4 link Nikolaus Pevsner series The Buildings of England title Cheshire edition publisher Yale University Press year 2011 origyear 1971 location New Haven and London page 485 url doi id isbn 978 0 300 17043 6 ref References Reflist coord 53.30679 2.29978 display title region GB scale 2000 Category Houses completed in 1709 Category Grade II listed buildings in Cheshire Category Country houses in Cheshire Cheshire struct stub UK historic house stub UK listed building stub ... more details
Matthew Henry Barker 1790 1846 , was an English writer of sea tales. Biography Barker was born in 1790 at Deptford , where his father had attained some distinction as a Dissenter dissenting Minister Christianity minister . At an early age he joined an East Indiaman , and afterwards served in the Royal Navy , where, as he was without influence, he never rose beyond the rank of master s mate. Retiring from the service, he commanded a hired armed schooner , and was employed in carrying despatches to the English squadrons on the southern coasts of France and Spain. On one occasion he fell into the enemy s hands, and was detained for some months as prisoner of war. In 1825, he became editor of a Caribbean West Indian newspaper, and was afterwards employed, from 1827 to 1838, in a similar capacity at Nottingham . Under the name of The Old Sailor, he wrote a number of lively and spirited sea tales, very popular in their day. He was naval editor of the United Service Gazette , and a frequent contributor to the Literary Gazette , Bentley s Miscellany , and the Pictorial Times . For some astronomical discoveries he was presented with a telescope by the Royal Astronomical Society . Working hard to the last, he died on 29 June 1846. His chief works are Land and Sea Tales , 2 vols., 1836. Topsail sheet Blocks, or the Naval Foundling , 3 vols., 1838, of which a new edition was issued in 1881. Life of Nelson , 1836. The Naval Club, or Reminiscences of Service , 3 vols., 1843. The Victory, or the Wardroom Mess , 3 vols., 1844. Most of his works were illustrated by George Cruikshank , with whom he was on intimate terms, and to whose Omnibus he was the chief contributor. References reflist Cite DNB wstitle Barker, Matthew Henry Attribution DNB wstitle Barker, Matthew Henry Use dmy dates date June 2011 Persondata Metadata see Wikipedia Persondata . NAME Barker, Matthew Henry ALTERNATIVE NAMES SHORT DESCRIPTION DATE OF BIRTH 1790 PLACE OF BIRTH DATE OF DEATH 1846 PLACE OF DEATH DEFAULT ... more details
Orphan date October 2011 Jeremy Rabb born January 28, 1970 in Princeton, New Jersey is an American stage and screen actor. A graduate of the Institute for Advanced Theatre Training A.R.T. Institute at Harvard University , between 2005 and 2007 he had a recurring role as an ER Resident on the television series Grey s Anatomy . He is currently performing in the William Shakespeare comedy Twelfth Night, or What You Will with A Noise Within the Pasadena based theatrical company. ref http www.westsidetoday.com m2 6021 a noise within los.html ref Filmography Weeds TV series Weeds 2011 episode Off the Map TV series Off the Map 2011 episode Southland TV series Southland 2011 episode Grey s Anatomy 2005 2007, 10 episodes Let Others Suffer 2007 Send in the Clowns film Send in the Clowns 2006 Hope & Faith 2003 espisode The Opponent 2000 Schrodinger s Cat film Schrodinger s Ca t 2000 Africans in America America s Journey Through Slavery 1998 Renaissance The Dissenter 1991 References reflist External links IMDb name 1868557 Persondata Metadata see Wikipedia Persondata . NAME Rabb, Jeremy ALTERNATIVE NAMES SHORT DESCRIPTION American actor DATE OF BIRTH January 28, 1970 PLACE OF BIRTH DATE OF DEATH PLACE OF DEATH DEFAULTSORT Rabb, Jeremy Category 1970 births Category People from Princeton, New Jersey Category Actors from New Jersey Category American stage actors Category American television actors Category Harvard University alumni Category Living people US actor stub ... more details
unreferenced date October 2011 Infobox album See Wikipedia WikiProject Albums Name Ipanema Type studio Artist Ipanema band Ipanema Cover Border yes Released Start date 2008 1 18 Recorded 2002 2008 Genre Alternative Rock , Punk Rock Length 62 05 Label Boss Tuneage This album Ipanema br 2008 Misc Singles Name Ipanema Type studio Single 1 Je Suis Un Baseball Bat Skull single Je Suis Un Baseball Bat Single 1 date Start date 2003 Single 2 Je Suis Un Baseball Bat Skull single Skull Single 2 date Start date 2003 Released in 2008 after the death of front man Darren Brown Wiz under the label of Boss Tuneage . Ipanema Self titled is British rock band Ipanema band Ipanema s full length studio album, including tracks from their mini album Me Me Me , and their single Je Suis Un Baseball Bat Skull recorded in 2003, and 9 other unreleased songs. Track Listing Je Suis Un Baseball Bat Skull Nervosa White Cat in a Snowstorm Burkina Faso Flagburner Lockjaw Attrition Misery and Vomit Against the World Hyperkarma Rayguns to Venus Me Me Me Quarantine Is it Still Raining Outside? Dissenter Vote for Pedro DEFAULTSORT Ipanema Album Category 2008 albums Category Indie rock albums by British artists ... more details
Daniel Lascelles 6 November 1655 5 September 1734 , English landowner and politician of Winton, Stank and Hallikeld Stank and Northallerton , North Riding, Yorkshire, was elected to the House of Commons of England House of Commons as Member of Parliament for Northallerton UK Parliament constituency Northallerton at a by election on 3 February 1702. He did not stand for election again. He also served as High Sheriff of Yorkshire in 1719. Lascelles was the son of Francis Lascelles 1612 1667 of Stank Hall Kirby Sigston Yorkshire and his wife Frances, daughter of St Quintin Baronets Sir William St Quintin 1579 1649 , Baronet of Harpham Yorkshire. Francis Lascelles , regicide for which he was granted indemnity and a dissenter had been a colonel in the Parliament s army and was MP for the North Riding in 1653. Francis s trade connections extended to Ireland and Barbados. Daniel Lascelles married twice. By his first wife Margaret Metcalfe died 1690 daughter and heiress of William Metcalfe of Northallerton, his nine children included George Lascelles 1681 1729 Henry Lascelles 1690 1753 By his second wife Mary Lascelles 1662 1734 daughter of kinsman Edward Lascelles, merchant of Barbados and Stoke Newington London Edward Lascelles 1702 1747 , father of Edward Lascelles, 1st Earl of Harewood Francis Lascelles, died young References Eveline Cruickshanks and Ivar McGrath, The History of Parliament Online 1690 1715 , 2002 Simon David Smith, Slavery, family, and gentry capitalism in the British Atlantic, the world of the Lascelles 1648 1834 , Cambridge 2006 Persondata NAME Lascelles, Daniel ALTERNATIVE NAMES SHORT DESCRIPTION Members of the Parliament of England DATE OF BIRTH 6 November 1655 PLACE OF BIRTH DATE OF DEATH 5 September 1734 PLACE OF DEATH DEFAULTSORT Lascelles, Daniel Category 1655 births Category 1734 deaths Category Members of the Parliament of England pre 1707 Category High Sheriffs of Yorkshire Category People from Northallerton ... more details
Dr William Rose 1719 1786 was a Scottish schoolmaster and classical scholar. Life The eldest son of Hugh Rose of Birse , Aberdeenshire , he was educated at Marischal College, Aberdeen . He later served as usher to the John Murray, 4th Earl of Dunmore Earl of Dunmore at the Daventry Academy Northampton Academy of Philip Doddridge . He then moved to Kew , and in 1758 to Chiswick , where he conducted a successful school until his death, 4 July 1786. Though a dissenter and a Scot, Rose was a friend of Samuel Johnson but Johnson blamed his leniency on corporal punishment , for, said he, what the boys gain at one end they lose at the other. Among Rose s pupils was Charles Burney scholar Charles Burney the younger, who married his daughter Sarah. Among his friends was Bishop Lowth , and his executors were Cadell and William Strahan, the publishers. ref name DNB cite DNB wstitle Rose, Samuel first William Prideaux last Courtney volume 49 page 243 ref Works Besides editing Robert Dodsley s The Preceptor 2 vols. 1748 , he issued a translation of Sallust s Catiline s Conspiracy and Jugurthine War London, 1757 . The work was commended in the Bibliographical Miscellany and other reviews, and a fourth edition was edited by Abraham John Valpy in 1830. His classical library was sold by T. Payne on 1 March 1787. ref name DNB Family William Rose married Sarah, daughter of Dr. Samuel Clark Samuel Rose 1767 1804 was their son. ref name DNB Their daughter Anne married Edward Smith Foss, and was mother of Edward Foss . ref ODNBweb id 9955 title Foss, Edward first Michael last Lobban ref Notes reflist Attribution DNB wstitle Rose, Samuel Persondata NAME Rose, William ALTERNATIVE NAMES SHORT DESCRIPTION Translator and editor DATE OF BIRTH 1719 PLACE OF BIRTH DATE OF DEATH 4 July 1786 PLACE OF DEATH DEFAULTSORT Rose, William Category 1719 births Category 1786 deaths ... more details
, May June 1993, April 1994 A Modern Dissenter s Theology of Sexuality Moral Theologian Richard ... 1986 The Pentecostalism Controversy September 11, 1973 The Theology of Sexuality of a Modern Dissenter ... more details
Refimprove date August 2011 Eber Dudley Howe June 9, 1798 November 10, 1885 ref name JSP http josephsmithpapers.org person?name Eber Dudley Howe Biography of Eber Dudley Howe, The Joseph Smith Papers accessed January 13, 2012 ref was the founder and editor of the Painesville Telegraph , a newspaper that published in Painesville, Ohio from 1822 to 1835. Howe was the author of one of the first books that was critical of the spiritual claims of Joseph Smith, Jr. , founder of the Latter Day Saint movement . His 1834 book Mormonism Unvailed sic was based largely on affidavit s collected by Latter Day Saint dissenter Doctor Philastus Hurlbut and on the letters of dissenter Ezra Booth , which in 1831 had been published in the Ohio Star . Life Howe was born to Samuel William Howe and Mabel Dudley in Clifton Park, New York Clifton Park , Saratoga County, New York Saratoga County , New York . In 1804 the family moved to Ovid, New York and 1811 relocated to Upper Canada , living a few miles west of Niagara Falls, Ontario Niagara Falls . During the War of 1812 Howe joined the U.S. Army in Batavia, New York . After the war, Howe became involved in the newspaper business, working at the Buffalo Gazette in Buffalo, New York , the Erie Gazette in Erie, Pennsylvania , and the Cleveland Herald in Cleveland, Ohio . In 1822, he moved to Painesville, Ohio and began publishing the Painesville Telegraph . Under Howe s editorship, the Telegraph had a strongly abolitionism abolitionist editorial perspective. Howe s home was used as a station on the Underground Railroad, assisting fugitive slaves. In June 1823 he married Sophia Hull of Clarence, Ohio. ref name JSP While living in Painesville, Howe s wife, sister, and niece converted to Mormonism . On January 11, 1831, Howe wrote a letter to W. W. Phelps Mormon W. W. Phelps , a newspaper publisher in Canandaigua city , New York Canandaigua, New York , asking about the origins of the new religion. Phelps, who had read the Book of Mormon and me ... more details
Infobox religious biography background FFA500 name Daniel Williams image Daniel Williams.jpg religion Christianity Presbyterianism location Ireland , England and Wales Title Period Predecessor Successor ordination post previous post present post birth date 1643 birth place Wrexham , Denbighshire death date 26 January 1716 death place Hoxton , London For others of this name, see Daniel Williams disambiguation . The Revd. Dr. Daniel Williams c.1643 26 January 1716 in Wales 1716 was a Presbyterian Church of Wales Welsh Presbyterian benefactor, minister and theologian. Life Early ministry Williams was born in Wrexham , Denbighshire , and was a cousin of Stephen Davies, minister at Banbury . He became a preacher by the age of nineteen details of his education are unknown, though it was probably cut short by his Dissenters refusing to conform to Anglicanism on the English Restoration Restoration . He ministered in Ireland from 1664 to 1687. This posting was a result of his accepting an invitation from the countess of Meath to be her chaplain. He was a regular preacher to Drogheda s joint Presbyterian Independent congregation 1664 67 and then became Samuel Marsden s colleague at the congregation at Wood Street, Dublin 1667 87 . He acted as a peacemaker amongst the Scottish Presbyterians, fiercely opposed Catholicism and helped to maintain the Presbyterians union with the other Dissenter Dissenting congregations in Ireland, as well as exorcising a house by prayer in 1678 as recounted by Richard Baxter . London On a new outbreak of the Troubles and after being abandoned by Gilbert Rule a Scottish exile, and Williams assistant since 1682 , Williams left for London in September 1687. There he became an influential Dissenter , becoming friends with the leading ministers Richard Baxter and John Howe Puritan John Howe and twice being invited to preach before London s Lord Mayor of the City of London Lord Mayor , the Independent religion Independent Sir John Shorter. At a meeting ... more details
to Unitarians by the Doctrine of the Trinity Act 1813 . Like many Dissenter s, Elwall objected to the Tithe system that maintained the Church of England . In the seventeenth century, some Dissenter s had ... more details
Unitarforbundet B t D vid Unitarian Union Beth David, The Norwegian Unitarian Church the Hebrew house of David is the denomination of Unitarian Christianity in Norway. The Unitarian Church continues the Christian tradition, which today exists in the Hungarian and Romanian Unitarian Church. It shares this common background with the first Unitarian Church in Norway created by Kristofer Janson in 1895, but also places emphasis on practicing a common Jewish heritage, differentiating it from other denominations . The Norwegian Unitarian Church is located close to the Jewish Unitarian Szekler sabbatarianism and probably represents today one of the closest to the religious context called Judeo Christianity . Proximity to Judaism is due to a belief that Christianity must be understood through a Jewish perspective. This is justified historically from the fact that Christianity was regarded as a part of Judaism prior to the destruction of Jerusalem by the Romans in the year 70 AD. However, the Unitarian Church faith community is established in a clear liberal Christian historical tradition. HIstory In 1894, Hans Tambs Lyche 1859 1898 established Norway s first Unitarian periodical Free word . The year before he made an unsuccessful attempt to establish the country s first Unitarian Church. Based on the preliminary work that Tambs Lyche did, Kristofer Janson founded the first Unitarian Church in Norway in 1895. Until 1900 this church was called Broderskabets Church, but was later simply referred to as the Unitarian Society. Because this church community did not accept Jesus divinity, it was refused approval by Parliament in 1897 as a Christian church. Instead, it was approved as the country s other non Christian dissenter societies. The first non Christian dissenter society was the Jewish community. The Unitarian Society was in existence until 1937, when Unitarian pastor Herman Haugerud 1864 1937 died, leading to the closure of his congregation. Among the most famou ... more details
. . . being a calm examination of the sixth answer ... by a Prot. Dissenter anon. , 1736 ... Gate in Nottingham, &c., by a Prot. Dissenter anon. , 1738 in vindication of No. 4, which had been ... on the foregoing anon. , 1748 annexed is a letter from a London dissenter on kneeling at the Lord ... more details
in the Church. In 1638 Wroth, along with fellow dissenter Walter Craddock , resigned, but continued ... , completed in 1639, with the help of the leading Dissenter , Henry Jessey . The historic meeting ... more details
the Marcos administration. He was the lone dissenter in many cases, such the High Tribunal s decision ... at noon of February 25. Teehankee s fellow dissenter, Justice Vicente Abad Santos, administered the vice ... more details
Cuthbertson s Forest of Montalbano col 2 of 4 Dissenter s Magazine, 1794 1799 ref WorldCat http www.worldcat.org title protestant dissenters magazine oclc 7153422 Protestant dissenter s magazine . London ... more details
Infobox Historic Site name Dissenters Chapel, Kensal Green native name image The Dissenter s Chapel, Kensal Green cemetery geograph.org.uk 677264.jpg image size 220 caption Dissenters Chapel, br Kensal Green Cemetery locmapin Greater London map width 220 map caption Location in Greater London latitude 51.5269 longitude 0.2159 coordinates coord parameters coord display title coord format location gbgridref TQ 239 824 area elevation formed founded built 1831 34 built for General Cemetery Company demolished rebuilt 1997 restored restored by Historic Chapels Trust architect John Griffith architecture Neoclassical architecture Neoclassical visitation num visitation year governing body Friends of Kensal Green Cemetery designation1 Grade II designation1 offname designation1 type designation1 criteria designation1 date 15 April 1969 delisted1 date designation1 parent designation1 number designation1 free1name designation1 free1value designation1 free2name designation1 free2value designation1 free3name designation1 free3value designation2 designation2 offname designation2 type designation2 criteria designation2 date delisted2 date designation2 parent designation2 number designation2 free1name designation2 free1value designation2 free2name designation2 free2value designation2 free3name designation2 free3value Dissenters Chapel, Kensal Green , is a redundant church redundant chapel in Kensal Green Cemetery , Kensal Green , London. It has been designated by English Heritage as a Grade  II listed building, ref name images Citation url http list.english heritage.org.uk resultsingle.aspx?uid 1080628 title The Dissenters Chapel, Kensington year 2011 work The National Heritage List for England publisher English Heritage accessdate 17  May 2011 ref and is under the care of the Historic Chapels Trust . ref name hct Citation url http www.hct.org.uk chapels london dissenters chapel ... was reserved for the use of dissenter s. ref name friends A competition to build the chapel was won ... more details