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Clergy -- Correspondence.

 Subject
Subject Source: Library of Congress Subject Headings

Found in 36 Collections and/or Records:

Reuben A. Beard papers, 1873-1945.

 Collection
Identifier: MS5095
Abstract

Reuben Alview Beard served as a Congregational minister, with the Home Missions, and as president of Fargo College. The collection consists of clippings, brochures, photographs, programs, biographical information, and correspondence.

Dates: 1873-1945

Rev. John Mack papers, 1921-2019.

 Collection
Identifier: MS5555
Abstract John Mack was born on March 7th, 1942, in New York City to Grace and Lewis Mack. He was the middle of three children and was raised in New Canaan, Connecticut. John attended Union Theological Seminary and received his Master of Divinity degree in 1971. While there, he met his future wife, Barbara Gerlach. In 1971, they would serve as co-pastors of Trinity Congregational UCC in Scranton, Pennsylvania. In 1984, John started to serve as the pastor of First Congregational Church in Washington,...
Dates: 1921-2019

Rhode Island Conference of the United Church of Christ records, 1812-2019.

 Collection
Identifier: RG0150
Abstract The Rhode Island Domestic Missionary Society was formed in 1802 and the Evangelical Consociation of Congregational Churches was formed in 1806. The two entities merged in 1912 as the Rhode Island Congregational Conference. The Rhode Island Congregational Conference merged with the Rhode Island and Massachusetts Christian Conference in 1931 to form the Rhode Island Congregational Christian Conference. After the formation of the United Church of Christ, the conference was known as the Rhode...
Dates: 1812-2019

Samuel Hopkins correspondence, 1766-1767, 1803.

 Collection
Identifier: MS4865
Abstract Rev. Samuel Hopkins (1721-1803) was a Congregational minister in the New England area. . Hopkins preached in Sheffield (now Great Barrington), Massachusetts, from 1743-1769 and then preached at the First Congregational Church in Newport, Rhode Island, from 1770 until his death in 1803. He is best known for his theological work that formed part of the theological scheme known as New Divinity, or Hopkinsianism. This collection contains three letters written by Samuel Hopkins; two thank a...
Dates: 1766-1767, 1803