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Topic: Samuel Ward


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In the News (Thu 31 Dec 09)

  
 Samuel Ward - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Samuel was born in Newport, Rhode Island in 1725 to Richard Ward and his wife, Mary Tillinghast Ward.
Samuel Ward (May 25, 1725 – March 26, 1776) was an American farmer, shop keeper, and statesman from Westerly, Rhode Island.
Ward was also one of those who joined together to found the College of Rhode Island (now Brown University) which he served as a trustee from 1764 until his death.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Samuel_Ward   (379 words)

  
 Samuel A. Ward - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Samuel Ward was born on December 28, 1847 in Newark, New Jersey.
Samuel Augustus Ward died on September 28, 1903 in Newark, New Jersey.
Samuel Augustus Ward (1847-1903) was an American organist and composer.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Samuel_A._Ward   (151 words)

  
 Probert Encyclopaedia: People and Peoples (Samuel B-Samuq)
Samuel Bochart was a French theologian and Oriental scholar.
SAMUEL B. Samuel B Moore was an American politician.
SAMUEL H. Samuel H Elrod was an American politician.
www.probertencyclopaedia.com /CDA.HTM   (2240 words)

  
 Samuel Ward King - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Samuel Ward King (May 22, 1786- January 20, 1851) of Johnston, Providence County, Rhode Island, was the Governor of Rhode Island, 1839-43, who took a strong stand against the expanded voting franchise that led to the Dorr Rebellion in 1841 - 1842.
King was Presidential Elector for Rhode Island in the election of 1832; Interment at a private or family graveyard, Providence County, Rhode Island.
President John Tyler refused to send in Federal troops at Governor King's request to suppress the uprising.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Samuel_Ward_King   (117 words)

  
 ward_sa.htm
Ward stu­died mu­sic under Jan Py­chow­ski and others in New York Ci­ty, and found­ed a mu­sic store in New­ark. He be­came or­gan­ist at Grace Epis­co­pal Church, New­ark, in 1880, suc­ceed­ing Hen­ry Cut­ler; a brass plaque in his mem­o­ry was placed on the par­ish house there in 1934.
Ward al­so founded New­ark’s Or­phe­us Club in 1889.
www.cyberhymnal.org /bio/w/a/r/ward_sa.htm   (74 words)

  
 Governor Samuel Ward and his Confession of Faith > The Good News : September/October 1995
The untimely death of Samuel Ward was a shock to the delegates.
Samuel Ward is but one of many during this period who was willing to state his strong belief in God's Sabbath and rejection of other ideas such as the Trinity.
Samuel Ward rose to prominence in this tiny New England colony in the middle of the 18th century.
www.gnmagazine.org /issues/gn01/governorsamuelward.htm   (1355 words)

  
 African American Registry: Rev. Samuel R Ward, spiritual abolitionist . . .
Ward himself became involved in the rescue of a fugitive slave in 1851.
Ward was very talented as an orator and educator of religion.
Ward grew up in New York, and was placed at a public school in Mulberry Street.
www.aaregistry.com /african_american_history/1584/Rev_Samuel_R_Ward_spiritual_abolitionist   (378 words)

  
 W
Samuel Miller Ward came into this world at Middletown, Ohio, on April 26, 1825, and the last forty years of his life was spent at and near Monon, dying at the latter place August 10, 1895.
Ward in addition to accumulating a substantial degree of material prosperity also deserve a great deal of credit for having hrought into the world and trained to the principles of truth and honesty a large family of children.
Ward has lived in White County, has met and accepted hazard of chance and circumstance, has steadily strengthened a reputation for integrity and unimpeachable conduct, and along with a fair degree of well won prosperity he has acquired those inestimable riches of character and honor.
www.brookston.lib.in.us /WhiteCo/biographies-W.htm   (15952 words)

  
 Rhode Island - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
King Philip (his British nickname, his real name was Metacomet) was the chief of the Wampanoag Indians.
Historically, the land is unique because it was purchased twice, once from the King of England, and once from the Native American tribes who lived on the land.
In 1637 Anne Hutchinson was banished from Massachusetts for expressing her beliefs that people could talk to God by themselves, not necessarily through a minister.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Rhode_Island   (1893 words)

  
 Samuel Ward
In consequence of his sending the college-plate to be coined for the King’s use, the parliamentary authorities deprived Dr. Ward of his professorship and mastership, and confiscated his goods.
On his return, Dr. Ward resumed his duties as head of Sidney College.
King James sent him, in 1618, to the Synod of Dort, in Holland, together with Bishops Carleton, Davenant, and Hall; as the four divines most able and meet to represent the Church of England, at that famous Council.
www.geocities.com /Heartland/Village/9553/sward.html   (1346 words)

  
 joelgarver.com - samuel ward on infant baptism
Downham had held the rectorship of Great Mundon prior to when James I granted it to Samuel Ward after the succession of Downham to the Bishopric of Derry (Ward was succeeded at Great Mundon by John Lightfoot).
Ward concurred with Calvinist figures such as Davenant, Richard Hooker, and John Forbes, that baptism remits original sin in all baptized infants, while nonetheless maintaining Dort's doctrine of perseverance, since, for these figures, the soteric experiences of infants were not taken as univocal with those of adult converts.
Ward, a moderate Puritan himself, was a student of the Puritan William Perkins and always remained favorable towards Puritanism, even when Puritanism was not a popular position and despite Ward's remaining a staunch royalist.
www.joelgarver.com /writ/hist/ward.htm   (1376 words)

  
 Portrait of Samuel Ward
Young Samuel Ward was the son of the late Chief Alderman of Derby, and his widowed mother was chosen to play host to the Prince when he stayed at Essex House in Derby on December 4th.
As a child Samuel Ward had been appointed taster to Prince Charles Edward Stuart ‘The Young Pretender’, when the Prince had stayed in Derby in December 1745 during his invasion of England at the head of a Scottish army.
Ward was chosen for the dangerous-sounding but honorific post of taster to the Prince, for which he was presented with a diamond ring.
www.historicalportraits.com /p_view.asp?ID=1368656NMfDmSRerpk4uNNWdMHSC5s1q   (308 words)

  
 MSN Encarta - Search View - Rhode Island
In May Dorr, who was elected governor in the People’s Party vote, was inaugurated at Providence, and Samuel Ward King, the winner of the regular election, was sworn in the next day at Newport, giving Rhode Island two rival state governments.
Because Samuel Slater built the first successful American cotton mill in the state in 1793, Rhode Island is sometimes referred to as the cradle of the American factory system.
In 1790 Samuel Slater, a recent immigrant from Britain, reproduced machinery in Pawtucket for spinning cotton.
encarta.msn.com /text_761572815__1/Rhode_Island.html   (10807 words)

  
 American Treasures: Sample Story
In spite of numerous attempts by composers everywhere to put her poem to their music, she favored a hymn by Samuel A.Ward called "Materna" which is the Latin word for "motherly".
Samuel Francis Smith, an early graduate of Harvard who went into the ministry in 1832, composed the lyrics (My Country Tis of Thee).
It was published in the colonies in 1761 and was adopted as an all-purpose tune for which a wide variety of patriotic texts were fitted.
www.guitarartistry.com /americana/sample_story.htm   (977 words)

  
 The GENE Shed - Thomas Wilson Dorr
Samuel Ward King was thus the last Governor of Rhode Island under theold Royal Carter.
Meanwhile Governor King foreseeing the rapid growth of the suffragistparty and its revolutionary and rebellious attitude towards theestablished government would lead to serious trouble, on 4 April 1842,sent a committee and two letters to President Tyler at Washington,stating "that Rhode Island was threatened with domestic violence," andasking for recognition and assistance in case of need.
Awaiting trial injail, Dorr worked on his defense with his attorney, Samuel Y. Atwell.Unfortunately, just before the trial began, Atwell became seriouslyill and Dorr was left to defend himself before the court that wasopenly hostile.
deckernet.com /Genealogy/DeckerGenealogy/5558.htm   (6683 words)

  
 An American Time Capsule: Three Centuries of Broadsides and Other Printed Ephemera: Titles: 15
Whereas the King in Parliament, being desirous to restore the blessings of reconciliation and peace to Great-Britain and the colonies, did in the course of the last year, repeal certain acts, which were found to have excited jealousies...
By His Excellency Benjamin Fletcher, Captain General and Governor in Chief of Their Majesties Province of New-York, Province of Pennsilvania, County of New-Castle, and the territories and tracts of land depending thereon in America, and vice-admiral of the same...
By His Excellency Benjamin Fletcher, Captain General and Governor in Chief of their Majesties Province of New-York, Province of Pennsylvania, County of New-Castle, and the Territories and tracts of land depending theron in America, and vice-admiral of the same.
lcweb2.loc.gov /ammem/rbpehtml/rbpebibTitles15.html   (5697 words)

  
 Account of a Declaration; Biographies
He was active in the Rhode Island Sons of Liberty, and was sent to the Continental Congress in 1776 to replace Samuel Ward, who had died.
Samuel Chase was born in Maryland on the seventeenth of April, 1741.
Samuel was a very visible popular leader who, along with John, spend a great deal of time in the public eye agitating for resistance.
www.leftjustified.com /leftjust/lib/sc/ht/decl/gbioa-e.html   (3360 words)

  
 Samuel Beckett Resources and Links
Samuel Beckett was awarded the Nobel Prize in literature, but perhaps he should have also received one in another category: physics.
Samuel Beckett is sui generis...He has given a voice to the decrepit and maimed and inarticulate, men and women at the end of their tether, past pose or pretense, past claim of meaningful existence.
Samuel Beckett raconté par les siens dans n° 372, Janvier 1999.
www.samuel-beckett.net   (7800 words)

  
 King James Bible Book 10: Old Testament: 2 Samuel - Chapter 11
And Ziba said, The asses be for the king's household to ride on; and the bread and summer fruit for the young men to eat; and the wine, that such as be faint in the wilderness may drink.
And he took their king's crown from off his head, the weight whereof was a talent of gold with the precious stones: and it was set on David's head.
And when king David came to Bahurim, behold, thence came out a man of the family of the house of Saul, whose name was Shimei, the son of Gera: he came forth, and cursed still as he came.
www.worldwideschool.org /library/books/relg/bible/KingJamesBible10-20Samuel/chap2.html   (10025 words)

  
 King
William King _ mf 1726 Aug 21 Mary Slait _ she of Oyster Bay, LI, NY, he of Hempstead, LI, NY LDSR0017693 (Schlect?) Anna King _ zf 1729 May 08 to William King et ux Mary at Oyster Bay Rv Samuel Seabury and Rv.
This Jeremiah King mf Hannah Young df 1833 Oct 15 at 80Y, (gravestone), and was the father of Rev. Ezra King, of Brookhaven, LI.
King _ and Miss Abigail King, presumably husband and daughter of the deceased.
www.cowaro.com /Genealogy/Surname_file/King.html   (8279 words)

  
 An American Time Capsule: Three Centuries of Broadsides and Other Printed Ephemera: Titles: 16
By his Excellency, Samuel Ward King, Governor Captain general, and Commander-in-chief of the State of Rhode-Island and Providence plantations A proclamation.
By the Honourable Col. Francis Nicholson, and Col. Samuel Vetch.
By the Honourable George Thomas, Esq; Lieutenant Governor and Commander in chief of the Province of Pennyslvania and the Counties of New-Castle, Kent and Sussex upon Delaware.
www.bonus.com /contour/Suffrage/http@@/memory.loc.gov:8081/ammem/rbpehtml/rbpebibTitles16.html   (5499 words)

  
 King James Version KJV
King James gave the translators instructions, which were designed to discourage polemical notes, and to guarantee that the new version would be conformed to the ecclesiology of the Church of England.
The King James Version (KJV) is an English translation of the Holy Bible, commissioned for the benefit of the Church of England at the behest of King James I of England.
At the Hampton Court conference, King James proposed that a new translation be commissioned to settle the controversies, and hopefully, to replace the Geneva Bible and its offensive notes in the popular esteem.
www.all-bibles.com /about-KJV.php   (2528 words)

  
 Samuel Ward Papers (Coll. 271)
Ward's father, also Samuel Ward, was the governor of Rhode Island and his brother Richard briefly ran a New York city merchantile concern in partership with Samuel.
Samuel Ward was a Rhode Island merchant and Lieut.
Capt Ward accompanied Benedict Arnold in the attack on Quebec and was aid-de-camp to General Washington and rose to Lieut.
www.mysticseaport.org /library/manuscripts/coll/coll271/coll271.html   (352 words)

  
 Sam Ward Lab - University of Arizona
esearch in the Ward Lab focuses on an extraordinary cell: the sperm cell of a microscopic worm, called
www.mcb.arizona.edu /Wardlab   (18 words)

  
 Samuel Ward
In consequence of his sending the college-plate to be coined for the King’s use, the parliamentary authorities deprived Dr. Ward of his professorship and mastership, and confiscated his goods.
When the Assembly of Divines was convened at Westminster, 1643, Dr. Ward was summoned as a member, but never attended.
On his return, Dr. Ward resumed his duties as head of Sidney College.
www.geocities.com /Heartland/Village/9553/sward.html   (1346 words)

  
 Center for Church Music :: Samuel A. Ward
Samuel Augustus Ward, composer of "America, the Beautiful," was born in 1847.
In 1890, Ward formed a male vocal group.
Labeled a genius by people who knew him, he was an unassuming man who enjoyed life one day at a time.
community.gospelcom.net /Brix?pageID=9567   (133 words)

  
 Julia Ward Howe
Julia Ward was born in New York City, third of the six children of Julia Rush Cutler and Samuel Ward, a wealthy banker.
Julia Ward Howe (May 27, 1819-October 17, 1910), little known today except as author of "The Battle Hymn of the Republic," was famous in her lifetime as poet, essayist, lecturer, reformer and biographer.
Samuel returned to Boston while Julia and the children wintered in Rome with her sisters.
www.uua.org /uuhs/duub/articles/juliawardhowe.html   (2575 words)

  
 Ward Samuel - new and used books
WARD, Samuel B. Embolism of the Arteries of the Extremities.
Samuel Ward - A Page a Day One-Year Perpetual Diary
Ward used his powerful oratorical skills overseas, and lived the remainder of his life in Jamaica, free from the constant threat of arrest.
www.isbn.pl /A-ward-samuel   (1492 words)

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