manual of the broadway tabernacle church, n.y. containing
TRANSCRIPT
GC974.702N422nee1851486
GENEALOGY COLLECTION
M A N IJ A I
OK TIIK
Sain’JUuU (fhuvch:
CONTAIN I S(i
THE HISTORY OP THE CHURCH
PRINCIPLES, RULES, COVENANT, ARTICLES OK KAITH
r ^ H t
|NEWBERRYLiBF^ Ry
O A. 'I' A I . < >< . U I •
COMPILED liY” TIIK COMMITTEE 01 TIIK Clll K« II
NEW YORK:
W. H. TUAK.uN * Ci. STATIOMKU8 ANI» KM*5 ANU If"*" Stukkt
1866 .
Digitized by the Internet Archive
in 2015
https://archive.org/details/manualofbroadwayOOnewy
18514bb
D20516.59
/•NEW YORK. BROADWAY li
Manual coat i in 1 I
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MANUAI
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The Broadway Tabernacle Church was organized
,in July, 1840, by the union of sixty-seven persons in
a covenant for that purpose. Its public recognition
by an ecclesiastical council took place on the 3d
of September in the same year. The sermon was
preached by Rev. Leonard. Bacon, 1). D., of NewIlaven, Conn., the charge given by Rev. John
Todd, D. D., then of Philadelphia, and the right
hand of fellowship by Rev. William Patton, D. D.,
of New York.
In October following an Ecclesiastical Society was
incorporated, pursuant to statute, under the name of
the u Broadway Tajjernacle Society .'5
The Rev. E. W. Andrews, of West Hartford, Conn.,
having accepted the call of the Church and Society,
was publicly installed on Sabbath evening, January
31st, 1841. Rev. W. W. Andrews, then of Kent,
preached the installation sermon;Rev. Mark Tucker,
D. D., of Providence, gave the charge to the pastor;
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4 MANUAL OF THE
Rev. E. L. Cleveland, D. D., of New Haven, gave the
charge to the people;and Rev. S. AV. S. Dutton, D. D.,
of New Haven, gave the right hand of fellowship.
In the summer of 1844 Mr. Andrews resigned hisj
pastoral charge, and he was dismissed by a mutual
Council on the 14th of August.
In March, 1845, the Church and Society presented >
a unanimous call to the liev. Joseph P. Thompson,!]
then of New Haven, Conn., to become their pastor.
He was installed on the 1.5th of the following April. 1
Rev. Leonard Bacon, I). I)., preached the sermon;
Rev. Samuel Merwin ottered the installing prayer
;
Rev. A. 0. Baldwin gave the charge to the pastor;
Rev. S. AV. S. Dutton, D. I)., gave the right hand of
fellowship; and Rev. Edwin TIolt addressed the peo-
Pie._ ^ |
For twelve years after the settlement of Dr. Thomp-son the Church continued to worship in the u Broad-
j
way Tabernacle,” from which it derived its name.
This building, situated on the east side of Broadway,
between Leonard and AVortli streets, was erected in'
1836.* In 1840 the house was purchased by Mr.!
David Hale, under foreclosure, and was by him leased!
to the Congregational Society formed in connection
with the Broadway Tabernacle Church. At the set-;
tlement of Dr. Thompson, in 1845, the Tabernacle
Society purchased the property, Mr. Hale encourag-
ing the movement by a liberal subscription.
So long as the location continued to be central to.
* The religious society which first occupied this building was Con-
gregational in its organization; but in 1838 “The Free Church,” which
had for some time worshipped at the corner of Washington and Dey
streets, united with it, and it became Presbyterian.
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BROADW AY TAUKRN AOLK ('HUROH.
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the population ot* the city, the vast cdiiiee was ordi-
narily tilled, and often thronged, upon the Sabbathby a congregation composed largely of strangers,
young men, and persons who, having no stated
place of worship, sought occasionally the privileges
of the Gospel in the ample free galleries of the
Tabernacle. The great Head of the Church mani-
festly smiled upon the enterprise, and made it an in-
strument for his glory in the salvation of many souls.
Since the organization of the Tabernacle Church, sev-
eral Congregational Churches have been formed in
New York, Brooklyn, and vicinity, and the principles
of the Congregational faith and order have been wide-
ly diffused beyond the pale of New England. In
several instances the organization of new Churches
may be distinctly traced to the example and influence
of the Tabernacle as the mother Church. This Church
has ‘itself been blessed with many seasons of special
mercy, and during the first twenty-live years of its
existence there were added to it by profession 45(),
by letter 1,000.
In June, 1S55, the Broadway Tabernacle Society,
after mature deliberation, unanimously voted to au-
thorize their Board of Trustees to sell the Tabernacle,
and seek a location for the Church in the midst of
the resident population of the city. The encroach-
ments of business compelling* families to remove up
town, made it well nigh impossible longer to sustain
the Church in its original home. In 1857 the Taber-
nacle was sold, and the last religious service was held
within its walls on the 26th of April in that year.
A site was selected for the new Tabernacle at the
intersection of Broadway, Sixth avenue, and Thirty-
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G MANUAL (XV THE
tburtli street, nearly three miles north of the old loca
tion, and the building was completed in April, 1859
Daring the interval the Church worshipped in the
City Assembly Rooms, the chapel of the u Home for
the Friendless,” and the chapel of the new building on
Thirty-fourth street.
The Tabernacle faces the Sixth avenue, which I
Broadway here crosses diagonally. It is built upon
a lot which measures 100 feet on the avenue by 150
feet on Thirty-fourth street ; and the building is 89
feet 8 inches front, and 150 deep, including the chapel
in the rear, which is under the same roof. The main
audience-room is 70 feet wide by 00 feet in depth in
the clear, exclusive of the recess for the pulpit;the
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entire length from the pulpit-screen to the front wall
is 118 feet.
In the ground plan of the interior the building pre-{
seats a parallelogram; but the roof is cruciform, and|
the elevation of the transepts gives a pleasing variety !
to the exterior walls and buttresses. On the corner
of Thirty-fourth street and the avenue is a massiveJ
and finely-proportioned tower, 135 feet in height.
The side view presents three tiers of windows;the
lower tier lighting the aisles, the second the galleries,
and the third forming the clear story of the nave.
The several heights of the building outside are 32 feet
to the top of the aisle walls, (H feet to the top of the
nave—the clear story rising 32 feet above the aisles—
and 88 feet to the ridge of the roof. The transept
walls are carried up to a line with the ridge;these
have a lower tier of three windows, and a great triple
window above. Directly in the rear of the transept
wall, the wall of the chapel rises to the same eleva-
BROADWAY TABERNACLE CIUJRCU. 7
tion with that ot* the aisles, and above this again, is
seen the clear story, which here forms an apsis, in
the rear of the pulpit, over the chapel—thus presenting
in the interior of the church, an arched ceiling 150
feet long, at an elevation ot* nearly TO feet from the
floor.
The style of the building is perpendicular Gothic,
carried out with a chaste and almost severe simplicity,
which imparts an air of grandeur and beauty to the
whole structure. The interior elfeet is rich and im-
posing.
The windows are- of colored glass, so happily toned
as to subdue the light without making it sombre, and
arc free alike from grotesque figures and gaudy colors.
The Avails are colored uniformly in drab. The pews
are of oak, without doors, and are finished with crim-
son upholstery;and the pulpit, the organ case, and
the galleries correspond with the oaken pews. There
are 312 pews in the house, 212 on the ground floor.
These are arranged in three double-blocks, with an
extra- tier of Avail pews upon either side; that is, there
are eight row s of pews the entire length of the build-
ing, divided by lour aisles. The front gallery ex-
tends back over the vestibule, to the front Avail of the
building, and contains some of the most eligible pews
in the house. Each gallery contains five rows of
pews through its entire length. Counting only the
sittings unobstructed by the pillars, the house Avill
seat comfortably about 1,600 persons.
Back of the pulpit, upon either side, is a gallery
for the choir, the manuals of the organ being upon
the same floor. The great organ, Avith the “swell’
and “pedal,” occupies the space in the apsis over the
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M A X CAL OF T11Ks
cluipel, and the choir organ is directly over the puj
pit, at a lower level.
The following Scheme of the Organ exhibits it
compass, variety, and power, and its admirable adap]
ation to the demands of Church music :
COMPASS ON THE MANUALS CC to G-, 56 Keys.
COMPASS ON THE PEDALS CCC to E, 20 Keys.
CHEAT ORGAN. 12 STOPS.;
SWELL ORGAN, 11 STOPS.
1. Double open Diapason 1(» feet.
2. Open Diapason s **
3. Gamba S k *
4. Stop Diapason 8 *•
5. Melodia 8 “
G. Ni.aiit Horn 4 **
7. Prineipal 4 k *
8 . Twelfth 3 ”
i). Fifteenth 2 .
10. Sesquialtera ....3 ranks.
11. Trumpet 8 feet.
T2. Clarion 4 •
13. .Bourdon 1G feet.
14. Open Diapason . S ”
15. Dulciana S * k
1G. Stop Diapason 3 kk
17. Prineipal 4 ‘*
IS. Fifteenth 2'*
10. Cornet 2 ranks.
*20. Mixture 3 kk
21. Hautboy 8 feet.
*2*2. Trumpet S kk
23. Clarion 4 *•
CllOlli ORGAN, 0 STOPS.
24. Open Diapason 8 feet.
Stop Diapason 8 k *
Prineipal ... 4 *•
Flute Harmonic 4 11
Pieolo 2“
Cremona . . 8 k *
PEDAL ORGAN, 7 STOPS.
30. Double Open Diapason, ,
wood 32 feet
31. Open Diapason,* wood 10 k *
32. Grand open Diapason,
metal 10 * k
33. Gamba, metal 1G **
34. Trombone, metal 1G k *
85. Quint, wood 12 **
3G. Violoncello, metal... 8“
COUPLERS, OR MECHANICAL STOPS.
Swell to Great.
Choir ki Great.
Swell k* C’hoir.
40. Great to Pedal.
41. Swell * k Pedal.
42. Choir k* Pedal.
43. Vox Tremulant.
14. Bellows Attachment.
45. Bellows Alarm.
COMPOSITION STOPS.
40. Full.|
47. Chorus. 48. Solo.
BJlT WO 48A* 1
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The Tabernacle is built of Little Falls (Jersey) rub-
ble;the’ dimension-stone and the porches throughout
are of cream-colored New- Brunswick stone. The front
porch, of this stone, is a beautiful specimen of carved
Gothic. The outer doors are of solid oak. There are
ample facilities for ingress and egress.
The chapel, directly in the rear of the main audi-
ence-room, is 28 feet by 85 in the clear, and will seat
nearly 500 persons. This is used as the principal
Sabbath-School room, the seats being fitted with re-
versible backs. Under this is a finished basement-
room, with a good entrance from Thirty-fourth street;
and over it a fine suite of rooms for Bible classes, and
parlors for social gatherings.
On the north side of the main building, at the angle
formed with it by the rear wall of the chapel, is a neat
two-story edifice for the accommodation of the pastor.
On the first floor is a reception-room, which communi-
cates with the chapel, and with the pulpit of the
church. In the second-story is the study, well-lighted
and ventilated, with ample book-shelves and closets;
and adjoining this, occupying the recess between the
Church and the Chapel, is an additional library, of
two stories, with book-cases, drawers, and galleries for
maps. All these apartments are for the pastor’s pri-
vate use.
The new Tabernacle was dedicated to the worship
of Almighty God, on Sabbath, April 24th, 1859.
Devotional Services were conducted by Rev. Milton
Badger, D. D., Secretary of the American Home Mis-
sionary Society, and the sermon was preached by Rev.
Edwards A. Park, D.D., Professor in Andover Theo-
logical Seminary, from 1. Cor. ii : 2. The pastor ot
10 MANUAL OF THE
the Oh urcli offered the prayer of dedication, prefacing
it with the following declaration :
u It does not accord with our views of worship under
the Christian dispensation, nor with the usages of our
body, to attach sanctity to a material structure. Hut
it does accord with the inmost sense of propriety and 1
with the devout sentiment of Christian gratitude, and I
it lias also the warrant of Scripture, that we should set
apart with due solemnity the place in which we and
our children shall worship God, and should hallow it
in our thoughts and associations. Now, therefore, ()
ye people, blessed of the Lord, I would call upon you
to arise, and join with me in offering this new temple
to the service of the Triune God—the Father, the Son,
and the Iloly Ghost.u AVe bring to God, with reverence and gratitude,
this house of prayer and praise, beseeching him to
hallow it with his presence in our assemblies and his
blessing upon our worship. AVe dedicate these walls
to the use of a church of Christ. AVe dedicate thoe
seats for the solemn and joyful convocations of God’s
people, in the reverent worship of his Name, and the
devout hearing of his AVord. AVe dedicate this choir
to the service of song in the house of the Lord. AVe
dedicate this pulpit to the preaching of Christ and
him crucified;and this table of communion to that
high and sacred service whereby we do show forth the
Lord’s death till he come. May he whose glory tills
the heavens condescend to meet his people in this
house ! May Christ here build into his temple new
and living stones ! May the 1 Toly Spirit here bless the
AVord unto sanctification and eternal life! May our
•children and our children’s children here worship in
BROADWAY TABERNACLE CHURCH. It
the beauty of holiness, when we shall slumber in the
dust! And when our earthly house of this Taberna-
cle shall be dissolved, may we enter upon a purer,
nobler worship in that city where the Lord God Al-
mighty and the Lamb are the temple of it ! And to
the King Eternal, Immortal, Invisible, the only wise
God, be glory in the church by Christ Jesus, through-
out all ages, world without end, Amen !"’
At the completion of the new Tabernacle there wasa debt upon the building of sixty-five thousand dol-
lars. The Society might have relieved itself of this
encumbrance by the common expedient ofselling pews
;
but it was resolved that there should be no private
ownership in the building; and as the financial con-
dition of the community was not then favorable fora
subscription towards reducing the indebtedness, the
Trustees decided to carry the debt until arrangements
could be made for removing it. In the Spring of 1863,
the congregation, having then largely increased, \>y a
free-will offering paid off twenty-five thousand dollars-
of this indebtedness; and in 1861, by a renewed sub-
scription, consummated on the second Sabbath in
March, they raised the remaining sum of forty thous-
and dollars, and cancelled every claim upon the pro-
perty. The Society now holds the land, the building,
and all its furniture free of encumbrance, for the occu-
pation and use of the Broadway Tabernacle Church*
12 MANUAL OF T1IH
PRINCIPLESOK
CONGREGATIONALISM.
[The iollowing statement of Congregational Principles andUsages published by the Congregational Board of Publication,
will be of service to members of the Church, in respect to their
personal privileges and duties).
I. Power of tee Church.
—
It is a fundamental
principle of Congregationalism that all ecclesiastical
power resides in the associated body of the brethren,
and not in tlie officers, nor in ecclesiastical bodies dis-
tinct from or above the particular or local Church.
The principal powers pertaining to the Church may be
classified as follows :
—
1st. The power of electing its own officers.—The
Bishops,or Pastors and Teachers
,and the Deacons
,
are elected by a majority of the Church.
2d. The power of admitting or excluding its oven
members .—Persons are admitted to the Church by a
vote of the brethren : unworthy members are ex-
cluded in the same manner.
3d. The power of forming its own creed.—Each
Church frames its own Confession of Faith / yet it is
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worthy of notice, as showing the unity of the teaching
of the Spirit, and the safety of trusting the local
Churches, that although the Confessions framed bythese Churches may be counted by hundreds, there is
the most substantial harmony and even identity of
doctrine among them, upon the essential truths of re-
ligion.
4th. The power of reyulatiny the details of its ownworship, and modes of procedure in e.rercisiny the
previouspowers.—The mode in which public worship
shall be performed, the seasons for communion, the
mode of receiving or disciplining its own members,
special seasons for religious worship, are all regulated
by vote of the Church.
5th. The power of independency.—That is, each
Church has these powers in and of itself, which it mayexercise without responsibility to any ecclesiastical
authority above itself. Its votes on all these points
are decisive and iinal. No ecclesiastical power can
impose on any Church a religious teacher, or other
officer; or admit or exclude members; or form its
creed; or regulate its mode of proceeding. Each
Church has the exclusive right of managing its owno o oconcerns.
II. Officers.—Congregational Churches have two
permanent and regularly elected classes of officers.
These are Bishops (usually styled Pastors),and Dea-
cons.
In the early history of New England, it was com-
mon for each Church to enjoy the labors of two
ministers (distinguished as Pastor and Teacher), and
the primitive Churches appear to have had several,
composing a Ministerial Elderhood, or Presbytery, in
14 MANUAL OF TIIK
(not over) each local Church;Acts 14 : 23 ;
Titus 1:5;1 Timothy 4:14; James 5 : 14.
The Deacons appointed by each Church may be as
many as the Church, in its discretion, shall determine.|
The primitive Churches, founded by the Apostles,
had these officers, and no others. Those called
“ Elders” were the same as “ Bishops.” Compare
Acts 20: 17, 28; 1 Peter 5: 1—5; Titus 1: 5—7.
See also Neander’s Church History, vol. i., p. 184, and
Mosheim’s Ecc. History, vol. i., p. 09. Thus Paul,
writing to the Philippians, directs his letters to “ the
saints at Philippi, with the Bishops and Deacons.”
Phil. 1: 1. It is evident, therefore, that in the single
Church in that city were at least two Bishops . In the
Church at Ephesus, also, were several Bishops / for
Paul, having invited the Elders of the Church atj
Ephesus to meet him at Miletus, Acts 20 : 17, stylesj
those very individuals, verse 28, Bishops . Ourtrans- '
lators give the word “'overseers;” but the word in the
original language is bishops, and is so rendered in
every other text. As there were several of these in
each of the primitive Churches, they divided the du-
ties of the ministry among them according to their
natural and spiritual gifts.
No text can be produced in which God assigns pow-
er over the Churches to any individual, or set of in-
dividuals. It is to be taken for granted, therefore,
that no such power exists. The New Testament
speaks of no organization above the local Church. It
always uses the word “ Church” to mean either the
general company of the redeemed,'or the congregation
of professed believers in a particular place. The word
never occurs in the sense of an external centralized
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BROADWAY TABERNACLE CHURCH. 15
organization, embracing and ruling a multitude of
congregations; as when we hear men say, “The Pres-
byterian Church,” or “ The Episcopal Church.” There
is no such thing as “ The Congregational Church of
the United States,” but “The Congregational Clmr-
dies,” &c. Thus we read of “The Churches of Ju-
dea,” Gal. 1: 22, “ The Churches of Macedonia,” 2
Cor. S : 1, and “The Churches of Asia, 1 Cor. 1G: 19,
“The Seven Churches” in Proconsular Asia, Rev. 1 :
11, the Churches being separate and independent.
But there are various passages which fully indicate
the possession of all the powers above named by the
primitive Churches. The election of officers by the
people was evidently a law of the Christian Church,
from the time of its commencement. Even the desig-
nation of an apostle to fill a vacancy, Acts 1: 15—2G,
was made by the assembled brethren. The Church
at Jerusalem chose the seven persons who were to ex-
ercise the ollice of deacon, Acts G: 3, 5. In Matthew
18 : 15— 17, the Church, and that alone, is expressly
charged with the duty of exercising discipline. The
Church at Corinth were directed by Paul to exercise
discipline, 1 Cor. 5: 1—7, 6: 1—5. The command
to exercise discipline is repeated in 1 Cor. 5: 11—13.
The Church of Corinth actually exercised this power,
as may be seen by 2 Col*. 2 :6—10, where the censure
is said to have been “ indicted of many.*’ Ecclesias-
tical History, also, gives the same account uf the
primitive Churches. Mosheim (who was not a Con-
gregationalist) says, Ecc. Hist., vol. i., p. G8.
“ The assembled people, therefore, elected their own
rulers and teachers, or by their tree consent received
such as were nominated to them. They also, by their
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suffrages, rejected or confirmed the laws that were
proposed by their rulers in their assemblies; they ex-
cluded profligate and lapsed brethren, and restored
them;they decided the controversies and disputes that
arose; they heard and determined the causes of pres-
byters and deacons; in a word, the people did every-)
thing that is proper for lliose in whom the supreme)
2>ower is vested/’
Moshcim says again, Mist. Com., vol. i., p. 19G:
—
u Although all the Churches were, in this first age
of Christianity, united together in one common bond
of faith and love, and were in every respect ready to
promote the interests and welfare of each other by a
reciprocal interchange of good offices, yet, with regard
to government and internal economy, every individual
church considered itself as an independent communi-
ty;none of them ever looking in these respects be-
yond the circle of its own members for assistance, or
recognizing any sort of external influence or authority.”
Congregationalism is true republicanism. Each
Congregational Church and Society elects its ownofficers, owns its own house and property, judges of
the qualifications of its own members, allows to each
brother an equal vote, and has no superior, lord, or
overseer.
It is worthy of remark, also, that the principles on
which Congregational Churches are organized, being
thus purely republican, are in entire harmony with
the principles of our civil government, and had much
to do with its origin.
III. Powers and Duties of Officers.—Congrega-
tional Churches intrust no ecclesiastical power to their
officers. The New Testament denies to the officers
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BROADWAY TABERNACLE (’IURC11. 17
authority of any original or exclusive character, and
represents them rather as theservants of the Churches.
Matt. 20 : 25, 27.
The great duty of the primitive scriptural Bishopwas to teach and to preside in the assembly of the
Church. As the passages which relate to this subject
are too numerous and too long to be quoted, let the
reader refer to Acts 20: 28, 1 Tim. b : 1—G; 5: 17;
4: 12—10; 2 Tim. 2: 1—27; 4 : 1—5; Titus 1 : 7,
9; 2: 1— 15; 8: 1— 11; Ileb. lb: 7, 17; 1 Pet. 5:
1—3.
Tiie duties of Deacons in Congregational Churches
are to assist in distributing the elements of the Lord’s
Supper; to attend to the secular business of the
Church; to visit the members for the purpose of re-
ligious instruction and prayer; and, in behalf of the
Church, to minister to the wants of the poor.
Very little is said in the Scriptures respecting the
office of Deacons. Their character, though not their
duties, is described in 1 Tim. 3: 8—12. Neander
says, in his Church history, vol. i.. p. 188 :
—
“ Besides these (the Bishops), we find only one other
Church-office in the Apostolic age,—that of the dea-
cons. The duties of this office were, from the begin-
ning, simply external, as it was instituted in the iirst
place, according to Acts vi., to assist in the distribu-
tion of alms. The care of providing for the poor and
sick of the communities, to which many other external
duties were afterwards added, devolved particularly
on this office.”
IV. Conditions of Admission to the Church.—It
is the unanimous opinion of the Congregational Chur-
ches, that a credible profession of personal faith in
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18 MANUAL OFJlllK
Christ is the indispensable condition of communionand membership in the Church. It is by no means!
maintained, that entire assurance of salvation should
l)e required, or perfect agreement in the details of
doctrine; but as the Church was designed to include
only true Christians, it follows, of course, that credi-
ble evidence of being a Christian, including belief of
the fundamental doctrines of the Bible, should be the
condition of membership.
This part of the system, also, is in accordance with
divine and apostolic example. For we are informed,
Acts 2: 47, “that the Ford added to the Church,
daily, such as should be saved while Philip required
ot the eunuch before baptism a statement of his belief
as to Christ, ActsS: 37. The apostolic epistles ad-
dressed to the Churches arc 4 inscribed “to the saints,1 '
“ to the faithful,” to the “believers in Christ,” with
other similar epithets;and they were required to ex-
clude those who lived in sin, or who denied the faith;
1 Cor. 5: 11— 13; 2 Thess. 3: 0, 14; 1 Tim. 1 : lb,
-b; (> : 3—5; Titus 3: 10; 2 Pet. 2: 1—3; thus
showing that the Churches were to be made up of
true Christians.
\ . Inflation ok Cju ia iiks to Each Otiiki:.
—
Congregationalism is distinguished from simple Inde-
pendency and Separatism by holding as a cardinal
principle the Communion of Churches. This is not
merely the principle of comity by which a member of
one Church is admitted to occasional communion in
another, for such comity exists among Churches most
diverse from each other in their forms of government.
It is the principle of mutual helpfulness and mutual
responsibility among Churches which find in the
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BROADWAY TABERNACLE CIIUROU. 19
Scripture the same platform of ecclesiastical order.
Such Churches, though equal in authority, and mu-tually independent, are nevertheless bound to consult
with each other for the common interest, to seek and
give advice on occasions in which the action of one
Church is important to the welfare of neighbor Chur-
ches, to give account to each other of any proceeding
or neglect which seems contrary to the order and
purity of the Gospel, and to give or receive admoni-
tion in the spirit of meekness, when admonition seems
to he required.
\rl . General Iuvlesiastical Bodies.—Although
the Scriptures give to no men, or set of' men, power
over the Churches, yet the Churches, or their pastors,
or both, may associate together for practical religious
purposes, which seem desirable, hut which do not con-
flict with their independence.
Associations are composed either of ministers ex-
clusively, or of Pastors and delegates from the churches.
They meet for prayer and mutual counsel;they ex-
amine and approbate persons who desire to enter the
ministry;and they other suggestions to the Churches,
without trenching upon their rights.
The General Association or Conference of each
State is usually composed of delegates from the small-
er Associations, although sometimes it is constituted
of pastors and delegates directly representing the
churches. This body meets annually;hears reports
on the state of religion; and oilers advice to the
Churches on matters connected with the concerns of
benevolence, sound doctrine, and religious duty. It
is to be particularly noted, that these bo:lies possess
no ecclesiastical power, like the superior judicatories
;
20 MAM Al, OK Till;
of the Romish Church, and of some Protestant, de-
nominations.
VII. Ecclesiastical Councils.—AV lien matters of
peculiar importance or difficulty come before a Church,
it avails itself of the advice of other Churches. Thus,
when a Pastor is to be ordained or installed, the
Church sends to a number of the neighboring Chur-
ches an invitation, called a “ letter missive,” to be
present at a certain time, by their Pastors and dele-
gates, to form an ecclesiastical Council, to examine
the proposed Pastor, and to act in behalf of the
Church in the public solemnity of ordination or in-
stallation, if the}7 see no valid objection. And so,
when a Pastor is dismissed, the Church calls a Coun-
cil to advise and act for it in the emergency.
If a member who has been disciplined thinks that
injustice has been done, and particularly if the vote
of the Church was divided, it is usual to call a mutual
Council, chosen half by each party, to give their opin-
ion or advice to the Church. If the Church should
not concur in the result, a copy of the opinion of the
Council may be used as a letter of recommendation
for the aggrieved person with which to apply to an-
other Church. If the Church refuse to unite yvitli the
complainant in calling a mutual Council, he maysummon an ex parte Council
;and if that Council
justify him, he may use their result as a letter of re-
commendation.
No Council can act on any matter not mentioned
in the letter missive, or remain in existence after ad-
journment at the close of that business.
VIII. Ok the Name Congregationalism.—The
term Congregational expresses the fact that all cede-
.
BROADWAY TABERNACLE CIIURCII. 21
siastical power resides in the congregated body or
members of the 'Church; that is, in the congregation
or brotherhood, and notin the officers.
IX. Differences from Other Denominations.
—
Congregational ists differ from Presbyterians princi-
pally in Church government. Presbyterian Churches
have each a ho ly of lay elders, who with the Pastor
compose the “ Session,” by whom the government of
the Church is exercised;members being received or
excluded by their vote alone. Over the Session is the
Presbytery, composed of the Pastors of the Churches
in a certain district, and an elder from each Church,
appointed by the Session. The Presbytery has power
to control the Sessions and reverse their proceedings,
and no Pastor can be called and settled without its
permission. Over the Presbytery is the Synod, com-
posed of several Presbyteries;and above the Synod
is the General Assembly, formed by delegates from
all the Presbyteries in the land. These delegates are
appointed by the Presbyteries, and are always minis-
ters or elders. A case of discipline may be carried up
successively through all the judicatories to the Gen-
eral Assembly. The people have no voice in the
system, except when the elder is tirst elected.
Congregationalists ditfer from Baptists with regard
to baptism and church communion. Baptists hold
that immersion alone is baptism, that none but adult-
believers should be baptized, and that none but im-
mersed professors should be admitted to the Lord’s
table; while Oongregationalisls a Imit the validity ot
any baptism in which water is applied to the person
in the name of the Trinity, believe that baptism should
also be given to the infant children ot believers, and
welcome to the Lord’s table all evangelical Christians.
22 MANUAL OF THE
Congregationalism differ also from Methodists in
clmrcli government;
the latter governing their
Churches by bishops and conferences, who legislate
tor the whole body, and appoint and remove the min-
isters.
Congregational i.-ls differ from Episcopalians in
ceremonies of worship, and in clmrcli government.
The Episcopalians hold to three orders in the ministry,
and confide the admission and exclusion of membersto the Pastor and the diocesan Bishop, who is set over
the Churches and Ministers of a particular district,
and alone has power to confirm members ai:d ordain
Ministers. Among Congregationalists every Pastor
is a Bishop, as among the New Testament Churches;
and all Ministers are equal in office.
X. Intercourse wmi other Denominations.—C011-1
gregationalism, desiring to be free from any narrow
sectarianism, insists upon no denominational peculi-
arities as the condition of fellowship. This principle
is carried out in intercourse with other denominations.
At their seasons of communion, Congregational
Churches invite all church-members, who are in regu-
lar standing in any evangelical denomination, and
who are honoring their profession by a godly life, to
sit down with them at the table of the Lord. If any j
of their members wish to unite with Churches of other
evangelical denominations, letters are given to such
Churches;or if any come from such denominations,
and there is no evidence against their C hristian char-j
acter, they are received as from sister Churches.
The principles of the Congregational polity are thus;
seen to be accordant with the Scriptures, and with the
practice of the first and apostolic age of Christianity.
BROADWAY TABERNACLE CIIURCH. 23
CONFESSION OF FAITH
BROADWAY TABERNACLE CHURCH.
As a Church of Jesus Christ associated in accord-
ance with the teachings of the New Testament, for
the public worship of God, for t lie observance of Gos-
pel Sacraments and Ordinances, for mutual edification
and encouragement in the Christian life, and for the
advancement of the Redeemer’s kingdom, we declare
our union in faith and love with all who love our
Lord Jesus Christ.
' Receiving the Scriptures of the Old and New Tes-
taments as the Word of God and the only infallible
rule of religious faith and practice, we confess our
faith in the one living and true God, revealed as the
Father, the Son, and the lloly Ghost; the Creator
and Preserver of all things^ whose purposes and pro-
vidence extend to all and who exercises a
righteous government over all II is creatures.
We believe in the universal sinfulness and ruin of
our race, since u by one man sin entered into the
world, and death by sin, and so death passed upon all
men, for that all have sinned/’
We believe that the Lord Jesus Christ, the Son of
24 MANUAL Ol-' THIS
God, having taken upon himself our nature, lias by
his obedience, sufferings, and death, provided a way 1
of salvation for all mankind; and that through faith
in Ill's name, whosoever will, may be saved.
We believe that although salvation is offered freely
to all, they only repent and believe in Christ, who, in
thus obeying the Gospel are regenerated by the HolySpirit
;and that all who are thus regenerated are “ kept
by the power of God, through faith, unto salvation.'’
We believe that there is a .Day appointed in whichGod will raise the dead, and judge the world; that
the wicked shall “go away into everlasting punish-
ment, and the righteous into life eternal.”
COVENANT ON THE PART OF PERSONS RECEIVED INTO TI1E
CHURCH UPON CONFESSION of their faith.
Accepting this as the faith of this Church, you who!
now present yourself to be received into its fellowship,
do by this act avow your personal sense of the love of
God in the forgiveness of your sins;and trusting that
He who hears and answers prayer, will uphold and
strengthen you, you do give yourself to the Lord
Jesus Christ to he Ilis disciple, receivingHim as your
only Priest and Propitiation, your great Teacher,
Lawgiver and King; you dedicate yourself to God as
the object of your highest love, and to Ilis service as
your highest joy ; engaging to walk with us in the
due observance of Christian ordinances, and that, by
the aid of the Divine Spirit, you will honor your pro-
fession by a consistent Christian life.
In this solemn consecration, you confess your belief
in God the Father Almighty, Maker of heaven and
1
BROADWAY T A BERN AOfJC CHURCH. 25
earth; And in Jesus Christ his only Son our Lord;
Who was conceived by the Holy Ghost, Born of the
Virgin Mary; Suffered under Pontius Pilate, Wascrucified, dead and buried : The third day he rose
from the dead; lie ascended into heaven, And sitteth
at the right hand of God the Father Almighty;From
thence he shall come to judge the quick and the dead.
You believe in the Holy Ghost;the Holy Catholic
Church, the Communion of Saints;the Forgiveness of
sins; the Resurrection of the body ; and the Life ever-
lasting.
[Here Baptism will be admiueteivil to any who have not before
leceived it.]
RKSl’ONSIVK COVENANT OK i'll R Kill RCII.
In view of these your professions and engagements,
we affectionately receive you to the communion of
this Church, and welcome you to this fellowship with
us in the blessings of the Gospel, and in the service of
aur Divine Redeemer. May you walk worthy of Him,
ond of vour profession ! May the Lord guide and pre-
serve you till death.; and at la>t receive you and us
to that blessed world where our love and joy shall be
forever perfect ! Amen.
26 MANUAL OK TIIK
ARTICLES
CHURCH AND SOCIETY.
Soon after the organization of the Society, Oct. 2e,
1S40, as a religious corporation, tlie following -Arti-
cles were adopted by both the Church and Society, I
as the basis of union and co-operation :
I. The Congregation shall hold the property, and
receive the income, and make all pecuniary engage-
ments, appropriations and payments.
II. In calling a Pastor, the Congregation and
Church will act as concorrent bodies—a majority of
each being necessary to constitute a call; the Church
nominating, and the Congregation confirming or re-
jecting the nomination,
III. The Committee of the Church will provide for
the supply of the pulpit when there is no settled Pas-
tor;make the necessary arrangements for singing,
and, in general, for the orderly celebration of religious
worship; and the Congregation will liquidate all rea-
sonable expenses thereby incurred. Prodded,That
-
BROADWAY TAB RNAOLK CIll'ROll. 27
if the Congregation choose to do so, they shall always
have the right to make the committee a joint commit-
tee, by putting on it as many members of the Congre-
gation as have been elected from the Church.
PERMANENT RULES OF THE CHURCH,
ADOPTED AT THE ADJOURNED ANNUAL MEETING IN DEC., 1865 .
1. The permanent officers of this Church shall 1> * a
Pastor, or Pastors and Deacons. There shall also be
elected annually, a Clerk, a Treasurer, and four breth-
ren who, with the permanent ollicers, shall constitute
a Committee for the general oversight of the interests
of the Church. This Committee shall provide for the
supply of the pulpit in cases of emergency;they shall
designate the objects of benevolence to be brought
before the Church for its contributions; they shall
confer with persons who offer themselves for admis-
sion, and report to the Church the names of all whomthey deem suitable condidates. They may also trans-
fer the regular prayer-meeting to another evening of
the same week.
2. All officers of the Church shall be elected by
ballot, and without any public, nomination, unless a
committee shall be appointed for that purpose. When
a vacancy occurs in any office, the* Clerk shall notify
the Church of the same at the lirst business meeting
thereafter;and the Church shall designate a time for
filling such vacancy, of which notice shall be given on
the Sabbath proceeding.
3. The Church shall meet for prayer and conference
on Tuesday evening of each week;except that the
; !
r:
’'
v
.
28 MANUAL OF THE
first Monday evening of each month shall be substi-
tuted for Tuesday evening. The Lord’s Supper will
be administered on the first Sabbaths of January,.
March, May, July, September and November, and the
prayer meetings next preceding these Sabbaths, shall
be also business-meetings;
at which any matter re-
lating to the interests of the Church may be intro-
duced;and the meeting preceding the first Sabbath
in March shall be the Annual Meeting; at which the
Committee and the Treasurers of the Church and of
the Deacon’s fund, shall present their reports, and the
officers for the ensuing year shall be elected. Upon
the requisition of ten brethren, in writing, the Clerk
shall call a special meeting for business, by causing a
notice to be read from the pulpit on the Sabbath pre-
ceding such meeting. No business shall be transacted
at any meeting other than the business meetings herein
provided, except the consideration of requests to par-
ticipate in ecclesiastical councils, and applications for
contributions at the time for special objects of bene-
volence;which requests and contributions shall be in
order in any meeting.
4. Candidates for membership shall be reported to
the Church at least two weeks, before a regular busi-
ness meeting. No person shall be admitted to mem-
bership except by the election of the Church, at such
meeting;and those who have not already made a
public profession of their faith shall make such pro-
fession in order to complete their admission.
5. Requests for letters of dismission may be an-
nounced at any of the stated services of the Church;
and if at the end of one week, no objection has been
made to the Clerk, he shall issue to the applicant the
I
hi . « i *.
BROADWAY TABKKNAOLK CHURCH.
customary certificate, wliieh shall 1)3 valid only one
year from its date, at which time liis or her relation
to this Church shall terminate, unless such certificate
shall have been returned to the Clerk.
6. It shall he the duty of the Committee to report
to the Church, from time to time, the names of those
members who have removed from the city without
requesting letters of dismission, and of those who are
habitually absent from Sabbath services and the com-
munion table of the Church, for such action as maybe deemed proper in the premises; it being under-
stood that this rule does not supersede the responsi-
bility of individuals to labor personally to recover such
as may fall into error or sin, and, if need be, to bring
their cases to the knowledge of the Church.
7. All questions shall be determined by a majority
of the male members present on the occasion;with
this exception—that the articles of faith, covenant,
form of admission, or permanent rules shall not be
altered but by a vote of two-thirds at an Annual Meet-
ing;notice of the intention to propose alterations, and
a statement of the substance of such alterations, hav-
ing been submitted at a previous business meeting.
.
30 MAN l A L OF Til K
PRINCIPLES OF DISCIPLINE.
Tiif following principles of Discipline, embraced in;
the report of a special Committee, were adopted byj
tlie Church, June 20th, 1S52. They have since beenj
incorporated by the Plymouth Church, Brooklyn, in’
their manual;and copied into the manuals of many
j
other Congregational Churches:
—
The subject of Church Discipline, like that of Church
polity, is left in the New Testament to the guidance
of general principles rather than specific precepts.
One invariable rule is given for the settlement of pri-
vate difficulties and the censure of private offenses
;
one conspicuous example is recorded of the method of
dealing with an open and scandalous offense against
a church; there are also occasional instructions upon
the proper subjects of church censure and the mode
of treating an offender; but no formal process of
Church Discipline is anywhere laid down in the NewTestament: that is left rather to the judgment and
experience of individual churches. Your committee
have therefore sought to embody the principles of the
New Testament upon the subject, in a series of re-
commendations, and to digest a plan of disciplinej
suited to the circumstances of this particular Church.
'N
**
BROADWAY TABERNAC LE C’lfUROH. 31
The directions given by (Christ in Matthew xviii.
15— IS, should be implicitly followed in all cases of
private and personal oifensc. The Church should
never in any form entertain a complaint, or suffer an
insinuation from one member against another, in a
matter of private grievance, until these instructions
have been complied with in good faith and without
effect. Even where the letter of these instructions
has been followed, regard should be had to the ques-
tion whether they have been complied with in spirit
or only in form. The Church should never allow a
private grievance to be spread before them without
satisfactory evidence that the aggrieved party has
used all reasonable endeavors to gain redress in pri-
vate, in the spirit of forgiveness, of forbearance, and
of brotherly love. When one member of the Church
suffers himself to be alienated from another, or from
the communion of the Church, because of a private
dillieulty, while yet he does not in a proper spirit seek
to reconcile the matter in private, any member of the
Church cognizant of the facts should labor with him
to persuade him to his duty.
Your Committee are of opinion that the rule of
proceeding laid down in Matthew xviii. is oUijatonj
as a rule, only in cases or private offense. That rule
was given prior to tin* organization of local (dm relies;
it was given to the disciples as individuals—ass abated,
indeed, in one brotherhood, but not incorporated as a
local church, under a covenant and laws. It was a
rule of practical wisdom for the settlement of personal
differences; a rule equally appropriate out of the
church and in it; a rule for kindly intercourse be-
tween man and man. If thy brother shall trespass
-
'
82 MANUAL OF T1I15
against thee, i. according to the precise import of
the original, it* lie shall do thee a wrong—if he shall
injure thee in thy person, in th y property, in thy reputa-
tion, in any of thy personal interests and relations, if
he shall give thee olfense, or do thee any injury what-
ever, go and tell him his fault between thee and himalone,—endeavor to settle it in private ; if he shall hear
thee thou hast gained thy brother. Hut if he will not
hear thee, then-—still for the purpose of a reconcilia-
tion, and with as little publicity as possible;—take
with thee one or two more, that in the mouth of two
or three witnesses every word may be established.
And if he shall neglect to hear them, tell it to the
church—the whole company, circle, or brotherhood
with which you are associated, and towards which
you sustain relations in common. Hut if he neglect
to hear the church—if lie will not regard the whole
society of believers—let him be to thee as a heathen
and a publican.
A breach of church covenant, or any public and
scandalous olfense against religion, is not a personal
wrong done to any particular member of the church,
or to the members of the church as individuals, in any
such sense as would bring it within the . scope of the
instructions of Christ for the healing of private of-
fenses. Hut while in the judgment of your Commit-
tee, the rule given in Matthew xviii. is not in such
case obligatory as a ride, it is nevertheless desirable
that the principle and the spirit of the instructions
there given should be applied also to offenses of a
public nature, wherever this is practicable. Indeed,
the Committee deem it of the utmost impprtance
that every member of the church should feel it to be
I'
BROADWAY TABERNACLE CIIURCIf. 33
his personal duty to admonish in private an erring
brother, and to seek to restore him to the path trom
which lie lias wandered. This is one of the most im-
pressive obligations of that mutual covenant into
which church members enter with one another.
No member of the church lias a right to pass over
without notice the dereliction of a fellow-member from
Christian duty, on the plea that the offense is not per-
sonal against himself. The knowledge of the trans-
gression imposes upon him an obligation to seek im-
mediately the restoration of the erring member, and
the purification of the church from his offense. Toomit this is to be guilty of a lire ich of covenant and
an offense against the purity of the church;
it is in a
measure to connive at sin. IIow can that church
member be faithful to his own covenant with the
church, who knows that a fellow-member of the
church is living in the habitual violation of that cove-
mint, in the belief of some deadly error, or in the al-
lowance of some known sin, and yet takes no steps to
recover the transgre ssor or to deliver the church from
the scandal that he is bringing upon it ? The discip-
line of the church belongs not to the Pastor, or to the
Deacons, or to the Church Committee; it is a matter
of personal duty and responsibility with every member
of the Church.
In all large churches, and especially in all city
churches, where membership is perpetually changing,
it comes to pass, in the course of years, that there are
numerous absentees enrolled upon the list of members,,
whose very names are hardly known to the active
members of the church, and of whose character and
position nothing is known to the body of present
v•
,'
,
3i MANUAL OF THE
communicants. The ease of such persons cannot be
left to the ordinary course;
it* there is anything in
them worthy of discipline, it is not likely to be ascer-
tained by any individual inquiry. Your Committee
would therefore recommend that the church from
time to time appoint Committees of Inquiry upon the
cases of absentees, or of members who, though resid-
ing in our vicinity, are supposed to be living in the
neglect of covenant obligations. The way for Mich
inquiries has been opened by the recent adoption of
the standing rules respecting absentees; but these
inquiries should not be devolved exclusively upon the
Church Committee, and much less upon the Clerk of
the Church, who is already overburdened with the
duties of his office. Hut the appointment of such a
committee of inquiry respecting an absentee or a
supposed delinquent, should in no case be regarded as
the commencement of a process of discipline, or even
preparatory to such a process; and it should not give
license to the utterance of any charges or insinuations
touching the character of the person concerning
whom the inquiry is proposed. If even in a criminal
court an accused person is presumed to be innocent
until adjudged to be guilty, certainly a church meet-
ing should hold itself aloof from canvassing the cliar-
acter of an absent member, who is not even upon
trial. The sole object of the Committee of Inquiry
should be to procure information respecting the resi-
dence and the church communion of absent members,
and not to gather up materials tor accusation against
them, as if they were already arraigned. If in the
course of their investigations they find matters worthy
of discipline, they should act precisely as it is proper^
It
35
X»hX4«bB110AD\VaY TABI2KNACL10 CHUKCll.
tor church members to net in any case where facts
requiring the discipline of the church are brought to
their knowledge.
In cases of public and scandalous offense, the church
may proceed in a more summary manner upon com-
mon fame. The authority for this is given in the in-
structions of Paul to the church at Corinth. It is
reported couir/ionly that there is fornication amongyou: the common fame of this scandal in the church
had reached the Apostle at Philippi; immediately on
hearing of it, he rebuked the church for their neglect
and connivance in the matter, and required them on
their first coming together to cut off the offender from
their fellowship without delay. Here is a precedent
for proceeding at once, and in a public manner, to
discipline a church member, whose offense is an open
scandal before the world. Obviously every such case
should be brought to the adjudication of the clmrcli.
A flagrant case of immorality, such as intemperance*
fraud, or licentiousness in a church member, dishonors
the church and the cause of Christ, as this is repre-
sented in and by the church. In such a case it is not
enough that one or more individuals, who have had
special oversight of the case, are satisfied of the re-
pentance of the offender; the church should also be
satisfied, and an open offender should in no case he
restored to his full standing in the church, without
making to the church a confession of his sin, and
giving satisfactory evidence of repentance.
As a matter of propriety during a process of dis-
cipline, the party arraigned should be understood to
be suspended from church privileges.
The standard Congregational treatises on church
.
1
.
-•
iv
36 MANUAL OF TlfF
discipline, make a distinction between the withdraw-
ing of fellowship and excommunication; the former
being sometimes called the lesser excommunication,”
and applied to cases of breach of covenant, or the
transgression of mere church ordinances, and the lat-
ter to breaches of the moral law. Your Committee,
however, can hardly find a warrant for such a distinc-
tion in terms, either in the Scriptures or in the nature
of the ease. The act in both cases is substantially the
same; the individual is cut oil* from the communion
of the Church, and can never again be received into
it, except upon a now confession of faith. If the term
excommunication could be dissociated from all .sup-
erstitious horrors, and from all idea of civil penalty,
it might be retained with advantage, as best corres-
ponding with the facts in the case. Your Committee
would recommend the use of this term, or it equival-
ent, in ul 1 cases where discipline proceeds to the
excision of the offender, care being taken in each in-
stance to spec it v the cause ot excision, that those who
are cut off for mere olfeiises against church order,
may not lie under the imputation of immorality. In
all cases of open and scandalous offense, or of any
breach of morality, or any fundamental error in doc-
trine affecting Christian character, when efforts to
bring the offender to repentance prove unavailing,
the church should proceed to the act ot excommuni-
cation or excisi n, giving the reasons for the same,
which should be publicly announced before the con-
gregation on the Lord’s dav.o © *
But in cases of breach of covenant, the church
should deal very patiently and leniently with the err-
ing member, discharging faithfully its own covenant
• if •!<>') v)
.
'
. ir
liROADWAY TABHKNACLE OlllKeir. 37
obligations towards him, which may hitherto have
been neglected, seeking in every way to lead him oi-
lier to repentance; and if after a reasonable delay, all
efforts seems unavailing, the Church shall disown this
member, giving in full the reasons for its action,
which shall also be stated to the assembled church at
the next following communion season.
LETTERS OF DISMISSION.
It is the duty of members removing, and iixing
their residence where they cannot customarily meet
with the Church in its religious services, to apply for
letters of dismission to some church in the community
where their residence is to be. It is the obvious duty
of a person taking such a letter to use it, and unite
with such church without delay. And although one
who takes a letter is in the interim deemed still a
member of this Church, yet if lie sutlers a year to pass
without using the letter or returning it, he ceases to
be a member at the expiration of the year, ami the
validity of the letter as a recommendation to other
churches terminates. The following extract from the
report of the Committee on Permanent Rules, made
at the annual meeting in Aarch, 1.800, states the prin-
ciples recognized by this Church on this subject:
—
“In the New Testament history it appears that
locality was an important, if not an essential, idea in
the constitution of a church. A church was a local
body of believers in Christ, associated and habitually
convening for the worship of Cod;
it was the com-
pany of believers in one place, joined together in a
' . . U - . a, i to so*; a*
i
38 MANUAL OF THK
common faith and worship. A church ought proper-
ly to consist only of those who can and do habitually
meet together in the same place for the maintenance
of Christian worship, and the enjoyment of Christian
communion. When, therefore, a member of a church
cannot, by reason of distance, any longer meet with
the body, it is proper that he should take a dismission
from that to some other church, with which he can
meet regularly for Christian worship and ordinances.
It has been customary to regard a person* thus dis-
missed, as still a member of the church from which
be takes his letter, until ho has been regularly received
into the fellowship of another church.u This custom originated at a time when the nemh-
borhood of communities, and the consequent fellowship
of churches was much closer than now. In the early
days of New England, permanent residence was the
rule, and removal the exception;and a church mem-
ber who removed could be followed, without difficul-
ty, into the neighboring town or county, which was
likely to be the limit of his travels. Now, removal
and temporary sojourning is the order of the day, and
permanent residence the marked exception; and be-
sides, removals are likely to be made to such a dis-
tance that a church necessarily los^s sight of its
dismissed members. Rules and usages, therefore,
which sprang up in a different state of society, are not
the infallible law for our times and circumstances. Achurch should not be permanently responsible for
dismissed members, over whom it cannot exercise its
watch and care.”
ItROADWAY TA15KKNAOI.E CIIITRCII. 39
CONDITIONS OF MEMBERSHIP
AM)
RULES RESPECTINfi ELECTIONS
JN T1IK
BROADWAY TABERNACLE CHURCH.
PROVISIONS OF STATUTE.
The annual meeting of the “‘.Broadway Tabernacle
Society,” for the election of Trustees, and other busi-
ness, is held on the second Tuesday succeeding* the
first Monday in November. The terms of office of the
Trustees expire on the first day of December.
The statute of this State, in reference to religious
corporations (I Bev. Stat. 4th ed., 1183), prescribe the
following rules in respect to elections :
1. The trustees of any religious society, or a ma-
jority of them, shall, at least one month before the
expiration of office of any of the trustees, notify the
same in writing to the minister, (or, in case of his
death or absence, to the deacons), specifying the names
of the trustees whose terms of office will expire; and
the minister (or, in case of his deatli or absence one
^ Sc
-
.
40 MANUAL OF Til
K
of the deacons) shall publicly notify the members of
the society of such vacancies, and appoint the time
and place for the election of new trustees to till upthe same. This notification shall he given at least
fifteen days before the election, and for two successive
Sabbaths or days on which the society shall statedly
meet for public worship. The election shall be held
at least six days before the vacancies shall occur.
II. Two deacons (or, if there be none present, then
two members of the society) to be nominated by a
majority of the members present, shall preside at the
elections, receive the votes of the electors, be the
judges of the qualifications of such electors, and the
officers to return the names of the persons who, byplurality of voices, shall be elected to serve as trustees.
III. Every male person of lawful age shall be en-
titled to vote, who shall have been a stated attendant
on divine worship in the congregation for at least one
year previous to the election, and who shall have con-
tributed to the support of the society according to the
usages and customs thereof.
TV. It shall be the duty of the clerk or'seerctary of
the board of Trustees to keep a register of the names
of all such persons as shall desire to become stated
hearers in the congregation, and, therein to note the
time when such request was made, and to attend each
election, in order to test the qualification of electors in
case the same shall be questioned.
V. The inspectors of elections must immediately
thereafter certify, under their bauds and seals, the
names of the persons elected to serve as trustees, spe-
cifying that they were elected to serve as Trustees (of
the Broadway Tabernacle Society), which certificate
BROADWAY TABKRNAOLK CHURCH. 41
thestatute requires to be acknowledged nr proved,
and recorded.
RULES OF THE SOCIETY, IN RELATIONTO ELECTIONS.
Adopted at an Adjourned Meeting in Junuarj/, 1800 .
I. The inspectors .of election, at each election, shall
preside in front of the audience, with a box for the
reception of ballots.
I I. The payment of pew-rent shall be considered the
only mode of contributing to the support ot this
Society.
III. Everv male person who hires from the Trustees
a pew, or one or more sittings, shall be deemed to
have thereby requested that his name be registered as
a member of the Society, and the Clerk is hereby di-
rected to enter such names upon his register accord-
ingly.
IV. No person shall be allowed to vote, by ballot
or otherwise, at any meeting of this Society who does
not possess the statute qualifications for an elector.
;i'i I
42> MANlTAf, OF TIIK
HULKS OF ORDER
AT
BUSTNESS MEErlTNGS.
THE CONDUCT OF BUSINESS MEETINGS.
Officer*.—At the appointed time for the meeting,
the Clerk, or it* the Clerk is absent, any meml) t, mayeall the Church to order, and put the question upon
the choice of a moderator.
When the Moderator chosen has taken the chair, if
the Clerk is absent, a Chirk pro inn. should be chosen.
Speal'huj .—When a member desire* to be heard, he
should rise in his place and address himself to the
presiding officer by his title. Moderator, and should
then pause for a moment until the Moderator announ-
ces liis name, or otherwise designates him.
Motions .—Every motion must be made in writing,
if required by any member; and, when seconded,
must be read or clearly stated by the Moderator, and
submitted to the consideration of the Church. Amo-tion made and seconded, must be disposed of before
any other business is in order; and meanwhile all
other motions, are out of order, except such as dispose
of a principal question, as a motion to amend, or com-
-
BROADWAY TABERNACLE CHURCH. 43
mit, or for the previous question; and sncli as arise
out of or are incidental to the principal motion, as
questions relating to order, motions for leave to with-
draw a motion, &e.;and motions incidental to busi-
ness, as motions to adjourn, Ac.
An amendment may go to the exclusion, addition,
or substitution of words or sentences; indeed, a 1110-
lion to amend by striking out all the words after the
word resolved; and substituting an entirely new pro-
position upon the same subject, is in order. Hut
where a resolution is in sections, the amendments
must be in the order of the sections, beginning with
the first section;and therefore, if an amendment is
made to the third section of a resolution first and
carried, it will be out of order to move an amendment
to the first or second section. No subject different
from that under consideration, can be admitted under
color of an amendment.
Dividing resolutions .— Where a proposition is com-
plicated, the preciding officer may divide the same,
at the request of a member.
Withdrawing motion .—Until a motion lias been
stated to the meeting, by the presiding officer, the
mover may withdraw or modify it, at his pleas-
ure.
Privileged motions .—There are certain motions
which may be made at any time that the mover can
gain the floor: such are the motions, to refer to a com-
mittee, to lay on the table, to postpone to a future
time, fixed or indefinite, and to adjourn. All these
motions may be debated except the motion to post-
pone indefinitely and to adjourn. Motions to post-
pone or to commit, cannot be made a second time at
.
-
44 MANUAL OF TIIK
tlie same meeting. And when a member is speaking,
no motion can be made, but with Ids consent.
Debate .—-When any motion is before the' Church,
every member lias a right to express his views con-
cerning it. The Moderator is bound to confine every
speaker to the point under consideration, and also to
protect him against all interruption, except that of
being ('idled to order it* he violate the rule of courtesy,
or of debate;but after the matter of order is adjusted,
the speaker has a right to go on with the debate.
Order of voting .—-When several amendments or
propositions are before the meeting, the order in which
they are to be acted upon is usually the reverse of the
order in which they were made. If several sums are
proposed, the largest is to be first put to vote; if
several -periods of time,
the longest ; and as to num-
bers generally, the largest. When a motion is put, it
should be first clearly stated by the Moderator or read
by the Clerk.
Tffect of various motions .—An indefinite postpone-
ment defeats or suppresses the question under debate.
A motion to refer to a committee postpones the sub-
ject until the committee report. A motion to lay on
the table means to lay aside for the present.
The previous question is a motion that the main
question under discussion be immediately acted upon.
If the motion for the previous question is carried in
the affirmative, the question under discussion must be
put without change of form, or further debate. If the
motion for the previous question is lost, then the con-
sideration of the main question under discussion is
still in order. The previous question cannot be put
upon an amendment, or upon any of the other merely
,
BROADWAY TABERNACLE CHURCH. 45
subsidiary motions, which are used like the previous
question itself for the suppression of original mo-
tions.
Voting .—There are three ways of declaring the
sense of the meeting : 1 . By the Moderator stating the
substance of the proposition, and declaring it to be
adopted if no one objects;
in this case, if no one
should object, the proposition is adopted by commonconsent.. 2. By the Moderator putting the question
and the members in favor of it responding aye, and
afterwards those opposed responding nay;and there-
upon the Moderator declares the result, but if a mem-ber thinks the Moderator in error, or that an accurate
count would show a different result, he has a right to
demand it immediately;
in which case the question
must be put again, and the voters carefully counted,
o. By ballot.
After the question is put to vote, there can be no
debate, and no new proposition made, until the voting
is finished.
Reconsiderations .—After the vote is taken, any
member who voted in the majority,may, during the
same meeting, move a reconsideration; which motion
opens the subject again for debate;and if the vote to
reconsider is adopted, the whole matter stands just as
it did before the reconsidered vote was taken.
Committees .—Tt is the duty of the Moderator ro ap-
point committees, unless the meeting do so by its own
action. The mover of a resolution, by virtue of which
a committee is to be appointed, is entitled, by courtesy,
to be appointed chairman of such committee. The
person first named in the enumeration of the persons
appointed on a committee, is to be deemed chairman
Ihr),j
.
sj •
46 MANUAL OF TIIK
of such committee;but the committee itself may elect
another chairman.
Reports of Committees .—When the report of a com-
mittee is presented, motions should be made either to
accept, or to accept and adopt, or to amend, or to re-
commit the report. Upon a motion to accept the re-
port, it will be placed on file;upon a motion to accept
and adopt the report, it will become the action of the
meeting.
Appeals .—All the decisions of the presiding officer
are subject to revision by the Church.
Adjourned meetings are deemed a continuance of
the original meeting.
to
.
BROADWAY TABKRNAOUE CHURCH. 47
CATALOGUEOF THE
and diUcmbcvsi of the (Sfouwli,'s > 7
APRIL, 1866.
PERMANENT OFFICERS.
PASTOR,
JOSEPH P. THOMPSON, I). I).
DEACONS,
HENRY WHITTELSEY, \VM. II. SMITH,SAMUEL HOLMES, AVM. G. LAMBERT,HENRY C. HALL, DR. WM. II. THOMSON.
OFFICERS FOR THE YEAR.
CLERK,
LEONARD llAZELTINE, JR.
THEASH HER,
WM. B. HOLMES.
MEMBERS OF COMMITTEE,
WM. W. FESSENDEN, REV. A. II. CLAPP,CHAS. WIIITTEMORE, FRANCIS B. NICOL.
.
.7 W
48 MANUAL OB' T1IH
MEMB K R S .
Abernethy, Charles.
Abernethy, Cornelia.
Abernethy, Maria (Charles.)
Alexander, Agnes W.Allen, Robert.
Allen, William.
Allerton, Mary E.
Allison, Lydia.
Ames, Isabel M.
Angwin, Joseph.
Arbuekle, Eetliia D. (widow of Rev.
James.)
Arbuekle, Eliza A.
Arbuekle, Maiy C.
Arbuekle, Sarah B.
Austin, Isabella J. (Alonzo J.
)
Badger, Clarissa M.
Badger, William.
Barnard, William F.
Barratt, E. Frances (Oliver.)
Barratt. Oliver.
Barrows, Ilenrv M.
Bartlett, Edward G.
Bartlett, Jane W. (Edward G.)
Bassett, 0. A (Win. D.)
Bates, Levi M.
Bates, Martha A. (Levi M.)
Beebe, Ili ram F.
Beebe, Rebecca M. (ILram F.)
Bel*, Angeline A. (Charles.)
Bell, Charles.
Benedict, Anna E. (Seth W.)B nedict, Emily J.
Benedict, Seth W.Berry. Anna E. (Thus. S.
)
Berry, Thomas >.
Bigelow, James.
Bissell, Allen Rage.
Bisscll, Hannah.Blackmer, Elizabeth W. (Rev. Joel.)
Blaekmer, Rev. Joel.
Blackwood, Margaret.
Blanchard, Charles 1\
Blewett, William.
Bloomingdale, Caroline.
Bloomingdale, David.
Boyd, Frederick S.
Brewster, Ilaniet.
Bridgeman, Sarah A. (Win. II.)
Bridgeinau, Wm, H.Brinkerhof, Jacob, Jr.
Bronson, Sarah D. (I)r. W. A.)
Bronson, Dr. William A.
Brown, Maria L.
Brown, Sarah M.
Bunnell, Jennie V. (Lyman B.)
Bunnell, Lyman B.
Burt, Maria.
Cadv, A. Stoyel.
Calkins, Mary C. (Norman A.)
Calkins, Norman A.
Camp, Antoinette (Amzi Lewis).
Camp, Amzi l ewis.
Camp, Olinda A. (wid. Amzi.)Carey, Mary, (Thomas W.)Caswell, Mary, (Alanson.)
Catlin; Frances II.
Chamberlain, Abigail (Moses).
Chamberlain, Susan E. (Dr. Wm. M.)
Chamberlain, Dr. Wm. M.Champlin, Edward L.
Champlm, Fanny. '
Chandler, Kate.
Chandler, Margaret.
Chester, Catherine W. (Elisha W.)Chester, Elisha \V
r.
Chester, George F.
Chester, Jane J. (G. F.)
j
Chiihcster, Cloissa.
i
Chichester, Lewis.
! Cl.vpp, Rev. A. Huntington,
j
Clapp, Emily P. (Rev. A. H.)
Clough, Maria (Isaac.)
. Connolly, Elizabeth.
Connolly, Maria (James.)
Connover, Thomas D.
Cooke, George T.
Cooke, Elizabeth B.
Cooper, Phyllis.
Corrie, Isabella.
’
'
- •_ J1 )
(i .«
BROADWAY TABERNACLE CHURCH.
Corrie, William.
Cozzens, Mary.
Crane, John W., Jr.
Crehore, Mary M.
Curtis, Margaret A. (Edwin.)
Cushman, William A.
Danner, Julius L.
Davis, Henry G.
Davis, James.
Davis, Louisa J. (James.)
Day, Edgar I.
Day, Elizabeth.
De Men itt, John l\
Dempsey, Mary RDenham, Elizabeth.
Denham, Emma.Dodge, Jeannie G. (Win, A.)
Dodge, W. A.
Doolittle, Eli>ha.
Doolittle, Theresa (Elisha.)
Dorman, Richard A.
Draper, Isabella (Henry.)
Dudley, Daniel D.
Dunham, Harriet L.
Dunham, James H.
Durfee, Adelpha S. (Charles.)
Durfee, Charles.
Edmonds, James.
Edmonds, Margaret.
Edwards, John.
Ely Jane (Isaac B.)
Erwin, Rachel (wid. Richard.)
Evans, John II.
Farrand, Edward F.
Feraud, Hannah.Ferguson, Sophia M.
Fessenden, William W.Field, Henry M., Dr.
Field, Lydia M. (Henry M.)
Field, Sarah T.
Finch, Amelia I. (Edward B.)
Finch, Edward B.
Fislur, Elizabeth R.
Fisher, Harriet E.
Fisher, Joel E.
Fisher, Mary Ann (Nathaniel.)
Fisher, Nathaniel.
Fisher, Sarah.
Fisher, William L.
Fitch, Luther P.
Fonda, Hiram I.
Forbes, E. Gertrude.
Forbes, Elizabeth W.Frisbie, Joanna E. (Myron J.)
Frisbie, Myron J.
Gale, Elizabeth II.
Gale, Sarah II.
Garretson, Mary J.
Gates, Ilmnuh M. (wid. W. II.)
Gavit, Joseph.
Gavit, Margaret S.
Gavit, Meta,
i
Gavit, William E.
Gaylord, Joseph F.
j
Gazani, Giegliclino.
|
Gidman, Richard,
jGilbert, Cassius M.
Gillie, George.
Gillie, Isabella.
Gilson, Emma (Win. 11.)
Girling, Amelia M. (Robert.)
Girling, Frances Louise.
Girling, Robert.
Gordon, Adella J.
Gordon, Stephen H.
,
Gordon, Stephen T.
Gray, Amelia.
Gray, Hannah W. (John.)
j
Gray, Harriet (William).
Gray, John.
Gray, Mary II.
Gray, William.
Greenwood, Mary E.
'
I lack ley, Caleb B.
Ilackley, Frances (Caleb B.)
Hall, Amanda II. F. (Henry C.)
Hall, Aroline C.
Hall, Charles L.
Hall, Elial F.
Hall, Elizabeth M. (Geo. G.)
Hall, Evelyn M (Elial F.)
Hall, George F.
Hall, George Godwin.Hall, Henry C.
Hall, Martha (Robert L.)
Hal), Robert L.
Halsey, Henrietta A. (II. P.)
Halsey, Henry A.
Ilalsey, Julia D,
:a j i».ifu !
'* » i '-»v
50 MANUAL OK T1IE
Hart, Matilda (Seth.
)
llarvey, Alpha R. (Charles K.)
Harvey, Charles 11.
llarvey, Ellen M.
Harvey, Olive M.
Harvey, Sarah B. (Willard).
Harvey, Willard.
Haskins, Robert W.Ilaskins, William II.
Hatch, Jane S.
Hathaway, Hannah C.
Haviland, Mary C. (Cha'lcs.)
Hawley, Frances A.
Hawley, Mary A. (wid. Aaron.)
llazeltine Emma (Leonard, Jr.)
Hazel tine, Leonard, Jr.
Hedges, Dr. David A.
Henderson, Archibald.
Henry, Agnes.
Hickock, Sarah E. (Wm. C.)
lliekock, William 0.
llineklev, Elizabeth R. (wid. Zena
R.)
Hitchcock, Anna L. (Jno. G)
Hitchcock, John G.
Holder, William W.lloliister, Henrietta K.
Holly, Abner B.
Holly, Catherine J.
Holmes, Abby II.
Holmes, Joanna L.
Holmes, Mary G. (Samuel.)
Holmes, Marv IT. (Win. B.)
Holmes, Mary M.
Holmes, Samuel.
Holmes, William B.
Hooker, Honor ia E.
Howard, Benjamin.
Howe, Horatio B.
Howe, Martha B. (II. B.)
Hunt, Seth B.
Hunt, Frances P. (Seth B.)
Huntington, Ellen J. (Thos. T.
)
Huntington, Emily S.
Huntington, Jeanette M.
Huntington, Mary Ann.Hyatt, Mary (Theo.)
Isham, Pierpont.
Jsham, Semantha S. (Pierpont.)
Jackson, Mary L.
I Jennings, Arthur Bates.' Jennings, Joel A.
!
Jennings, Susan F. (Joel).
;
Jennings, William N.1 Johnson, Delia M.Johnson, Julia (George.)Judson, Anna Maria.
Judson, Eliza.
1 Kershaw, Amelia F. (John.)Kershaw, John.
King, Amanda E. (Thomas.)Kingman, Sophia.
Knapp, Eliza C. (Samuel.)
Knevals, Caleb B.
|
Kyte, Francis If.
Lambert, Dr. Edward W.' Lambert, Ellen L
|
Lambert, Martha W. (Dr. E. W.)s
;
Lambert, Sarah (\\rm. G.)
! Lambert, William G.
Lane, Mary Ann (Thomas.)Lane, Thomas.Leavens Philo F.
Leeds, Sarah P.
Leonard, Ambrose.Link, Christina L. (Frederick.)
Link, Frederick.
Lipe, Melissa.
Lipe, Walter.
Littlejohn, Agnes L. (David.)
Littlejohn, Francis. .
Littlejohn, Samuel B.
Locke, William E.
Lockwood, Frederick.
Lockwood, Helen M.Lockwood, Olivia (Fredeiick.)
Lord, Sarah Ann.Lord, William.
Loring, Herbert A.
Lugar, Amelia M.
Lugar, Frances A.
1 Lugar, Harriet N. (Jeremiah G.)1 Lugar, Harriet N.
iLugar, Jeremiah G.
ILyon, Mary E.
Magee, Alexander.
Magee, Ann.Magee, John Alexander.
.
'
BROADWAY TABERNACLE CHURCH. 51
Maghee, Sarah P. (Jolin.)
McCombs, Margaret.
McDonald, Margaret (wid. Thus. R.
McDougall, Klva (William.)
McDougall, Jeanette A.
MeDougall, Matthew.
McDougall, Susannah (Matthew.)
Megary, Maria C.
Mellish, Lucy M.
Menair, Jane (Jasper.)
Mcrriam, Ed waul C.
Merrill, Jane M.
Middleton, Mary (John.)
Miller, Mary M.
Mills, Adelie.
Mills, Julia T.
Miner, Henry Clay.
Minor, Catherine R.
Minor, Cyrus S.
Minor, Flora L.
Monroe, Albert F.
Moore, Cornelia C.
Moore, Clarissa E. T. (Edgar W.)Moore, Edgar W.Moore, Sarah M. (L. C.)
Moore, William D.
Morse, Ida May.
Moses, Dorothy (Aaron.)
Moses, Susan F. (Charles.)
Newcomb, Maria II. (Harvey.)
Nicol, Ciorinda B. (Francis B.).
Nicol, Francis B.
Niles, Isabel W. (Win. W.)Niles, William W.North, Dr. Alfred.
Norlhup, Emelinc M.
Oakley, Surah.
Catalina, Lydia A. (John.)
Owens, Elizabeth M. (Thus.)
Palmer, Annie W.Pardee, Almira M. (Dr. Walter.)
Pardee, Mary E. (Ward C.)
Pardee, Rebecca C. (R. G.)
Pardee, Richard G.
Pardee, Dr. Walter.
Pardee, Dr. Ward C.
Parker, Agnes C.
Parker, Joseph, Jr.
Pel ton, Mary C. (Guy II.)
Pel ton, Sarah A.' Pember, Martha A.! Perry, Sarah B. (0. If.)
;
Peters, Rev. Absalom, I). D.
Peters, Harriet II.
Phelps, Benjamin K.
IPhelps, Hannah M. ( B. K.)
Pickering, Sarah C.
Pitts, Helen 1).
Plyer, Charles W.Plyor, Hattie.
Pomeroy, Ed. Noyes.I Pond, Harriet.
!
Pond, Harriet (Lewis A)
Pond, Rev. Theodore S.
Pooler, Eliza (John W.)1
Potter, Catherine (John.)
Potter, Cynthia L.
Potter, Wilson.
Pratt, Harriet L (Milo )
Pratt, Sarah B. (wid. Rev. Edward.)Pray, Sarah A. (wid. Isaac C.)
Prentice, Mary A (Sartelle.)
Rand, Sophia C.
' Ranney, Ambrose L.
Ranuey, La Fayette, Dr.
Ray, Susan C.
Reed, Alvan.
Reed, Lucinda (Wilson I).)
Reeve, Jeremiah.
Reeve, Mary (Jeremiah.)
Riggs, Edward.Ritter, Annie.
Ritter, Delia M. (Dr. Thomas.)Ritter, Louisa (Caspir If.)
Ritter, Maria.
Ritter, Dr. Thomas.Robbins, Mrs. Relief (David.)
Roberts, Mary R.
Roberts, Morris, Jr.
Robinson, Mrs. E. L. (Russell.)
Robinson, Frederick M.
Robinson, Mary B. (Frederick M.)
Robinson, Mary C.
Robinson, Robeit II.
Robinson, Russell W.Rochester Susan (wid. Joseph.)
Rockwell, Clarissa T. (widow Dr.
Thcron.)
Rogers, Charles T.
Rogers, Sarah M. (Charles T.)
-
.
V
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.
(JiTUi)' )qH
52 MANUAL OF TUB
Saxton, Josiah C.
Scliarlau, Win. August.
Sears, Sarah J. (Ilenry P.)
Seely, Caroline A.
Seymour, Elizabeth S.
Seymour, JamesSeymour, Lucy J.
Shafer, Loretta 0. (Abraham.)Shannon, Sarah L.
Sherwood Eranees A. E. (Thos. D.)
Shriver, Eliza C.
Slade, Jonathan B.
Smith, Adon.Smith, Anna.Smith, Mrs. Caroline M.
Smith, Charles S.
Smith, Elijah II.
Smith, Elizabeth (James D)
Smith, Ellen.
Smith, Emma Eve.
Smith, Hannah B.
Smith, Harriet T. (Wrn. II.)
Smith, Helen A. (Harry D.)
Smith, James.
Smith, James I).
Smith, James Henry.
Smith, Mrs. Margaret II
.
Smith, Mis. Mary.
Smith, Miss Mary.
Smith, Mortimer.
Smith, Rhoda Jane.
Smith, Samuei St. John.
Smith, Sarah.
Smith, Sarah II C.
Smith, Sarah N.
Smith, William II.
Snell, Mrs. Mary.
Snow, Joseph P.
Southmayd, Sarah A. (Stephen 0.)
Staples, John C.
Starr, Mary W. (Matthew W.)Starr, Matthew W.Stephenson, MargaretStevenson, Isabella G. (Henry I-.')
Stites, George M.
Stites, Maria L. (Geo. M.)
Storrs, Harriet T.
Stupes, Abigail.
Sumner, Abigail.
Sweet, Francis P.
Sylvester, Eliza M.
Taleott, Henrietta E. (James.)
Taleott, James.Taylor, Eliza G. (II. S.)
Taylor, Horace S.
Taylor, James.Taylor, Mary A. (William.)
Taylor, Olivia M.
Teal, William II.r
l\ stmun, Eliza (will. John.)
Thayer, Mary E. (N. W.)Thayer, Normandus W.Thomas, Mary.
Thompson, Abel lv.
j
Thompson, Artemus E.
j
Thompson, Elizabeth (Rev. Jos. P.)
i Thompson, Eunice (Rev. A. G.)
,
Thompson, Rev. Joseph P., D. D.
I
Thompson, Lucy B.
I
Thompson, Mary K. (Artemus E.)
, Thompson, Mary L. (F. E.)
Thompson, Melissa (A. IC.)
\
Thompson, Sarah (Jno. W.)
|
Thomson, Catherine L. (Wm. II,)
|
Thomson, James B.
j
Thomson, Mary C. (James B)
! Thomson, Dr. William II.
|
Thurston, Thomas G.
|
Tindall, Amanda.
|
Turner, Dr. A Ivan 11.
j
Turner, Sarah W.j
Tyler, Charles Alfred.
|
Tyler, Cornelia.
Van Dyne, Hannah'Van Ness, Harriet E. (Giles P.)
Van Norden, Charles.
Vaughan, Am iriah B.
I Walcott, William Henry.
|
Walley, Henry C.
j
Wmd, Elizabeth C.
Washburn, Jane Ives (Jno. II)
Washburn, John II.
Watei bury, Benjamin.
Watson, Charles C.
Weston, Caroline IT. (David.)
Weston, Celia (Milton.
Wheat, Josephine C.
White, Amos C.
White, Hannah.White, Harriet P. R. (Amos C.)
White, Henry Kirk.
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A J A™*-
BROADWAY TABERNACLE CHURCH. 53
White, Moores M.
White, Sarah K. (Elijah K.)
White, Sophia A.
White, \V i 11 a i cl W.Whitehead, Charles E.
Whitehead, Rachel T. (Charles E)
Whittcmore, Charles.
Whittemore, Maria F. (Charles.)
Whittelsey, Catharine A.
Whittelsey, Ilenrv.
Wilbor, Mary E. (Wra H.)
Wilde, Isaac L.
i
Williams, Eliza (Charles F.)
I Williams, Frances L.
;
Williams, Luther.
! Williams, Margaret.
: Williams, Mary A.
|
Williams, Mosely H.
I Williams, Charles F.
I
Winslow, Edward II.
j
Winslow, Helen A.
Witter, William C.
|
Wood, Rebecca (wid. Benjamin.)
|
Wright, Rosetta M. (Isaac.)
THE FOLLOWING NAMED PERSONS UNITED WITH THE CHURCH
APRIL 15, 13GG, SINCE ABOVE CATALOGUE WAS ARRANGED.
Adams, John Quincy.
Adams, Ada W. (John Q.)
Bridge, Elizabeth.
Colton, Mary A. (Rev. Erastus).
Durfee, Charles A.
Durfcc, Melanie B.
Emerson, Nathaniel B.
Gale, Mary 0.
Gale, Phoebe.
Gunn, Mary R.
Hall, S. Josephine.
Lillie, Ralph.
I Morse, Ancoletta (Daniel P.)
j
Olmsted, Albert II.
|
Partridge, John Chandler.
I Partridge, Sarah K. (James H.)
! Pratt, Win. II.
iPutnam, Jennie S. (Samuel P.)
Putnam, Samuel P.
Reeve, Fanny Isabel.
!
Smith, Cornelinett (Harlan P.)
I Stowell, Martin Luther.
|
Ward, Elizabeth C. (w. Frederick.)
I Wright, Dr. Slocum.
I
Wright, Caroline L. (Dr. Slocum).
.,
.
54 MANPAL OK TIIE
HISTORICAL CATALOCUE.
PERMANENT OFFICERS.
Rev. E. W. Andrews,* Rev. Joseph P. Thompson, D. D.
Samuel Pitts, fWilliam G. Lambert,:);
A LBERT Wool) RU F P, §George Walker,
||
John C. Cass,**
Israel Minor, f|IIenry Whittelsey,
Matthew W. Starr, Jr.,§§
Austin Abbott, ftSamuel Holmes,Wm. G. Lambert,Henry C. Hall,William II. Smith.
J)r. Wm. II. Thomson.
OFFICERS FOR THE YEAR.
CLERKS.
A. K. Thompson, 1810 to IS 43.
Albert W. Huntington, 1 8 4 to
1844.
J. W. Camp, 1841 to 1845.
E. F. Treadwell, 1845 to 1840.
Henry M. Benedict, 18 Id to 1847.
Alexa nde k An d e rso n,
1800.
William W. Fessenden, 1847 to
1850.
James D. Smith, 1850 to 1851.
William W. Fessenden, 1851 to
1S05.
Leonard IIazeltink, Jr., 1865
to —TREASURERS.
1859 to A. K. Thompson, I860 to 1801.
William B. Holmes, 1801 to —MEMBERS OF COMMITTEE.
1840 to 1812.
David Hale,Marcus Hurd,Samuel C. Hills,
Leonard Crocker,George Dry den.
18 42 to 1848.
Leonard Crocker,James Cruiksiiank,
Munson Lockwood,Richard Hale,Stephen C. Gray.
1843 to 1844.
Rev. Amzi Camp,David Hale,Wm. R. Powell,Charles Durfee,Aaron Q. Thompson.
1844 to 1845.
Leonard Crocker,Henry Whittelsey,James Smith,
Seth W. Benedict,
J. C. Lanpiiier.
* Dismissed, August 14 1S44.
t Resigned, August 17, 1853.
4 Resigned, December 23, 1810.
§ Resigned, December 17. 1844.
44 Resigned, February 27, 1800.
3 1|The Piistor, Deaeons, Treasurer, and
Committee.
R Dismi ssed, August 9, 1S59.** Expelled, January 3, 1850.
ft Dismissed, January 21, 1859.
§§ Resigned, October 28, 1S02.
Clerk are, ex officio, members of the
<1
BROADWAY TABERNACLE CHURCH,
1845 to 1846. 1852 to 1853.
Rkv. Amzi Camp,James Ciuiiksiiank,
A. W. HUNTINGTON,William G. West,Leonard Chock Kit.
James L. Ensign,A 1 . E X A N her Anderson ,
Thomas E. Smith,
Myron J. Erisijie,
William R. Powell.
1846 to 1847. 1853 to 1854.
Wm. C. Gilman,Henry Wiiittelsky,
John Sloan k,
Setii W. Benedict,
A. K. Thompson.
Alonzo S. Ball,Marcus Mitchell,Thomas Ritter,
Moses Cristy,
Thomas Rutherford.
1847 to 1848. 1854 to 1855.
David S. Williams,Thomas Ritter,
George Walker,William W. Fessenden,
Cyrus S. Minor.
William G. West,George Andrews,Charles II. Waterrury,Langron S. Ward,Henry A. Halsey.
18 48 to 1849. 1855 to 1856.
Albert W. Huntington,Isaac E. Smith,
James Smith,
Marcus Mitchell,Edwin Johnson.
A. K. Thompson,Isaac E. Smith,
Alex’k J. Henderson,Samuel Holmes,Henry C. Hall.
1849 to 1850. 1856 to 1857.
David S. Williams,Edwin, Johnson,Cyrus S. Minor,
William G. West,Joseph W. Camp.
John Gray,Alex. Anderson,W. B. Holmes,NT
. A. Calkins,
Edward Pratt.
1850 to 1851. 1857 to 1 S5S.
Marcus Mitchell,
Thomas E. Smith,
Charles H. Waterrury,John Gray,Asa Parker.
David A. Hale,Henry C. Hall,R. A. Dorman,A. K. Thompson,Samuel Holmes.
1851 to 1852. 1858 to 1859.
Matthew W. Starr,
Amos G. Bartlett,
Henry C. Conkling,Joseph E. Woodrridge,Albert W. Huntington.
Henry A. Halsey,Asa Parker,S. W. Benedict,
Jas. D. Smith,
A. K. Thompson.
56 MANUAL OF THE
1859 to 1 800.
Chas. S. Smith,
James II. Grovkstekn,Henry C. Hale,Myron J. Frisbik,
Wallace E. Caldwell.
1860 to 1801.
Wallace E. Caldwell,Levi M. Hates,
Samuel P. Holmes,Thomas E. Smith.
1801 to 180-2.
Chas. Bell,
Jeremiah Reeve,Wallace E. Caldwell,Calkh B. Knevals.
1802 to 1803.
Wm. II. Smith,
Wm. G. Lamhkrt,Tiios. W, Wiiittemour,Edmund L. Ciiamplin.
1863 to 1804.
Chas. S. Smith,
Wm. II. Biudgkman,Dr. George II. White,Ch a r les Aheii n et ii y.
1804 to 1805.
Wm. Allen,Tiios. W. Whittemork,Dr. Wm. II. Thomson,Nathaniel Fisher.
1805 to 1800.
Wm. W. Fessenden,A. K. Thomson,Edward B. Finch,
James Talcott.
1800 to 1867.
Wm. W. Fessenden,Chas. Whittemork,Rev. A. II. Clapp,
Francis B. Nicol.
BROADWAY TABERNACLE CHURCH. 57
MEMBERS.PERSONS CONSTITUTING THE CHURCH AT ITS ORGANIZATION, SEPT. 3
,1840 .
Mr. David Halo, d. Jan. 21, IS 19.
Mrs. Lucy S. Hale. dism. Oct. 28, 1S52.“ Lydia Halo. dism. Doc. 5, ISIS.
Mr. Richard Halo, dism. March 27, 1S40.“ Samuel Pitts, dism. Aug. 17, 1853.
Mrs. Rhoda I*. Pitts. kk
Mr. Marcus II uni, d. March 21, IS 17.
Mrs. Fanny Hurd, d. Feb. 7, 1S19.
Mr. Abel K. Thompson.u Israel Minor, dism. Jan. 21, 1S59.
Mrs. Charlotte. L. Minor, *• “
Mr. Jacob Brinkerhoff, disin. April 7,
1S4 i*.
Mrs. Mary G. Brinkorhoff, * k ‘*
Mr. Silas C. Smith, dism. July 1. 1S4S.
Airs. Mary Smith, k * k
Mr. David I. Huntington, dism. March23, 1852.
Mrs. Emily S. Huntington, dism. March23, 1S52.
Miss Harriet S. Chamberlain {Mrs.Stone), dism. Oct. 23. ISM.
Mr. David Bourne, fellowship withd.April 29, 1S51.
Mrs. Mary Gray, d. June 19. 1841.
Mr. Francis N. Shaw, dism. Nov. C,
1S43.k* William M. Ray, dism. Feb. 20,
1S4G.“ Charles Roberts, dism. June 8. 1S42.“ Martin Uhlor, dism. April 12, 1842.“ Augustus llustaee, dism. July 29,
“ J. W. Fellows, dism. Sept. 27, 1S41.
Mrs. Mary A. Follows, ** “k* Charlotte Crawford, dism. April 4,
ISIS.“ Catherine Rotter.
Air. Ilezekiah Whitney, fellowship withd.May 1, 1S54.
Miss Rachel B. Sickles, dism. Jan. 4.
1S14.
Mr. John S. Savory, dism. Dee. 27, 1845.“ Benjamin Waterbury.“ Isaac E. Smith, dism. Aug. 9, 1859.“ George Williams, dism. Nov. 28.
1345.k
* Samuel C. Hills, dism. July 4, 1S4S.*• llervey F. Lombard, dism. Sept. 17,
1842.l
- Charles G. Wright, dism. May 10,
1843.
Ali>s Harriet Barry {Mrs. Meeks), dism.Feb. 26, 1844.
‘‘ Jaqiu line Barry {Mrs. Jloxie) dism.Oet. 29, 1845.
“ Lavinia Quackenboss, fellowshipwithd. Nov. 23, 1852.
Mr. George Dryden. dism. Oct. 1, 1850.
Airs. Barbery Dryden, “ kk
Miss Ann Hicks {Mrs. Watkins), dism.April 15, 1842.
k‘ Catherine Alexander, fellowship
withd. Nov. 23, 1852.“ Elva James {Mrs. Macdougal).
Airs. Eliza H. Bacon, dism. July 2, 1845.
Air. Stephen Pritchard, dism. July 5,
1841.kk Asa K. Allen, dism. Jan. 13. 1S41.
Aliss Cordelia Halsey (Mrs. Brown),dism. Feb. 1. 1849.
Mrs. Sarah ITobasco, dism. May 20,
1S51.
Miss Susannah On*, dism. Aug. 30. 1842.“ Elizabeth A. Wicks (Mrs. Curtis),
dism. Nov. 18, 1-51.
All*. Alfred W. Smith, dism. Dec. 6,
1841.“ Leonard Crocker, dism. Nov. 11,
1847 .
Airs. Penelope Crocker. “ “
Mr. William G. West, dism. Aug. 21,
1 SCO.“ Orange A. Smith, dism. Oet. 14,
is 13.
John C. (’ass, expelled Jan. 3, 1850.
Mrs. Susan W. Cass, d. 1850.
Mr. William G. Lambert, dism. March31, 1-41.
* k Asa Parker, dism. April 22, 1SG2.
Mrs. Rebecca J. Parker, d. Dec. 1844.
Air. Alexander Patrick, d. Dec. 21, 1S53.
Airs. Louisa Patrick, dism. Sopt. 9, 1SG3.
Mr. John W. Crane, dism. April 8, 1842.“ James E. P. Dean, dism. April 30,
1845.
SUBSEQUENT ADDITIONS.
Received Oct. 20, 1840, by Certificate.
AH. Albert Woodrulf. dism. Dee. 17, 1S44.u George G. Jewett, dism. Sept. 30,
1S4G.
Airs. Jane L. Smith dism. Dec. G,1S41.
Air. Albert L. Winship, dism. July 1,
1 SG3.
December 28, ls40, by Certificate.
Aliss Charlotte S. Turner, dism. Nov. 24,
1852.
0 ?i Profession.
Air. Ahial B. Ilageman, dism. April 19,
1853.
Aliss Sarah Gray, dism. March G, 1S47.
March 1, 1S41, by Certificate.
Air. Charles li. Harvey, dism. Alay 22,
1844.
Mrs. Rebecca Harvey, k ‘ “
Note.—
T
he following abbreviations are used in this catalogue:—d., died; dism.
sinissed; withd., withdrawn;excoin, excommunicated.
'
V .
L
58 MANUAL OF THK
Miss Marcia L Harvey (Mrs. Elliott),
dism. Dec 24. 1S44.“ Ann Frost (Mrs. Woo l), dism. Nov.
12, 1S41.
Mrs. Sylvia Griswold. d. Dee. 29, 1849.“ K6t)ccca Wood ( IF. Benjamin.)“ Sarah Sickles, dism. dan. 4, 1 S 44.
“ Harriet Gant, dism. May 6 1846.
Mr. Stephen C. Gray. died May 12 ’842.
Mrs. Harriet Gray, dism. March 6, 1813.
Mr. Thomas Lane.Mr. John W. Hall, fellowship wit lid.
March 1, 1 853.
Miss Priscilla Polhamus (Mrs. Craig).d. July, 1861.
“ Catherine Doyle dism. May 8, 1855.
Mr. Richard E. Dibble, fellowship wit lid.
Get. 28, 1 857.
Mrs. Mary Dibble, d. Sept. 9 1851.
Rev. 1C. W. Andrews, dism. Nov 28,1815.Miss Maria C. Hopkins, dism. Jan. 6.
1852.li Louisa Weed. dism. Dec. 25 1648.
Mr. James Cruikshank, dism. Feb. 15,
1851.
Miss Mary Ann Wheeler (Mrs. Cndk-- shank), dism. Feb. 15, 1851.
Mrs, Sarah Woodruff, dism. l)ee. 17,
1844.
Harriet Woodruff,Miss Cynthia Woodruff, k ‘
Mrs. Elizabeth Elder, dism April 7. 1 S58.*• Lydia K. Shipman, dism. Jan. 21,
Miss Elizabeth De Witt (Mrs Cobin-son), dism. Jan. G, 1847.
Mr. Albert W. Huntington, dism. Dec.8, 1 853.
“ llazcn S. Crook, dism. Oct. 8. 1848.
Miss Sarah A. Relany (Mrs. Whitlock ),
dism. Sept. 2, 1851.w Julia A. Relany (Mrs. Hovvitfr),
dism. July IS, 1844.
On Profession.
Miss Mary Mulliner d. Nov. 22. 18G3.Mr. Jesse \V. Rcnediet, dism. June 13,
1842.Joseph W. ("amp, dism Feb. 3, 1352.
4* Edward E. Rankin, dism. Dec. 27,
1845.
On Profession.
Mr. Krasins E. Ripley, dism. Nov. 24,
1841.
July 4, Istl, by Certificate.
Miss Julia Ann Wetmore, di-sin. Nov. 2G,
1842.
Mr. William R. Powell, dism. June 16,
1653.
Mrs. Ann R. Powell,Mr. I'M ward S. Rates, dism. Dec. 23,
1842.
Mrs. Mhrv 0. Rab-s, ‘* “
Mr. William W. Fessenden.k
* Ellsworth M. Punderson, dism.March 10, 1S43.
Mrs. Margaret Kingsbury, dism. Sept.
22, 1853.“ Elizabeth Quiller, dism. Feb. 26,
1843.“ Emma Smith, dism. Oct. 14, 1613.
Mr. Charles U. Pratt, excom. April 30,
1861.•* Hector Sears, dism. June 24, 1851.“
. Lewis P. Clover, dism. June G, 1854.
Mrs. Bridget Clover. “
Miss Clarissa Ruck dism. Oct. 12, 1847.•• Rosina Hamill {Mrs. Treadwell),
dism. June 15, 1847.
Mr. Franklin Sayre, dism. Jan. 10, 1645.“ Thomas P. Gustin, dism. July 20,
1848.
On Profession.
Mr. Jonathan F. Morris, dism. June 30,
1858.“ Russell W. Robinson.
Mrs. Caroline Wheeler, fellowship witlid.
April 27, 1852.
May 2, 1811, by Certificate.
Miss Elizabeth M. Renton dism. May23, lb44.
“ Lucy Rogers, d. 1S4S.
Mr. Jacob Freeland, d. May. 1843.“ Henry A. Halsey.
Mrs. Ann H. Halsey, d. May 27, 18G2.
Miss Deborah C Woolley, (Mrs. Evans),dism. June 20. 1848.
Mrs. Emily W. Smith, dism. Aug. 9,1859.“ Ann Eliza Merritt, dism. Nov. 23,
1843.“ Catherine Matilda Peck, dism. Apr.
September 5, 1841, by Certificate.
Miss Almira Ebbets, dism. May 4, 1S47.k* Julia Johnson, dism. March 5, 1845.
Mrs. Elizabeth Meeker, d. May 29, 1842.
Air. Munson Lockwood, dism. Nov. 2s,
1842.
Mrs. Charlotte Lockwood, “ * k
Mr. Reujamin Lockwood, dism. May 27,
18 Hi.
Mrs. Elizabeth Lockwood, dism. May 27,
1840.“ Olivia Lock word.
Mr. Le Grand Lockwood, dism. March27. I860.
“ Henrv M. Benedict, dism. Aug. 29,
1854.‘
15, 1659.
Miss Elizabeth Savory (Mrs. Bradley),dism. June 5, 1849.
Mr. Daniel Whiting, dism. Jan. 19,1858.Mrs. Susan 1». Whiting, dism. Jan. 19,
1858.* Julia R. Townc, dism. Sept. 14, 1843.
Mrs. Mary Frazier, dism. July 27, 1842.
Miss Elizabeth Frazier,“ Mary Smith.4
* Ann* Eliza Denniston (Mrs. JPan-ser), dism. Aug. 22, l $48.
Mrs. Marv W. Jewett, dism. Sept. 80,
1846.*
>
A\. ‘. < . *4 tf
. r .ui .. : -.a
BROADWAY TABERNACLE CHURCH. 59
On Profession.
Miss Betsey Ann Harris. dism. Sept. IT,
18-15.
Mr. Thomas J. Hall, <lism. Fob. 13. 1.3G0.
November T, IS 11, by Certificate.
Mrs. Olinda A. Camp f Pev. A/nzi.)
M iss Adeline Winchester (Mi \v. Kn ig/i
t
)
,
dism. Oct. IT, IS 12.
“ Rachel Milligan, dism. Nov. I, is 12.
“ Eliza Stephenson {Mrs.Crook), dism.Oct. 3, ISIS.
Mrs. Mary Carnes, dism. July 2, Is IS.
Mr. John I). Carnes, dism. May 25, is 12.
Miss Sarah Oakley.“ Maria A. Stone, fellowship withd.
Nov. ‘23, 1 S52.
Mrs. Mary (.'rocker, dism. Nov. 11, Is IT.u Agnes Sage, dism. J line 21), 181s.
Miss Philomela Strickland, dism. Oct.
11, 1815.“ Caroline Stanard, dism. May 10, 1812.w Margaret Frazier, dism. July 2T,
1842.
Mr. Luther Williams.Mrs. Frances Louisa Williams.Mr. Charles L. Westervelt, fellowship
withd. Nov. 23, 1852.“ Nathaniel Barnum, dism. May 20,
1851.“ Samuel Whitney, dism. April 21,
1843.“ Cyrus S. Minor, dism. Dec., 1851.
On Profession.
Mr. Moses M. Bradley, dism. Jan 9, 1851.4* Aaron Q. Thompson, d. Jan. 13,1850.
Miss Martha Jane Clover, dism. June 22,
184T.“ Lucy T. llale {Mrs. Conover), dism.
Oct. 28. 1852.“ Laura Hale {Mrs. Cauip), dism. Feb.
3, 1852.
January 2, 18-42, by Certificate.
Mr. William II. Whitlock, dism. Sept. 2,
1851.
Mrs. Elizabeth Whitlock, d. 1843.
Miss Mary L. Whitlock, dism. Sept. 2,
1851.“ Susan Rebecca Webb, fellowship
withd. Sept. 9. 1531.
Mr. James J. Walworth, dism. July 18,
1542.
Mrs. Elizabeth C. Walworth,Mr. Frederick II. Johnson, fellowship
withd. Nov. 23, 1852.
Mrs. Euphcmia Sutherland, d. Nov. 4,
184T.
Miss Joanna Sutherland, fellowshipwithd. March 1, 1853.
Mrs. June. McVickars {Mrs. Iiickett),
fellowship withd. May l, 1854.
Mr. William II. Moore, dism. March G,
1843.“ Nathaniel Davidson, fellowship
withd. March 1, 1S53.
Mr. William S. Comstock, dism. Feb. 25,1845.
Mrs Betsey G. Swain, dism. Dec. 281542.
Mr. James II. French, d. 1843.Mrs. Mary W. French, dism. Nov. 5,
DIG.Mr. David 11. Fitch, dism. May 20, 1851.Mrs. Mary C. Fitch,
On Profession.
Mr. Erick Samuel Burstrand, dism. Jan.22. 1 s50.
Mrs. Adalino Chapman {Mrs. Wanzer),dism. May 1, 1"51.
Su>un Clark, dism. Oct. 12, 154T.Miss Harriet Wheeler, fellowship withd.
March 10, 1552.u Frances Smedley, dism. Dec. 23,
15 12 .
March G, 1842, by Certificate.
Mr. Lewis Pugh. dism. Aug. 30, 1842.Miss Ruth Grove nor, dism. Sept. 30, 184G.“• Mary G. Jewett, dism. Sept. 30. 18 4G.
Mr. George Andrews, dism. June 2T,1555.
‘
Mrs. Sarah Andrews, “ u
Mr. Charles Durfee, dism. Dec. 1, l54T.Miss Harriet A. Gregory, dism. Nov. 10,
15 43.
Mr. William M. Bennett, dism. May 25,1 852.
John Chapman, d. March, ls51.
Mrs. Anna J. Chapman (Jfrs. EdwardBrown), dism. Jan. 22, 1852.
Mr. George W. Trembly, distil. March 4,
185<rMiss Ann Eliza Goddard {Mrs. Mill-
wood). dism. Nov. 15, 1855.” Julia Ann Reed, dism. Sept. 5, 1843.
Mr. Cornelius B. llulshart, dism. Oct. 12,
1S4T.
Mrs. Mary llulshart, dism. Aug. IT, 1 S 47.*• Maria L. Brown.
Mr. David S. Williams, dism. April 22,1831.
Mr, Alanson Taylor, dism. June 13, 1842.Mrs. Rebecca B. Taylor,
•• Hannah Church, dism. Nov. 28, 1845.Miss Sarah Jane Church,Mr. John Burdell, exp. April 12, 1844.
On Profession.
Mr. John Bacon, dism. July 2, 1815.
Mrs. Mary L. Jackson, dism. Sept. 2G,
18 45.
Mr. A Ivan Reed.Mrs. Sarah White, dism. April 2, 1S45.
*• Harriet B. 1 hompson, d. Aug. 12,Is 14.
Mr. Thomas N. Dale, dism. May G, 1S4T.Miss Amelia Ketcham, dism. April 30,
1845.
Mr. William A. Swain, dism. Dec. 28,1842.
Miss Mary J. Hulslander {Mrs. Calhoun)'’,
.
fellowship withd. Apr. 2G, 1853.
.
A-
-
• •/' ,t ai A M .hi, i
60 MANUAL OF THIS
May 1, 1842, by Certificate.
Mrs. Olivo Wilkie, dism. M;iv 23. 1815.44 Eliza Dubois, dism. Mareh 0, 1843.
Miss Lucy Leuber, 4 *
Mr. James Olmstead, dism. Sept. 14,
1843.41 Courtland 1*. S. Betts, dism. May 13,
1851.
Miss Hannah '\ heeler (Mrs. Gray).
On Profession.
Mr. Jacob Brinkcrholl’, Jr., dism. May6, 1840.
Miss Marv Moore, fellowship wilhd. Nov.23, 1852.
44 Sarah Jane Smith (Mrs 6WA ), dism.April 3, 1840.
Mrs. Lydia Jessup, fellowship wilhd.
May 1. 1854.
Miss Charlotte Jessup (Mrs. 1VaUcer).
fellowship withd. April 20, 1850.
Mrs. Mary a Cruikshank, dism. July 20,
1852.44 Amelia Snow, dism. June Is, 1815.
Miss Hannah J. Ross, fellowship withd.Sept. 0, 1851.
Miss Rose A. Miller, distil. Sept. 20, 1 850.
Mr. (diaries D. Brown, exeom. April 20,
1 850.44 John 0. O'Brien, fellowship withd.
.June. 18 3.
Miss Marv F. Holbrook, dism. July 2.
1815.'
Mr. Aaron B. Heath, d. Mareh S, 1851.
Mrs. Malvina Heath, dism. May 24, 1855.
Mr. Stephen Conover, Jr., dism. Get. 28,
1852.44 Josiah A. Priest, dism. June 23,
lS4s.
Amintor Davidson, dism. July IS,
1811.
Miss Sarah Elder {Mi s. Greeuleaf),dism. Nov. 1. 1847.
44 Ann Maria Lovett, dism. Nov. 2S,
1845.
Mr. Henry Camp, dism. March IS, 1810.4 * (lerard Baneker, fellowship withd.
Nov. 23, 1852.
Miss Sarah Maria Dempsey (MrsMoore.)
Mr. Jeremiah C. Lanphier, dism. Jan. 4,
1840.14 Elwood Stratton, dism. April IP
1843.44 John Gray.44 James Smith.“ Thomas C. Chandler, dism. March
14, 1 8-13.
“ Richard S. Cross, distil. Dec. 8, 1851.
Mrs. Elizabeth Stanley, fellowship wilhd.
Feb. 27, 1855.
July 3, 1842, by Certificate.
Mr. Pliny Allen, dism. Sept. 17, 1842.
Mrs. Louisa Allen, 4 * 14
Miss Elizabeth S. A. Curtis,
Mr. William W. Smith, dism. Nov. 22,
1812.
Mrs. Deborah Retd, dism. March 14,
1 ">55.
*• Mart Ann Smith, dism. July 11.
1843.*• Elizabeth Austin, dism. Mareh 25,
1840.
Miss Mary Ann Austin, u “
*• Cyntiiia Jones, dism. April 3, 1843.Mr. Henry J. Sartwell, dism. April 15,
184 4/
On Profession.
Mrs. Elizabeth Ball, dism. August 20,
1840.
Mr. Charles Denham, fellowship withd.April 20. 1850.
" William II. Moseley, dism. Jan. 12,1 852.
,l Stephen 11. Provost, dism. April 3,
1801.
Mrs. Ann Delia Turcott, dism. March 5,
1815.
Mr. George Hillier, dism. May 23,
1>0;I.
“ Calvin S. Knight, dism. May 281845.
Mrs. Mary W. Fox, dism. Nov. 17,
IvlO.
Mr. Jeremiah P. Robinson, dism. Jan.
0, Is 47.
Miss Eve Blanchard, d. Feb. 25, ls51.
Sept. 4, 1812, by Certificate.
Mr. Edward J. Smith, dism. Jan. 4,
1850.“ Richard G. E. Humphreys, dism.
Jan. 24, 1-45.*• Mvroii II. Crafts, dism. Sept. 17,
18*15.
44 John L. Bennett, dism. Oct. 0,
1844.
Mrs. Amanda Bennett, 4 '
4* Jane llustace, dism. July 20, 1844.
Mr. Henry Martin, distil. Nov. 2, 1843.4* George llinman, dism. Nov. 30,
1812.
On Profession.
Mr. Seeley Scofield, exeom. Sept. 9,
1 85 J.
Miss Elizabeth Bennett (Mrs. Stock-man), dism. Dec. 0, 1851.
Mrs. Louisa Johnson, exeom. Nov. 4,
1845.
Mr. Charles F. Burckett, dism. Nov. 30,
1852.
November 0, 1812, by Certificate.
Miss Harriet Rice, dism. Nov. 7, 1S43.
Mrs. Sarah Lewis, fellowship withd.March 1, 1853.
44 Mary T. West, d. Dee. 27, 1854.4‘ Alice Clifton, d. Oct. 30, 1850.
Miss Phebe Miller, fellowship withd.June 30, ISG3.
“ Emalinda Miller, dism. Oct. 12, 1847.
-
BROADWAY TABERNACLE CHURCH. 61
On Profession.
Mrs. Sarah Smith, <1. March 15, IMS.Miss Frances Dolcy, dism. Nov. 25, 1844.
Mr. Augustus F. Ball, dism. Aug. 2(5,
January 1, 1848, by Certificate.
Miss Mary D. C. Sehrciber, dism. July 30,1850.
Kmily 1*. Kummell, fellowshipwithd. May 1, 18.54.
“ Betsey Thompson, d. Aug. 25. 1851.
Mrs. Eunice Thompson, widow Rev. A.< 1 .
Mr. Forman llendriekson, dism. June 20,
Is |(J.
Mrs. Eleanor llendriekson, dism. June 20.
Is 10.
Mr. Robert Johnson, dism. Feb. 10.
1 S 17.
*• Nathan Camp, dism. .Sept. 28, 1 M0.Mrs. Araty (’amp, * k k *
Mr. Albert Dodge, fellowship witlnl.
Nov. 28, 1852.
Rev. Am/.i Camp, dism. Mar. 25, 1851).
On Profession.
Miss Hannah N. Smith (Mrs Oates).Mr. John Sloane, dism. Aug. 5, ls5().
k- John 1*. Hull, dism. Aug. IT. 1M7.k> John 1). Hart, Jr., d. Jan. 2 It, 1 -58.
March 5, 1818, by Certificate.
Mrs. Margaret L. Fov.le, dism. Mar. fi.1
Is IT.
Mr. John A. Fowle, dism. Alar. 0, 1-17.* k Mason B. Browning, dism. Mar. 0,
1M4.1,1 Moses Christy, dism. Sept. 5, 1.818.
Mrs. Elizabeth A. llawes, dism. Jan. 10,
1 M0.Miss Sarah Ann Rowe, tellowsaip w itlid.
May 1, 1S54.
On Profession.
Miss Cornelia Hall, dism. June 25, 1S15.
Mr. Benjamin F. Browning, dism. Jan. 7,
IMG.“ John Stackhouse, d. in 18-18.
“ John Ranson, fellowship witlnl. Nov.28, 1852.
May 7, 1S48, by Certificate.
Mrs. Sarah Hawkins, dism. Jan. 25, 1810.
Mr. Joseph Harris, dism. Jan. 11, 1 sob.
Mrs. Hannah T. French, dism. May 2,
1344.
Miss Mary Cousins.“ Eliza Cousins (Mrs. Parker), dism.
Jan. 7, 1M0.“ Jane Cousins (Mrs. Menair), dism.
Oct. 11, 1811.
Mrs. Isabella Menair, dism. Juno 12,
134(3
Miss Martha Menair, d. in 1 s 15.
“ Ann Harris (Mrs. Shillington ),
dism. Dec. 29, 1M0.
;
Mr. John J. Allen, dism. May 23, 1344.I Mrs. Harriet Allen, kk k *
Mr. Isaac Morris, dism. Mar. 30, 1S47.Mrs. Mary Morris, k - “
Miss Julia 1». Meeker (Mrs. Pugsley),dism. Nov. 18 1 M0.
Mr. Horace Dresser, fellowship withd.Feb. 20. l-5fi.
Mrs. Eliza Test man.Mr. Henry Whittclsey.
>k Ruins Lockwood, dism. Apr. 2, 1M5.k‘ Samuel N. Stehbins, dism. May 0,
On Profession.
Miss Angelinc White, fellowship withd.May 1. 1-5-1.
Mrs. Elizabeth Waugh, dism. August 51850.
.Mi'S Emily Hatfield (Mrs. Pager*),dism. Oet. 10. 1 -55.
* Catharine R. Hatfield (Mrs. Minor),dism. 1 )ec. 15, 1 ->51.
k‘ Melissa Hatfield (Mrs. Thompson.)
kl Amarantlni lialiield, d. August 31810 .
Mr. Charles R. Hatfield, dism. Aug. 27,1 802.
u John S. Cook, dism. Dec. 17, 1M5.u Joseph Terry, fellowship withd. Nov.
28, 1 -52.kk
Beiij. Menair, dism. June 12, 1-10.
Miss At>by Ann Cooke (Mrs. Pay),dism. Feb. 2o. 1M0.
Mrs. Fanny Pollock, dism. Jan. 25, 1M0.Mr. Eilward Clock, d. July, 1-40." William 11. Snow, dism. June IS,
1815.
Mrs. Lucv W. Dresser, dism. Jan. 4,1 -58.
“
k* Emma Robinson, dism. August 5,
1850.k
‘ Elizabeth Dennison, fellowshipwithd. Nov. 23, 1-52.
•kk Phebe Baneker, dism. Oct. 23, 1840.
Miss Catharine Sigler (Mrs. Scojield),fellowship withd. June 23, 1853.
Mr. Samuel Elder, d. Nov. 20, 1310.
July 2, 1M3, by Certificate.
Miss Lvdia W. Bulklev, dism. Oct. 23,
1 - 10 .
kk Martha Ann Day, dism. April 22,1-51.
Mrs. Elizabeth A. Watkinson, d. Jan. 7,
1850.
Miss Jane C. Watkinson (Mrs. Gill),
dism. Feb. 3, 1352.
Mr. Isaac C. Mayer, dism. Dec. 10,1847.Mrs. Henrietta N. Mayer, k - kk
Mr. Samuel It. Morse, fellowship withd.Aug. 30, 1853.
kk Walter Reid, dism. April 22, 1357.
Mrs. Margaret 1). Reid, k * k *
On Profession.
Miss Margaret Murray (Mrs. Fletcher ),
dism. July 30, 1-51.
; ?
62 MANUAL OF THE
Mr. Edward F. Treadwell, dism. June 15, .
1*17.“ George Pollock, disir.. Jan. 25, IS If),
j
“ William Mamvaring, fellowship|
witlid. Mar. 1, 1853.
September'S, 1843, by Certificate.j
Mrs. Margaret Salters, d. Get. 25, 1*57.
Miss Catharine Johnson (Mrs. Halt),dism. Jan. IS, 1 >53.
“ Abigail Stuhes.“ Elizabeth L)oak, dism. April 12,
j
IS 14.
Mr. Marcus 11. Sand ford, dism. May 12,
IS 15.
Mrs. Susan Rochester.Mr. Jira Payne, dism. Dec. 21, 1844.
0)i Profession.
Mrs. Mary Lavinia Paige (Mrs. Pierce
\
dism. Get. 30. 1849.'
“ Sarah Wareham, dism. Sept. 17,
1 802.
Movember 5, is 13, by Certificate
Mrs. Susan Colesworthy, dism. July 20,
is 17.
“ Alary Ann Wright, d. Feb., 1802.
January 7, 1844, by Certificate.
Mr. Samuel Fisher, dism. Get. 31. Is is.
Mrs. Mima Ann Fisher, "
Mr. Benjamin M. Wilson, dism. April 2,
1S45.
Airs. Mary W. Wilson, dism. April 2,
IS 15.
Mrs. Maria Clough.Aliss Sarah Van Size (Mrs. Kelsey), d.
April, 1S50.
Alr>. Miranda AV. Crafts, dism. Sept. 17,
Is 45.
Air. Frederick llennell, dism. Jan. 28,
1 so 1
.
“ Charles W. Benedict, dism. Jan. 27,
1 >53.“ George AV. Dunmore, dism. Get 12,
IS 17.
“ Edward AVard, dism. April 7, is 10.
Mrs. Sophia Ward, " u
Mr. George Heard, dism. April 24, 1S51.
Mrs. Eleanor Heard, ** “ “
Miss Aurelia Osborn, “ “
On Profession.
Mrs. Mary Bruorton, dism. Aug. 22Is IS.
Air. Asahel Jones, dism. Aug. 22, IMS.Mrs. Alary «!• Jones),
Air. Robert. G. Eeonori, dism. Feb, 15,
1 *49.
Miss Alary Ann Thompson, dism. Aug. 5,
1850.
Mrs. Sarah Ann Eaton, d. July 22, 1848.
Sarah Gill, dism. Sept. 11, 1802.
March 3, 18D, by Certificate.
Mr. Seth W. Benedict, dism. Afareh 4,
ls5(J.
Mrs. Fanny R. Benedict, d. Jan. 9, 1854.“ Ann Louisa Lockwood, dism. Alarch
27, 1 800.
On Profession.
Air. James Menair, dism. Get. 11, 1844.u Alexander F. AVelsh, fellowship
witlid. Nov. 23, 1852.
Mrs. Hannah Thompson, dism. Dec. 17,1*15.
u Matilda J. Ilart,
Air. Henry Ames, excom. Nov. 23, 1852.
May 5, 184 j, by Certificate.
Airs. .Margaret Stephenson.“ Elizabeth Boozy, d. Dee 14,1852.
Mr. John D. Carnes, dism. Jan. 20, 1S47.
On Profession.
Mrs. Margaret Humphry s. dism. Alay 15,1 *52.
July 7, 1841, by Certificate.
Mrs. Sarah Beach, dism. Nov. 1, 1*17.*• Frances Harris, dism. Jan, 14, 1859.
Air. James AV. lliggins, dism. June 3(J,
1 *10.
AL-s. Eleanor Higgins, “ u
Aliss Eleanor Higgins, “ “
Airs. Elizabeth L. Lee, fellowship witlid.
Nov. 23, 1>52.“ Eliza Barton, dism. Apri 1 5, 1849.“ Lydia Pearson, d. Jan. 1 ^ 47.
On Profession.
Aliss Harriet E. AVhittlesey (Mrs. VanMess).
Air. Thomas 1>. Grillith, dism. Alarch 20,1*51.
Xovemher 3, 1*44, by Certificate.
Mrs. Alary L. Hills, dism. -July 4, ISIS.
Air. Isaiah Beesley, dism. Feb. 1, 1849,
On Profession.
Mrs. Jane Holmes, d. Oet. 13, ISIS.
Air. Thomas E. .Smith, excom. Feb. 25,1*03.
“ Gilbert T. Pugsley, dism. Nov. 13,1*49.
Francis L. Benedict, fellowshipwitlid. March 1, 1853.
John llinchey, dism. May 24, 1819.
January 5, Is 15, by Certificate.
Airs. Esther Sears, dism. Dec. 17, 1845.k* Alary P. Janes, dism. Jan. 29, 1850.“ Abby II. Davis (Mrs. Holmes).
On Profession.
Airs. Chloe Drake, dism. July 30, 1S51.“ Flora A. Smith, dism. Dec. 13, 180-4.
•• Sarah M. Harris, fellowship witlid.
Sept. 9, 1851.
Aliss Mary J. Cox (Mrs. Carnes), dism.i Jair 20, 1847.
1
BROADWAY TABERNACLE OIIUROH. 63
March 2, 1845, by Certificate.
Mr. George W. Pratt, dism. June 0,1853.Mrs. Mary Pratt, “ “ 4i
Mr. David A. Hale, dism. Sept. 7. I860.
? “ John Springer, d. Nov. 13, 1819.“ Thomas Ritter.
Mrs. Delia M. Ritter.
On Profession.
Mr. George F. Glossing, d. May 31, 1855.41 John C West. d. Nov. 1858.“ John Crowe, fellowship withd. Aug.
2S, 1855.
May 4, 1845, by Certificate.
Mrs. Sarah Van Sice. d. Sept, 18(51.
Miss Amanda Van Sice (Mrs.Monta. < ye).
cl. August, 1 SOI.
Mrs. Julia Hale, dism. March 27. 1843.
Mr. Norman L. Hart, dism. June 27,
1847,
July G, 1845, by Certificate.
Miss Catharine Masterson (Mrs. Pin-ning). dism. Jan. 7. 18.' >2.
Mr. John L. Bail lie., dism. May 1, 185(1.4i David Ritter, dism. June 1 t. 1854.“ Oliver P. llatlield, excom. Jan. 13,
1852.
Miss I.aura llatlield^ dism. June 1, 1817.44 Martha A. Denniston (Mrs. Bypie-
man). dism. May 27, 1851,44 Henrietta R. Denniston, dism. Dec.
15. 1853.
Mr. Thomas 11 Ilulse, dism. Mav 2?,
1855.
Mrs. Pamelia Ann Dulse, dism. May 22,
1855.
On Profession.
Mr. Henry M. Miller, fellowship withd.Nov. '23. 1852.
44 Isaac P>. Lott, fellowship withd. Mar.
1, 1853.
Mrs. Mary Smith.
September 7, 1815, by Certifcate.
Mr. William Thompson, dism. June 8,
1853.
November 2, 1845, by Certifcate.
Mr. John M. Grant, dism. Oct. 185G.41 George Walker, dism. Aug. 9, 1 859.
Mrs. Minerva H. Walker,Rev. Joseph P. Thompson.Mrs. Lucy O. Thompson, d. Jan. 27,
1852.
Mr. Charles F. Williams.Mrs. Eliza Williams.Mr. William C. Gilman, dism. March 1,
1849.
Mrs. Eliza Gilman,Miss Elizabeth Gilman,
44 Maria Gilman,Mr. Edward W. Gilman, dism. June 1,
1S47.
On Profession.
Mrs. Hannah Henderson, fellowshipwithd. Nov. 23, 1852.
January 4, 1S4G, 6// Certifcate.
Mr. Ira A. Tlmrber. dism. Nov. 24, 1846.Mrs. 1 1 uld.th Thurber, 44 u
Miss .Sarah Jane Low ( Mrs. Cross), dism.Dee. S. 1851.
Mrs. Sarah H. Springer,(Mrs. Bedfield),
dism. Nov. S. 180'.).
Mr. George Winchester, fellowshipwithd. Nov. 23, 1852.
44 Gideon Watts Sherman, dism. June22, 1817.
On Profession.
Mrs. Sarah Rozat. d. Aug. 23, 1SG3.
March 1,1540, by Certifcate.
Mr. Noah Gilmore, dism. Nov. 12. 1852.44 Horace R. Latimer, dism. June 2,
. » 1 1 » i • .Hiii ) #. ijiiiiim i^
Miss Marie Louise Newlin, dism. June24. 1817.
Mrs. Abigail Ann Wait. dism. June 27,ls5D.
On Profession.
Mr. Joseph Wait. Jr., dism. June 27,1 >50.
44 Thomas J. Burger, dism. Oct. 4,
1849.
Mrs. Mary Ann Smith, d. Nov. 1G, 1801.
May 3, is 40, by Certifcate.
Mr. Oliver P. See veil, dism. Oct. 26,
1852.44
lb! ward Bmvhard, dism. Nov. 8,
1 802.44 Clinton Clapp, dism. Jan. 12, 1852.44 Henry G. Judd, dism. April, 1851.44 Albert L. Comstock, dism. Dec. 27,
1850.
Mrs. Catharine U. Comstock, dism. Dec.27, 1850.
Miss Sarah E. Comstock, dism. Dee. 27,
1 850.
Mr. Henry A Merrill, dism. July 9, 1850.
Mrs. Sarah Merrill,44 M aril la W. Hall, dism. Dec. 19, 1S54.44 Phila A. Williams, dism. April 22,
1 852.
Mr. James E. 11. Wallin, dism. April It),
1851.
Mrs. Elizabeth K. Wallin, dism. April 10,
1851.
On Profession.
Mr. Ward A. Work, dism. Aug. 3. 1343.44 James L. Ensign, dism. Oct. 9, 1854.44 Andrew W. Rose, dism. June 25,
1852.
Mrs. Mary Frances Davidson, dism. Nov.IS, 1847.
44 Eliza Moseley, dism. Jan. 12, 1852.
*v '
' ,
.
>
-
MANUAL OF THK1)4
Miss Martha Jam* Moore (Mrs. Scott).distil. Feb. 24. 1 852.
“ Harriet L. Giiinnn, dism. Mareh 1,
1819.
Miss Mary E. Vallar (Mrs. Enyeholm),fellowship withd. Mar. 10, 1 nV2.
“ Sarah N. Smith.“ Catharine (.Mi ftmi (Mrs. Van Tuyl).
dism. Fel>. 2 h Is:, 2 .
“ Susan 11. Ca-s. distil. Nov. 30. Is,',2 .
July l), 1' 40 . by Certificate.
Mr. Edgar W. Davies, dism. March 20.
IMS).*• Kdward S. Finney, distil. Jan. 22.
18,VO.
“ John l*. Alvord, dism. Jan. 25, lMs.•* William A. Morgan, dism. May 31,
1 s 19.
Mrs. ltoxana Morgan, u “
On Profession.
Mr. Edwin S. Fierce, dism. Oct. 30, 1819.“ Charles II. Waterbary, dism. Feb. 19,
18(51.
“ Joseph T. Whitlock, dism. Sent. 2.
i sr> l
.
“ Frederick G. Huntington, dism. July2, 1817.
“ Emanuel Cunart, dism. Dec. 27.
1850.“ Bruce Fierce, cxcom. Ail!*;. 31, 18,72.
“ James IT. Iloyt. dism. July 18. 1S48.“ James ltedmond, dism. Nov. 7. Isis.
Mrs Margaret Flace. dism. July 30, 1M>.“ Abby A. Bush. dism. Feb, 20. 1 >55.
Missliebecca 11. IVarl {Mrs. Cady)., d.
April 29, lsVj.“ Elizabeth Laidlaw, dism. Mav 17
lhllf.*• Louisa C. Halsey ( Mrs. McCarty), d.
May, 1853.“ Mary Frances Camp {Mrs. Mutt),
dism. Nov. 7, 1851.“ Ann Eliza (-'amp, d. Aug. 18(57“ Mary F. Watkinson, distil. Eeb. 3,
1872.•• Jauo F. Clifton ( Mrs. Williams).
dism. Jan. 11, 1 870.
Charlotte Hale. dism. Oct. *28, 18,72.
•• Christian It. Hatlicld, d. Feb. 2.
1 870.*• Frances 8. Minor ( Mrs. ILath).
dism. Jan. 21, ls59.
September (5, 1810. by Certificate.
Dr. John F. Batchelder, dism. May 80,
1850.
Mr. William S. Miller, dism. Oct. 21.
18,72.
Mrs. Francis A. Boyd, dism. July 4.
ISIS.“ Ann Crosby, dism. Feb. 15, 1349.
Miss Jane Anderson {Mrs. Gibbs\ dism.April 12, 18(51.
On Profession.
Mr. Frederick Lockwood.“ Lewis T. Halsey, d. in Cal. Nov.
1873.” Ira E. Tlmrber, dism. Oet. 12, 1M7.ki George Frederick Scott, dism. Feb
24. 1 >52.
Mrs. L. Ophelia Benedict, dism. July 81>51.
J
Miss Mary Isabella Dolson, dism. March19. lMil.
” Julia Ann Barton, d. April 15, IMS.•folia E. Fitter {Mrs. ('hare), dism.Oet. 20, 1858.
Caroline M. Titus ( Mrs. Sm ith).kk Alary Ann Titus {Mrs. Simms), d.
April. Did.*
Alina 1>. Smith, dism. Oct. 11, 1804.
XoCi /fiber 1, 1810, by Certificate.
Mrs. Lucy. Morse, dism. April 29, D5l.Mrs. Cornelia Ensign, dism. Oct. 8, ls51.
On /Profession.
Mr. Henry M. Halsey, dism. Oet. 28,1850.
March 7, 1817, by Certificate.
Airs. Mary E. Barker. dBm. April 22. 1802..Miss Alary C. Fellows {Mrs. Brown).
dism. Dee. 21, ! 858.Airs. Susan T. Sears, dism. June 24,
1851.
Air. Edward E. Brown, dism. Juno F2,
1857.
Mrs. Luey Batchelder, dism. May 30.1850.
‘
Air. James AI. West, dism. May 30, 1850.
On Profession.
Mrs. Alary Deni rest, d. May 20, 1852.Air. Alexander J. Henderson, d. Alay 21,
1 855.
Miss Maria Gill {Mrs. Clark), dism.Alay S, 1800.
Mrs. Mary Ann Miller {Mrs. Becker),
dism. 1858.
May 2, Is 17. by Certificate.
Mrs. Elizabeth T. Judd, dism. April 17.
1851.
On Profession.
Mr. William Finlay, d. Alay 1, 1849.Mr. John Brown, dism. Aug. 22, 1848.
July 4, 1M7, by Certificate.
Mrs. Charlotte St urges, dism. April 29»
18(52.
On Profession.
Mr. John Lander, dism. July 30, 1851.
Mrs. Isabella Lander,Aliss Euphemia Lander ( Mrs. McMel-
len ), dism. July 30, 1851.
Air. Lawrence F. Mott, dism. Nov. 7,
1854.“ Thomas Owen, dism. July 2, 1850.
.
,
. .J
1JROADWAY TABERNACLE CHURCH. 65
September 5, 1847, by Certificate.
Mr. Myron J. Frisbie.
Mrs. Joanna E. Frisbie.“ Anna W. Day, dism. June 0, 135*2.
Miss Amanda '1'. ilulsc, fellowship wilhd.March 1, 1858.
On Profession.
Mr. Charles S. Smith.“ Archiltald Henderson,
November 7. 1317. by Certificate.
Mr. Arcliibald Campbell, dism. April 11),
ISIS.
“ Edwin Johnson (Rev.) dism. May14, 1 Sol.
“ Sidney II. Smith, dism. Jan. 7, 1352.“ John Williamson, dism. June 20,
1313.
Mrs. Catharine Williamson, “ u
December 23, ls47, by Certificate.
Mx*. William Danfort h, dism. Jan. 4,
1849.
Mrs. Lydia Dantbrth, dism. July 9, 1350.
Miss Frances A. Dantbrth,Mrs. Lucy Ann Brewer, d. Feb. 17, 1848.
Mr. Marcus Mitchell, dism. March 27,
1 355.
Mrs. Betsey Mitchell,
On Profession.
Miss Margaret L. Winnie, fellowshipwithd. Aug. 27. 1801,
“ Emily Gilman, dism. March 1, 1849.
February 29, ISIS, by Certifcate.
Mr. Oliver W. Ilimrod, fellowship witlid.
April 29, 1 b50.“ Enoch Tindall, dism. Oct. 3, 1848.“ Frederick S. llawlcy, fellowship
withd. March 15, 1359.“ Calvin lloyt, dism. in 1852.“ Theodore A. Eaton,' d. in Dec.., 1852.
Miss Mary Ann Huntington.
On Profession.
Miss Elizabeth A. Van Rypcr, dism.July 12, 1853.
Mr. Francis M. Hall. dism. Dec. 19, 1354.
Miss Harriet Kingsbury, dism. April 22,
Mr. Samuel Hoyt, dism. April 29, 1>51.
Mrs. Mary Ann lloyt. dism. in 1852.
Mr. Daniel Coit Gilman, dism. Jan. 25,
1S49.“ Wiliiam Blewett.
Mrs. Martha L’Amic, fellowship witlid.
March 1, lb58.
May 1, 184S, by Certificate.
Mrs. J. S. Denman, dism. May 25, 1352.“ Mary Snell.
On Profession.
Mrs.'.Mary Ann Osborn, fellowship witlid.|
Nov. 23, 1852.
Miss Mary Ann Snell (Mrs. Lane).Mr. John W. Cass, dism. Nov. 30, 1852.
June 27, 1848, by Certificate.
Mrs. Abigail Plummer, dism. Sept. 17,
1850.
Mr. Jacob Brinkeiliolf. d. March IS, 1.805.” Andrew Jordan, dism. June 1, 1852.‘* Jacob Brinkcrhoir, Jr., dism. April
10. 1851.“ William F. King, d. 1.857.u Horace Gould, dism. June 7, 1350.“ James 1>. Smith.
Mrs. Sarah Gould, dism. June 7, 1S50.*• Angclinc Dolsun, d. Jan. 20, 1854.
On Profession.
Mrs. Wilhemetta Smith, dism. Oct. 11,
1304.k
' Sarah Jane Morse, d. Jan. 13, 1350.
Miss Augusta Wood, dism. Oet. 23, 1.351.
Mr. Alexander Anderson, d. July 25,
1300.
Auy ust 29, 1M3, by Certificate.
Mr. Henry Smith, d. Jan. 0, 1850.
Mrs. Margaret II. Smith.Mr. Benjamin Lockwood, dism. Feb. 15,
1 .851 .
Mrs. Eliza Lockwood,Mr. Archibald Hyatt, cxcom. March 1,
1358 .
October 31, ls4S, by Certificate.
Mr. Ezra W. Goodrich, dism. April ft,
1850.li Norman A. Calkins.
Mrs. Sarah Fleming, dism. Jau. 10, 1859.
January 2, 1849, by Certificate.
Mrs. Laura West, d, Aug. 7. 1851.
Mr. Thomas Davies, dism. .Ian. 12, 1852.
Mrs. .Jane Benedict, dism. Jan. 27, 1853.
On Profession.
Miss Elsie M. Winnie (Mrs. Brackett ),
dism. June 27, 1849.“ Mary Ann Davies, dism. Jan. 12,
1 852.
Mr. Nathaniel Shiverick, dism. Nov. 8,
ISM.
February 27, 1349, by Certificate.
Mrs. Esther Evans, dism. April 10, 1851.
Mr. Joseph Wills, dism. Feb. ft, 1S50.: Mrs. Susan Simixson, fellowship witlid.' April 29, 1850.
On Profession.
Mr. William D. Russell, dism. Jau. 13,
1853.** Alpheus Colburn, fellowship witlid.
March 1, 1858.
. i.
66 MANUAL OF TILE
May 1, l $49, by Certificate.
Mr. Samuel Delamater, dism. July 0.
1852.“ William II. Niles, dism. May 20,
i >r> i
.
“ Thomas ilinwood, dism. Nov. 10,
1 $55.
Miss Catharine Stroble, dism. Feb. 21.
1852.
Mr. Martin E. Kingman, dism. April 19,
1853.
Oil Profession.
Miss Mary Catharine Parker {Mrs. New-house), fellowship withd. June 80.
1S08.
Mr. Theodore Sturges, disin. Feb. 24,
1 $52.
Miss Elizabeth Herring, fellowship withd.Nov. 28, l $52.
“ Catharine A. Whittelsey.
June 20, 1st!), by Certificate.
Mrs. Ann Eliza Meeker, dism. March 15’
1 s58.
Mr. Theodore L. Atkins, dism. July 1,
1852.
Miss Catharine Magee, dism. Dee. 24,
1801.
On Profession.
Mr. John Ik Paxton, dism. Sept. 25, 1851.•• Joseph Heath, fellowship withd. Feb.
24, 1 $08.
Miss Mary Elizabeth Test man, dism.Nov. s. 185s.
Mr. Charles M. Miller, fellowship withd.March 28, ls52.
" Alexander Magee.Mrs. Elizabeth K. Collins, fellowship
withd. June 2$, 1858.
Miss Christina Miller {Mrs. Hatfield ),
dism. Aug. 27, 1802.
August 2$, 18-19, by Certificate,
Mr. William lk Shot well, dism. Oct 1$,
1850.“ ltobert Avro, fellowship withd. Aug.
80, 1858.
On Profession.
£iss Louisa F. Parker ( Mrs. Townsend).fellowship withd. June 80. 1S08.
Mr. James Bowles, dism. May 20,1851.
Mrs. Anne P. Powlcs, “ u
October 80, 1 $ 49, by Certificate.
Miss Nancy Campbell, dism. Feb. 2S,
1851.
On Profession,
Miss Charlotte S. Whitlock, dism. Sept.
2, 1851.“ Elizabeth 1). Thompson, dism. Dee.
5. 1850.
December 1S-49, by Certificate.
Mr. James If. Warren tjiev.), disin. May14 ,1851.
Mrs. Mary S. Ik Bradley, dism. Jan. 9,
1851.
Mr. James Edward Pringle, dism. May15
,1855.
': *
;
Mrs. Harriet M. Jones, dism. Sept. 10,
1858.
Mr. William I). Smith, dism. April 20,
1858.
Mrs. Sarah W. Smith,Mr. Joseph Chapin, cl. June 12, 1857.
On Profession,
Miss Marianne Inwood, dism. Nov. 2,
1854.
February 20, 1850, by Certificate.
Mr. George Tavlor, dism. Nov. 24, 1S52.“ Matthew W. Starr, Jr.
Mrs. Mary M. Starr.
Mr. \mos G. Bartlett, dism. Jan. 17,
1850.
On Profession.
Mr. David D. Ayres, dism. Jan. 9, 1855.
Mrs. Georgiana M. Bartlct, dism. Jan. 17,
1 s50.
Mr. Thomas ltutherford, dism. Nov. 11,
1 $02 .
April 30, 1850, by Ce/tficate.
Miss Mary Simond, disim June 24,
1851.
Air. Samuel Ewing, d. 1859.
Mrs. Elizabeth Taylor. d. 1857.
Miss Emma Taylor ( Mrs. Gilson)." Amelia Taylor (Mrs. Freeman ).
dism. Oct. S, 1802.
Mrs. E. L. Kobinson.
On Profession.
Mrs. Maria Wood, dism. pet. 23, 1551.
July 1, 1 $50, by Certificate.
Mr. James Edwin Vickridge, fellowshipwithd. May 1. 1S51.
Aliss Mary Van Duyn, dism. A! arch 24,
l $52.
ltev. George P. Tindall, disin. August 11,
1 854.
Mr. Beniamin if Evans, fellowshipwithd. May 1. 1851.
On Profession.
Aliss Margaret Tcstman (Mrs. Adams),dism. April 0, 1859.
Auejust 20, 1850, by Certificate.
Miss Ann Al. Dayton (Mrs. liedford),dism. Feb. 12. 1$58.
October 29, 1850, by Certificate..
Air. .Joseph E. Woodbridge, dism. Jun*2, 1$53.
'4.
BROADWAY TABERNACLE CHURCH. 67
Mrs. Sarah E. Woodbridge, dism. Juno2, 1858.
Mr. Gourde Brown, <1. Doe. 4, 1 "52.
Mrs. Eunice Brown, dism. May 20, JS51.
December 31, 1S50, by Certificate.
Mr. Gcorgo B. Dickenson, dism. March,lb58.
*
“ Clinton P. Scoville, fellowship witlul.
Oct. ‘26, 1850.*• John A. Johnston, dism. Sept. Hi,
1851.
Mrs. Anna Johnston, d. Sept. 20, 1S53.
Abagail Sumner.
February 20, 1S51, by Certificate.
Mr. Walter Jackson, fellowship withd.Feb. 27, 1 S55.
“ Morris J. Franklin, dism. Jan. 5,
1658.
Miss Azerbnh 0. Shipman, d. March,1801.
Air. George Lawrence, dism. June 25,
1651.
On Profession.
Mrs. Sarah Lawrence, dism. Dec. 15,
1651.“ Genet Jackson, fellowship withd.
Feb. 27, 1S55.
April 21), 1 Sol, by Certificate.
Mr. Joseph Woodbridge, dism. March 28.
1652.“ Charles L. Woodbridge, dism. June
2, 1 "53.
Mrs. M. Isabella S. Hale, dism. Sept. 7,
1 Si'll I.
Mr. David Owen,' dism. June 20, 1630.
On Profession.
Mr. Charles G. Parsons, fellowship withd.March 1, 165s.
“ llalpern Albert, fellowship withd.Dec. 80, 1602.
Ephraim M. Epstein, dism. April 28,
1657.“ George W. Whiting, dism. Jan. 10,
1856.
July 1, 1651, by Certificate,
Mr. Luther Halsey Gul’iek (ltev.l, dism.Aug. 21. I "52.
Mrs. Dorothy Moses.Olive C.' Moses, d. Dec. 20, 1605.
Mr. Amos Temple, dism. July 5, 1858.
“ Richard C. Dunn (Key.), dism. April
0, ls51.
Mrs. Mary E. Wilbor. dism. April 27,
1854.
On Profession.
Mr. James Short, dism. Feb. 14. 1855.
John Short, fellowship withd. April 20,
1650.
September 1, 1S51, by Certificate.
Mr. lleury Jiulson, dism. Jan. 1G, 1652.
Miss Sarah T. Bowers, fellowship withd.Aug. 27, lSGl.
Mr. George Jackson, dism. June 21), 1852.•* Henry C. Conkling, dism. Dec. 2S,
165-1.
On Profession.
Mr. Joel M. Howard, dism. Sept. 20, 1654." Edward S. Wells, fellowship withd.
J une 80. 1 "08.•• George. M. Stites.
Mrs. Maria L. Stites.
October 26, 1651, by Certificate.
Mr. Augustus- Gaylord, di.sin. June G,
1654.
Mrs. Martha Gaylord. “ “
“ Phillis Cooper.Mr. Richard Edwards, dism. April 20,
l "50.
Mrs. Jane Edwards, “ “u Esther Sears, dism. July 1, 1651.
Mr. William Lord.“ William lloldridge, dism. May 24,
1 655.
Mrs. Eliza G. lloldridge, “
On Profession.
Mr. Cornelius Xoafu*. dism. Nov. 30,
1852.“ Henry C. Ilall.
Mrs. Sarah Ann Lord.
December 0, 1851, by Certificate.
Mr. Joseph Wills, dism. Sept. 17. 1858.
“ Smith Curtiss, dism. June!), 1852.
Miss Elizabeth Frances Gaines, d. Oet. 3,
1 "51 .
Mr. Moses Christy, dism. Aug. 20, 1601.
Mrs. Harriet Christy, ••
* Jane Menair.Mr. William E. Whiting, dism. June 5,
1656
Mrs. Ann L. Whiting, “ u
Mr. Cliarb'S Clark, dism. July 1, 1650.
Mrs. Diana Cusar. dism. Jan. 25. 1850.
Mr. Thomas Murdock, dism-. March 22,
1658.
Mrs. Jane I L Murdock, k * “
On Profession.
Mr. Augustus H. Farliu. dism. Nov. I,
1858.
Miss fsabell i G. Ritter(.I//v». Sferenson).Mrs Anna Maria Wilcox, dism. Feb. 20,
1 "55 .
Mr. John M. Wilcox, dism. Nov. 0, 1855.
Miss Sarah Mitchell, dism. March 27,
1 6.55.
Mr. Josiah T. Wright, withdrawn.Miss Elizabeth W. Forbes.Mrs. Harriet E. Chapin, dism. Nov. 22,
1600.
Mary B. Bennett, dism. Oet, 28,
1850.
March 1, 1S52, by Certificate.
Mr. James Duff, dism. June 20, 1851.
\
G8 MANUAL OK T11K
Mrs. Martha Duff, dism. Juno 20. ISM.“ Susan Wills, dism. Sept. IT, 1854. i
Mr. Clement K. Beebe, dism. April 20, I
1S5-1.
Miss Debecea Story, dism. Dv r. 20. l^M.Mr. John A. Seymour tltev.). di.-uu. Juh
10, 1855.‘
‘
I
u John Vernon, fellowship willid. l’Yb.
27, 1855.
Dr. Alonzo S. Dali, dism. Oct. 25, 185:).|
Mrs. Eliza W. Dali, ••
On Profession,
Miss Mary 0. Hosier (Mrs. Calkins).Mr. Moses Drown, dism. May 20, 185-1.u Thomas 1). Conover.kl Jerome ilusted, fellowship willid.
Dec. 10, 1.800.u Edwin P. Strickland, dism. June 1,
1 854.
Miss Ellen Smith.“ Sarah Smith.
Elizabeth Henderson (Mrs. Jus. D.
Smith).Huldali G. Drown, dism. May 20,
1 S54.
Mi-. Joseph Enscoc, fellowship witlul.
Get. 28, 1850.
April 27, 1852, by Certificate.
Mr. John A. Sterry, dism. May 1, 1805.u Charles E. Latimer, dism. Dec. 7,
1852.
Mrs. DulaU Ar. Terry, dism. Oct. 8, 1802.
On Profession.
Mr. T. F. Tracy, dism. Nov. 23, 1854.
Miss Francis Emeline Terry (Mrs. Bar-rett).
June 20, 1852, by Certificate.
Mr. James H. Groveslien, dism. June 7,
1854.
Mrs. Anna V. Grovcstien, 4i “
“ Mary McBride, d. August 10. 1850.
Miss Lydia D. Darker, dism. June 7,
1855.
On Profession.
M r. Edgar J. Day.11 Richard A. Dorman.
Miss Maria Hitler.
August 31, 1852, by Certificate.
Mrs. Sarah Wood, dism. Nov. 24, 1852.1
December 28, 1852, by Certificate.
Miss Charlotte G. Connor, dism. June 14,
1851.“ Sarah Frances Benedict, dism. Dee.
11), 1856.
March 1, 1850, by Certificate,
Mr. Langdon S. Ward, dism. Oct. 9, 1854.
Mrs. Isabella Draper.Mr. John West, fellowship withd. March
15, 1859.
April 20, 1 853, by Certificate.
j
Mr. Henry E. Stanifurd, dism. March 4,
I 1 850.u Patrick James Golden, tVllowship
withd. June 20. 1855.
Mr^. Mary A. Golden, dism. Sept. 1,
I 1855.
June 2 s, 1854, by Certificate.
iMr. Albert L. Comstock, dism. Aug. 30,
1 >5 1.
Mrs. Catharine U. Comstock,“ Sarah E. Deed,“ Maria Sumner, dism. June 10, 1856.
A u gtnst 30, 1854, by Certificate.
Miss Dacliel Kimmons, dism. Oct. 28,
1 856.
Mr. Pliny F. Whiting, dism. Oct. 11,
1804.
November 1, 1853, by Certificate.
Mr. William Corn, dism. Feb. 28, 1S54.
Mrs. Sarah Ann Corp, u “
Mr. Homer W. Keeler, dism. Jan. 2,
1857.4i Williiam IL Colton, dism. Sept 14,
1S51.
December 20, 1 854, by Certificate,
Mrs. Ann Hartshorn, dism. Sept. 18,
1 857.
Mr. Curtis Doynton, d. Oct. 1858.
Mrs. Elizabeth G. Doynton, dism. March8, 1859.
Mr. William I). Doynton, dism. Nov. 4,
1850.“ Samuel Holmes.“ William D. Holmes.“ John S. Grid ley, dism. March L8,
1 s50.
Mrs. Elizabeth Sehapps, dism. Dec. 14,
1803.
Mr. Camillas Farrand, dism. July 22,
1 >03.
Mrs. Debeeca M. Snyder, dism. June 8,
1 S58.
February 27, 1854, by Certificate.
Mrs. Eliza Jane Palmer, dism. Feb. 19,
1 858.
Miss Juciictte E. Melntviv, dism. April
>, 1 >01 .
:
‘ l Philinda P. Jones (Mrs. Couper\I dism. Jan. 20, 1 >00.
On Profession.
Mr. Joseph Grcatbach, fellowship withd.Dee. 1857*
May 1, 1854, by Certificate,
Mr. Thomas E. Cornwall, dism. Nov. 13,
1 854.
Mrs. Elizabeth Thompson (Dev. Jos. P.)Dev. Edward Pratt, d. April 4, 1801.
Mrs. Sarah D. Pratt (w. Dev. Ed.)Mr. Edmund W. Clark, dism. Dec. 11,
1855.
-
BROADWAY TABERNACLE CIIURCII. G9
On Profession.
Miss Mary .Jane Ilemlcrson, d. Aug. 29,
isr>4.
Mr. Arnzi Lewis Camp.Mrs. Amelia M. Girling.
June 27, 1 Sot, on Profession.
Mr. Edward Smith Ward, d. Sept. 10,
1*55.
October SI, 1854, by Certificate,
Mr. Jacob Brinkerhoir, Jr.
Mrs. Susan Mayerean, dism. Dee. 25,
1857.
Mr. Isaac W. Baniutn, dism. March 28,
1857.
Mrs. Jaenette Barnum, “
Mr. William II. Raymond, dism. May 20,
1S02.
On Profession.
Miss Louisa lltehfleld, fellowship witlul.
Feb. 21, 1808.
January 2, 1955, by Certificate.
Mrs. Mary Middleton.Mr. William Gilchrist, dism. Dee. 10,
1S5S.
February 27, 1855, by Certificate,
Mr. Levi A. Fuller, dism. Nov. 20, 1859.
Air. Thomas Warrincr, dism. Oct. 4, 1859.Mr. James Davis.Mrs. Louisa Jane Davis.Mr. William 1*. Tuttle, dism. Nov. 0,
1S57.
On Profession.
Mr. Abraham Van Tassel, dism. March S,
1901.
May 1, 1855, by Certificate.
Mr. Robert Rodiror. dism. Auer. 9, 1859.
Mrs. Jane Shields Rodger, ••
** Electa M. Sheldon, dism. June 13,
1850.“ Sarah Smith, dism. Jan. 25, 1S50.“ Charlotte Landsdown, dism. April 9.
1S0O.
On Profession.
Miss Isabella J. Camp (.»/,*. Austin).Master Nathan Henry Camp, dism. Sept.
27, l >01.
Mr. William Wood, dism. Oct. 13, 1*55.
William Monfort, d. March 7. 1*5*.
“ Oliver S. Atkins, dism. Jan. 25. 1*50.
“ Henry W. II wise, dism. March 23,
1853.
June 20, 1955, by Certificate.
Mr. Edward B. Hatch, dism. June 29'
1300.
August'!*, 1855. by Certificate.
Mr. James Bedford, dism. Feb. 12, 1S53.“ Frederick S. Boyd.
On Profession.
Mrs. Hannah Bissel (w. Samuel M.).
October SO, 1855, by Certificate.
Mrs. Margaret A. Curtis.
Mr. (diaries F. Aldeii, dism. April 25,
1350.
Mrs. Maria Owen. dism. June 20, 1S50.
Mrs. Cornelia L. Turner (J. Hart), dism.April 1 1. 1804.
“ M. Jeiiette Farrand (Camillas), dism.January 11, 1*01.
“ Christina L. Link (Frederick).
On Profession.
Mr. Frederick Link.Mrs. Elizabeth Merritt (Andrew), dism.
Oct. 4, 1*59.
December S\, 1855, by Certificate.
Mrs Relief Robbins (David).
On Profession.
Mr. David Robbins, d. July, 1359.
February 20, 1*50, by Certificate.
Mrs. Mary C. Blake (Anson), dism. Nov.29, 1804.
Mr. Anson Blake, dism. Nov. 29, 1804.
Mr. Benjamin Barr, dism. Aug. 5, 1850.
On Piifiession.
Mr. William Henderson, fellowship
withd. Aug. 27, 1*01.
Mrs. Mary Ann Linton (W. John), dism.
Oct. 1, 1*59.
Miss Lydia Ann Cooper (Mrs. John Oata-
lina).
April 29, 1850, by Certificate.
Mrs. Sarah Thompson (John \\r.).
u Clementine D. Rutherford (Tlios.),
dism. Nov. 8, 1802.
Mr. Henry C. llalsey, dism. June 14,
1 *59.
Mrs. Elizabeth Halsey (Henry C.),“
" Amanda II. F. Hall (Henry C.).
, On Profession,
Miss Harriet Brewster.Mr. Robert Allen.
July 1. 1 >50, by Certificate.
Mrs. Mary E. Wilber (Win. II.)
Mr. Hiram F. Beebe.Mrs. Rebecca M. Beebe (Hiram F.).
Mr. V, m. C. lliekok.
Mrs. Sarah E. lliekok (Win. C.).
.Miss Elizahetli 1*. Taylor, dism. Oct. 2,
1800.
Mr. David N. Beebe, dism. Get. 20, 1SC0.
Clement E. Beebe, dism. Dec. 8,
1*57.
On Profession,
Mr. Robert Ferguson, excoin. Juno 29,
1904.
.
' >'!: 1 *
70 MAN I' A I. OK THK
Mrs. Mary Harding (James), dism. March
Septembeo 1, 1S5G, by Certificate.
Mrs. Maria Connolly (James).
On J*rofessiou.
Mr. Charlie C. Converse, dism May 0,
1802.
October 28, 1850, by i\rtijicafc.
Mr. E. C. Benton, dism. March G, lSiai.
“ Benjamin Howard.Mrs. Mary Brewster (Nathan 11. ). dism. '
July 17, 1857.
On Pj'ofession.
Mrs. Sarah Taylor (James) d. Nov. 17,
l $05.
Mr. John Wightman, dism. March *2C>,
1858.
December o(), 1 $50, by Certijicat*.
.
Mr. Jesse Carpenter, dism. Januarv 20*
l $00.
Mrs. Abagail II. Carpenter (Jesse),
Isabella I). .Marsh (Joseph), dism.May 4, 1 858.
Mr. Thomas Jones, fellowship witlul.
February ‘24, 1803.
14r. Alvan II. 'l'urner.
Mrs. Mary G. Holmes (Samuel).Mr. Franklin Stobbins, dism. Dec. ‘2$,
1 sbl).
On Profession .
Mr. Georgo L. Allen, dism. Oct. 1G, 1357.
Ci bruary 24, 1 $57, by Certificate.
Mrs. Sarah W. Turner (A. II.).
April ‘20, 1 857, by CertiJicaH.
Mr. Joshua B. Hall, fellowship witlul*Feb. ‘2b, 1803.
“ David Fitch, dism. Oct. 4, 1850.
On Profession.
Mr. J.evi M. Bates.
Mrs. Martha A. Bates (Levi M.)Mr. Alonzo E. Austin, dism. March 25,
1 s59.
June. 20, 1S57, by ( \ rtifcate.
Mr. T. L. Snyder, dism. June 29, 1858.
Mrs. Julia L. Snyder (T. L.),
Mr. Edwin S. Fierce, dism. Feb. 22, 1SG2.
August 28, 1857, on Profession.
Mr. John W. Crane, Jr.
October 20, 1857, by Certificate.
Mr. James G. Caldwell, d. Aug. 25, 1801.
Mrs. Eliza Caldwell (James G.), dism.Dec. 13, 1 $04.
Mr. Wallace E. Caldwell,Mrs. Corinth N. Caldwell (Wallace E.),
dism. Dec. 13, 1SGL
December 29, 1851, by Certificate.
Mrs. Julia It. Davis (Lev. Samuel B.),
dism. Dee. 27, 1859.
Miss Sarah J. IVterson, dism. Sept. 11,
Wil.Mrs. Itosetta M. Wright (Isaac).“ Mary C. West (Win. G.), dism. Aug.
21, lsGti.
Mr. Seth W. Benedict.Mrs Anna E. Benedict (Seth W.).Miss Sarah F. Benedict (Mrs. Pierson ),
dism. Aug. *2s. DGO.• Emily J. Benedict.
March 1. 1>5s, //// Certificate.
Mr. Win. W. Ingersoll, dism. June 25,
t m>2.
Mrs. Mary J. Ing.rsoll (Win. W.). “
•• Sarah It. Fisher (Aaron A.), dism.Mav 23, 1 sGil.
“ Harriet Fond < W. Lewis).“ Harriet L. l’ralt (Milo).“ Fanny S. Eddy (W. Hiram), dism.
J uly 9, 1 sGLMr. Horatio Cnderwood, dism. March 21,
1805.
Mrs. Elizabeth M. A. Cnderwood (Ho-ratio), dism. March 21, 1 ><».*>.
Mr. ltobcrt Tovcy, d. April 27, 1>63.
On Profession.
Mr. Aaron A. Fisher, dism. Mav 23,1800.- Joel E. Fisher, dism. June 28, 1801.
Mrs. Eliza Fooler (.John W.)Mr. Charles H. Fratt (Bev ), dism. April
20, 1 >05.
A jo it 27, ls57 by Ce it{/irate.
Mr. Austin Abbott, dism. March 0, 1800.
I Mrs. Ellen 1,. G. Abbott (Austin).I Mr. George I.. Dale. dism. March 1,1801.
Airs. Harriet B. Dale (Geo. L.)“
Mr. Walter B. Sheldon, d. April 9, lsG4.
Mrs. Mary M. Crchore (Horace C.)
Mr. Henry M. Barrows.Miss Mary J. Wilson (Mrs. Munson),
dism. .June 1 1, lsGO.
Mr. Samuel 1*. Holmes, dism. April 27,
1 $04.
Mrs. Eleanor A. Holmes (Samuel IV),“
On Profession.
Mr. ltobcrt Girling.“ William F. West, dism. Aug. 21,
1 SOO.
Miss Louisa Lockwood (Mrs. C. 11. Hit-
ter):4- Flora W. Smith, dism. Dec. 13, ls04.
•• Sarah M. Bowkcr (M/'s. Rogers).Mrs. Ann Magee (Ale\.)
Miss Mary (>. Davis, d. Aug. 10, 1602.“ Julia D. Halsey.u Mary E. Starr * Mrs. Pardee).“ Annie Bitter.
Margaret Blackwood.Mr. George T. Cooke.“ ltobcrt H. Eddy, dism. July, 1804.
“ Henry Heath, dism. Jan. 21, 1859.
V
.BROADWAY TA15KHNAOLK CHURCH. 71
Mr. !«ntcl Minor, Jr., dism. Jan. 21, 1859.“ John 0. Minor, “
June 21), DoS, by Certificate.
Mrs. II. Maria Newcomb ( Harvcv).“ Carol ims A. Rassett (Win. l>.)
“ Eliza Tovey (Robert), dism. April11, DG4.
“ Mary 8. Tavlor (Charles F.). dism.June 3, 1 m»:1.‘
Mr. Caleb 15, Kmvals.Mrs. Emeline Minor ( W. Gcor-e),d. Jan.,
1 s02.
Mr. Edwin Miner, dism. April s. DG3.Miss Maria K. Miner, “
Mr. James 11. Grovestecn, dism. Oct. 1.
1802.
Mrs Anna V. Grovestecn (James II )kk
Dr. Lafayette Eanney.Mrs. Adeline E Eanney (Lafayette), d.
-Jau. 1, Di'io.
Miss Mary A. lianney, dism. April 1.j
1802.
I)r. liul'us O. Mason, dism Feb. 15, IS Go.
Mr. Francis II. Holton, dism. June 21.
1803.
Mrs. Anna M. Holton (Francis 11.),k *
Sophia Kin-man (\V. Willard).Miss Mary K Allerton.
Mrs. Aba-ail Holden (w. Iiev. W.),dism.Dec. 24, 1 SGI.
“ Aba-ail 15. Whelpley (W. Sami.), “
On Profitanion.
Mr. Frederick M. Robinson.u Henry C. Miner.
Mr. ('harles A. White, dism. June 3,
1SG3.“ Willard W. White.
Miss Fannie E. Frisbie (Mrs. //ayes).dism. Jan. 12, 1800.
kk Jane E. Van Arsdale, d. Jan. T, 1SG;3.
Mrs. Mary A. Taylor (Win.)kk Harriet Winship (Albert), dism. July
1, 1S03.
Miss Aroline 0. Hall.
Mr. Wm. W. Holder.
Any u.st 31, 1858, by Certificate.
Mr. A. S. Cady.u Henry Hayes, dism. Jan. J2,TSGG.
On Profession,
Mr. Francis II. Kyte.“ Henry Ilaldwin, dism. Oct. 27, 1SG2.“ Harrison Parker, dism. April ID.
1804.
Mrs. Susan A. Eamsdcll (Ezra E.), dismMarch 8, 1SG1.
Xore/nber 1, 1 858, by Certificate.
Mr. Richard G. Pardee.Mrs. Rebecca C. Pardee (Richard G.)Dr. Ward C. Pardee.Miss Cecilia Rumsev, dism. March 4,
1803.
Mr. Aden Smith.Mrs. Louisa Smith (Adon), d. Jan., 18G0.
- Jacnette M. II untin-ton (W. Selden).Miss Emily S. Huntington.Mrs. Eliza M. Sylvotcr (Fordyec).
kk Mary K. Thompson (Arteinas E.)** Mary L. Thompson (Frederick F.)
Mr. James Seynuuir.Mrs. Elizabeth S. Seymour (Janus)." Mary A. Hawley (W. Aaron).
Miss Frances A. Hawley.Rev. Elijah C. Ilaldwin, dism. Nov. 22,
1 ><.»().
Mr. John Danforth, dism. June 30. 1800.Mrs. Mary M. Miller (Ezekiel).
On Profession.
Mr. Walter Lipe.*• Arteinas E. 'Thompson.
Miss Elizabeth Denham.Miss Emma Denham.
•• Martha E. Davissou, dism. April 27,1 sGO.
December 23, 1858, by Certificate.
Rev R. Ravard Snowden, dism. April 7,
1 >03.
On Profession.
Mr. William 15. Fletcher, dism. Nov. 22,
1 800.ki John 11. 'Thompson, d. March 1G,
1803 (in the Army).
March 1, 1859, by Certificate.
Mrs. Julia Johnson (W. George).Mr. Wm. W. Niles.
Mrs. Isabel W. Niles (Win. W.)Mr. Edward Conner, dism. June 25,
L8G1.
Mrs. Susan J. Conner (Edward), “
Mr. William L. Alden, dism. Nov. 2G,
1802.
Miss L. Almira Robbins, d. May 4, 1804.kk Ellen Jones, dism. 'Feb. 13. 18G0.
Mrs. Elizabeth Everett (Thus. R.), dism.Dec. 24, D59.
Miss (taroline 11. McIntyre (Mrs. DavidWeston.
Mrs. Sarah A. Pel toil (Timothy I).)ik Anna Mom 11 (Claudius L.), dism.June 2. 1 803.
Ayrit 20, W>9, by i Certificate.
Mrs. Simnev Wallev (Henry C.), dism.March 9, 1800.
. Miss Julia A. Janes (Mrs. D. B. Sand-I ford), dism. April 22, 1802.
Mr. Charles Gates, dism. March 1, 1SG4.
Mrs. Harriet P. R. White (Amos C.)
Mr. Robert II. Robinson.Mrs. Mary C. Robinson (Robert II.)
Miss 8usan McGregor, dism. May S, i860.
On Profession.
Mr. Oliver llarratt.
Mr. Amariuh 15. Vaughn.
-
72 MANUAL OF THE
Mrs. Clara B. .Tonkins (George W.). dism.May 81, 1 >01.
Mr. Francis B. Nicol.
Mrs. Clorinda B. Nicol (Francis B.)
June 28, Kfl. by Certificate.
Mrs. Maria C. Alegary (Dennis.)
Mr. David Chichester, dism. Jan. 11, lsOl.
Elisha Doolittle.
Mrs. Theresa Doolittle (Elisha).
Mr. Charles A. Tyler.
Mrs. Cornelia V. Tyler (Charles A.),k Mary llyatt (Theodore).Lucy Haves (Horace), dism. April 14.
1 S(>3.
Harriet H. Peters ( Absalom).“ Mary E. Ward (Albert S.), d. Jan. 2,
Mr. Bob't A. Williams, dism. May s, 1-00.
Mrs. Catharine D. Williams (Bob. A.) "
1859, on Profession.
Mr. Charles Kay, dism. March 1, ls(>4.
Xoeember 1, 1 859, by Certified te.
Mr. John C. Taylor, dism. Oct. 24, 1SG0.u Lewis Chichester.
Miss Clarissa Chichester.- Sarah Chichester, d. April 27. 1 soi.
Mr. William Come.Mrs. Isabella Corrio (Win.)
Celia Weston (Milton).
Miss Ellen W. Dorchester (Mrs. Pcv.llulijfson), dism. Oct. 17, ls05.
On Profession.
Miss Elizabeth II. dale.
Sarah II. dale.
December 27, 1859, by Ce rtificate.
Air. Francis P. Sweet.William S. Adamson, dism. June 2S,
I Mil.
Mrs. Margaret S. davit (John 12.)-
” Amanda E. King (Thomas).Mr. Isaiah W . Sylvester, dism. Jan. IS,
ts<;;>.
On Profession.
Mr. Charles W.Opdykc, dism. Jan. 7, 1 803.
February 2s, 18(10, by Certificate.
Air. Zenas B. Hinrkly, d. June 2. 1804.
Mrs. Elizabeth B. Hinckley (w. Zenas B.)
Mr. Henry Hastings, dism. Aug. 12, 1801.
On Profession.
Airs. Harriet E. Parker ( Mr*. Fish. r).
Miss Elizabeth L. Ellis (Mrs. Stanton ),
dism. April 5, iMio.
Miss Margaret McCombs.
Aliss Julia Meeker, dism. Dec. 31, 1861.
Mr. Daniel O. Quimby, dism. Dec. 5. lsoo.Mrs. Clara Bell Qnimby (Daniel O.)," Jane Ely (Isaac S.)
Air. James Taleott.•• Hiram J. Fonda.
Aliss Hannah White.Mrs. Sarah Washburne (Joseph), dism.
April 27, 1 Mil.
June 20, J >00, by Certificate.
Mr. Charles Bell.
Mrs. AngelineA. Bell (Charles).Miss Mary Al. Holmes.Mr. Alanson Caswell, d. July 24, ls00.Mrs. Alary Caswell (Alanson).Air. Jeremiah Beeve.Mrs. Alary Beeve (Jeremiah).
Au<just'l>. l.Mirt, by Certificate.
Mr. Thomas W. Whittemore, dism. Alar.
0. is 00.
Mrs. Attosaa F. Whittemore (Tlios. AV.),
dism. March 0, 1800.“ Susan F. Moses (Charles).
Mr. Edmund L. Cltnmplin.
October 30 1 800, by Certificate.
Miss Lydia Allison.* Alary L. Jackson.
Mr>. Claris.-a M. Badger (Milton).Mr. Charles Whittemore.Mrs. Alaria F. Whittemore (Chas.)
January 4, 1S01, by Certificate.
Airs. Agin-s L. Littlejohn (David).“ Bac.hel Erwin (w. Bichard).
Air. 1-2(1 ward < ’. Alerriam." Stephen Cordon.
Stephen II. Cordon.Mrs. Adella J. Cordon (Stephen T.)
Henrietta E. Taleott (James).
On Pt'ofession.
Mr. Francis Littlejohn/Airs. Mary Carey (Tlios. W.)
February 20, ls>01, by Certificate.
Mr. Cngliclmo Cazani.- Abner B. Holly,
llov. Theodore S. Pond.Mrs. Harriet Pond (Lewis A.)
•• Eliza ('. Sliriver (Thos.)“ Jeim v A. Hull (Calvin E.), dism.
Jan. *18, 1 8(15.
Mr. Josiah 0. Saxton.
On Profession.
Miss Harriet Wright (Mrs. McBride ),
i dism. Alarch 4, ls03.i Air. ('has. 'J'. Budget’s.
May 1, 1800,by t 'ertificate.
,
April 30, 1801, by Certificate.
Mr. Edward Biggs. Mr. Nathaniel A. Boynton, dism. Dec. 2,
Mrs. Sarah Boynton Perry (Oliver 11.) 1>(13.
Mr. Win. L. Fisher.jMrs. Prudence W. Boynton (Nathaniel),
Mr. George Badger, dism. April 13, 1802. i dism. Dec. 2, 1 S03.” Win.' Badger.
|
Mr. Seth B. Hunt.
BROADWAY TABURNACL li CHURCH. 73
Mrs. Frances I\ Hunt (Seth B.)
Miss Frances II. Hunt (Mrs. J. Catlin,
Jr.)Dr. Edward II. Winslow.Mrs. Helen A. Winslow (Ed. 11.)
Mr. Wm. G. Lambert.Mrs. Sarah Lambert (Wm. G.)Miss Ellen L. Lambert.Dr. Edward W . Lambert.Mrs. Martha W. Lambert (Ed. W.)
*• Sarah J. Sears (Henry l*.)• k Mary II. ('lark (Ezra, dr.), dism.
dan. 12, ISM.Miss Frances Clark, dism. dan. 12. 1SGG.u Mary d. Topping (Mrs. I/. Garret-
son ).
Mr. Wm. II. Smith.Mrs. Harriet T. Smith (Wm. 11.)
Miss Sarah II. 0. Smith.Mrs. (). Loretta Shafer (Abraham).
On. Profession.
Mr. Geo. F. Hall.“ Henry C. Walley.
July 1, 1SG1, by Certificate.
Mr. WYii. O. Kimball, dism. July 11,1802.
Mrs. Elizabeth A. Kimball ( Wln.O.) k *
Mrs. Lucy d. Seymour (Kobt. W.)Dr. Alfred North.
(hi Profession.
Mrs. Lydia J. Bartlett (Phineas). dism-dune 7, lsC4.
Mr. Isaac L. Wilde.
Ait (just 27, 1 SCI,by Certificiite.
Mrs. Fanny Champlin (Ed. L.)
Dr. Wm. II. Thomson.Mrs. Cath. L. Thomson (Wm. II.)
Mr. Wm. II. Eraser, dism. Dec. 21. 1SG4.
Miss Kate Chandler.
I Miss Ellen M. Harvev.1 Mr. Willard Harvey.'Mrs. Sarah B Harvev (Willard).Mr dailies W. llalsted, dism. Oct. 21,
“ Bcllj. K PhelpsMrs. Hannah M. Phelps (Benj. K.)Miss faitnie 11. Hyde, dism. Sint *>
7
1MU.* 4 *
Mrs. Elizabeth Hyde ( W. Jos. ]}.),k* Sarah A. Soiithmayd (Stephen 0.)
J* ranees A. F. Sherwood (Thos. 1> )
Mr. Geo. F. Chester.Mrs dalle d. Chester (Geo. F.)Mr. Thos. liiirney, dism May dl, lsG5.Mrs. (’hloe W Kignev (Thos.) ki
Miss Almira d. Rigney,Mrs. Henrietta Roimdy (Thos.) dism
Sept. 21, 1 bG2.*
Miss Sarah M. Conover, dism. Feb ‘>1
lsOd.' " ’
Re v. doel IMacknu r.
Mrs. Elizabeth W. Blaeknu r ( Re v. doel)1 >r. W in. A. Bronson.Mrs. Sarah 1). Bronson (Win. A.)Mr. das. 11. Dunham.” John S. Cutler, killed in Va. in bat-
tle in isCd.
Z. N. Bradbury, dism. May (5, LbG2.Miss Catharine Danforth, dism. June 17,
1 sG:>.
“ Henrietta Danforth,** Phi him Danforth,
Mrs. Helen A. Smith (Harry D.)” Sarah A. Pray ( Isaac C.)'• Eliza d udson, ( widow).
Miss Anna Maria Judsoii.'“ Mary C. Arbuckle.
On Profession.
Mr. (’has. W . Plyer.w Amos C. White.
October 29, 1801, by Certificate.
Mr. Normandus W. Thayer.Mrs. Mary E. Thayer (Normandus Wr
.)
Mr. doel A. Jennings.dames A. Tindall, d. Aug., 1S05.
Mrs. Amanda Tindall (das. A.)
Miss Jane I vis (Mrs. J. II Washburne).Mrs. Betliia D. Arbuckle (W. Rev. Jas.)
Miss Eliza A. Arbuckle.“ Sarah B. Arbuckle.
Mr. William Allen.“ Chas. Abernethy.
Mrs. Maria Abernethy (Chas.)
Miss Cornelia Abernethy.Mr. KlialF. Hall.
Dr. Geo. II. White, dism. Aug. 29, 1SG5.
Mrs. Rebecca W. White (Geo. II.) dism.Aug. 29, 1 SC5.
Mr. Elisha W. Chester.
Mrs. Catharine W. Chester (E. W.)Miss Emily E. Chester (Mrs. A. T.Bat-
tel)}& sm. Feb. 12, lsGO.
Mr. Charles R. Harvey.Mrs. Alpha R. Harvey (Chas. R.
Miss Olivo M. Harvey.
December o 1, 1SG1, by Certificate.
Mrs. Sarah K. White (W.' Elijah K.)Mr. Edward A. Rand, dism. Dec. 19 1SG5.Mrs. A hagai 1 Chamberlain, (W. Moses).
** Sarah P. Maghee (John II.)“ Susan F. Jennings (doel J.)
Mr. Jesse Joy, d. May 12, 18(52.,k Moores M. W hite.
Mrs. Sophia A. White (Moores M.)Mr. Edward G. Bartlett.Mrs. Jane W r
. Bartlett (Ed. G.)Mr. Thos. S. Berry.Mrs. Anna E. Berry (Thos. S.)
On Profession
.
Mrs. Marv E. Greenwood (Wr
. Henry B.)Miss Cornelia C. Moore.Mrs. Henrietta A. Halsey (Harlan P.)Mr. IL nry Kirke White.
February 25, IS02, by Certificate.
Mr. Wm. Henry Bridgeman.Mrs. Sarah A. Bridgciimn ( Win. 11.)
Mr. Edward M. Norwood, dism. Feb. 20,1SG0.
;
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l <M»> i ... M
*
74 MANUAL OF THE
Mr. Luther P. Fitch.“ Matthew McDougall.
Mrs. Susannah Mellougall (Matt.(
Mr. Morris Roberts, Jr.
Mrs. Mary K. Roberts (Morris, Jr.)“ Elizabeth 11. Cooke.
On Profession-.
Mrs. Ellen J. Huntington (Thus. T.)
April 29, 1 8(>2, by Certificate.
Mrs. Enu-line M. Nortlmp ^Win. W.)Mr. Horace S. Taylor.Mrs. Eliza G. Taylor (Horace S.)
•• Sarah T. Field (widow).Mr. Writ. II. Haskins.
k Robert W. Haskins.u Pierpont Isltam.
Mrs. Seinantha S. Isham (Pierpont).
Miss Mary A. Isham (J//*.v. Prentice).
Mr. Leonard llazeltine. Jr.
Mrs. Emma llazeltine (Leonard, Jr.)
On Profession.
Mr. Joseph Gavit.w James Henry Smith.
Miss Ellen R. Stowell, dism. Jan. 22,
ISt>1.
July 1, 1 SG2, by Certificate.
Mr. William C. Gilman, d. June (5, 1 Slid.
Mrs. Eliza Gilman (widow Win. C.)dism.Get. IS, lStU.
Mr. Nathan Camp, dism. Aug. 11, lbGo.
Mrs. Phebe W. Camp (Nathan), “
Mr. Henry G. Davis.
October 28, ISG2, by Certificate.
Mrs. Eliza C. Kna]»p (Samuel).Miss Jane Young, dism. Nov. 14. 1 > G 4.
Mr. Nathaniel Fisher.
Mrs. Mary A. Fisher (NathUMiss Sarah Fisher.“ Elizabeth R. Fisher.
Mrs. Melissa Lipe (Walter).Mr. Thos. G. Thurston.
On Profession.
Mr. Edward F. Farrand.Miss Helen M. Lockwood.Mr. Win. A. Cushman.Mrs. Delia M. Johnson (Edward).“ Susan C. Ray (Edward C.)“ Hannah Feraud (Gustave J.)
Miss Margaret Chandler.
December^ 1SG2, by Certificate.
Mr. Henry 11. Underwood, dism. Oct. 13,
!bG3.
James Edmonds.Mrs. Margaret Edmonds (James).Mr. Win. A. Dodge.Mrs. Jennie G. Dodge (Win. A.)
On Profession.
Miss Josephine C. Wheat.“ Agnes W. Littlejohn {Mrs. Alexan-
der).
Mr. Samuel B. Littlejohn.“ Lyman 11. Bunnell.“ William N. Jennings.
February 24, 1 SG3, by Certificate.
Mrs. Gath. J. Holly (Abner 11.)
Mr. Ambrose Leonard.
On Profession.
Mr. John Edwards.Miss Mary Thomas.Mr. Win. E. Gavit.Miss Meta Gavit:
Lucy 15. Thompson.1 Mrs. llonoria E. Hooker (Nath. W.)
April 28, 1 SG3, by Certificate.
Rev. Rich. Judson Adoniram, dismMarch Hi, lsii4.
Miss Mary 11. Gray.Mr. Joseph P. Snow.Mrs. Minerva 11. Snow (Jos. P.) d. April
25, 1SG3.
Miss Isabel M. Ames.Mrs. Joanna L. Holmes (Daniel).
On Profession.
Mr. Robert L. Hall.
Mrs. Martha Hall (Robt. L.)Mr. Charles L. Hall.
Dr. David Anson Hedges.Mr. George Goodwin HallMrs. Elizabeth M. Hall (Geo. G.)Miss Sophia M. Proudfoot {Mrs. John
Feryuson).Mr. Charles II. Clark, dism. Jan. 12,1SG6.Miss Frances Louise Girling.
*• Jaciiette A. McDougull.
JuneS0, 1SG3, by Certificate.
Mrs. Julia T. Mills (S. D.)Miss Addle Mills.
Mr. Israel II. Gerry, distil. Nov. 1, 1SG5.
Mrs. Josephine M. Gerry (Israel 11.)
dism. Nov. 1, 1SG5.“ Frances Haekley.
Rev. Ilettj. F. Mi Herd, dism. Oct. 25, 1SG4,
Mrs. Frances E. Millcrd (llenj. F.) “
On Profession.
Mr. Ambrose L. Ranney.Miss Agnes C. Parker.
October 27, 18G3, by Certificate.
Mr. Simeon Haekley, dism. Feb. 1G,18G4.“ Chatincey L. Hamlin, dism. Aug. 14,
1 SG5.
Dr. Walter Pardee.Mrs. Almira M. Pardee (Walter).Mr. Charles Durfec.Mrs. Adelpba S. Durfee (Cltas.)- Lucy M. Mcllish (David 11.)
Mr. Jeremiah G. Lugar.Mrs. Harriet N. Lugar (Jerk. G.)
Miss Harriet N. Lugar.“ Amelia M. Lugar.“ Frances A. Lugar.
Mrs. Caroline Hloomiugdale (David).
'
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BROADWAY TABERNACL' ( Ml K*( II. 75
On Profession.
Mr. John II. Evans.“ Elijah Herman Smith.“ Samuel St. John Smith.41 David Bloomingdule.
December '29. 1S03, by Certificate.
Mr Philo F. Leavens.• 4 Joseph F. Gaylord.“ Charles C. Watson.“ Wilson Potter.
Mrs. Cynthia L. Potter (Wilson).Rev. Absalom Pi ters, D. D.Miss Hannah II. Smith.
On Profession.
Mrs. Sarah M. Drown (w. Dr. Samuel II.)
Miss Mary 1!. Dempsey.Mr. William 1). Moore.Mrs. Ehoda .lane Smith (Darwin A.)Miss Amelia Gray.
4‘ Elizabeth Connolly.
March 1, 1SG4, by Certificate.
Mr. Henry L. Dolt wood. dism. Oct. 21.
1SG5.
Mrs. Helen E. Boltwood (Henry L.) 11
Mr. Joel I Fisher.
Mrs. Harriet L. Dunham (James II.)
Dr. Henry M. Field.
On Profession.
Mrs. Lydia M. Field (Dr. Henry M.)
Ayril 20, 1S04, by Certifcate.
Miss Harriet T. Storrs.
Mrs. Jane S. Hatch (Wm. B.)44 Sarah C. Pickering (Tlios. A.)
Miss Hannah Van Dyne.Dr. William M. Chamberlain.Mrs. Susan E. Chamberlain (Dr. Wm. M.)Mr. George Gillie.
* 4 James Taylor.Mrs. Olivia M. Taylor (James).
On Profession,
Miss Sarah 1*. Lambert {Mrs. Leeds).Mr. John A. Magee.“ Caleb D. Hackky.
Mrs. Isabella Gillie (George).Mr. William Gray.Mrs. Harriet Gray (Wm.)
June 2$, 1SG4, by Certifcate.
Miss Agnes Henry.Mr. Edward D. Finch.Mrs. Amelia I. Finch (Ed. B.)
November 1, 1804, by Certificate.
Mrs. Sarah L. Shannon (Horatio N.)Miss Mary A. Williams.Mr. John C. Staples.
Mrs. Martha A. Pombor (Henry II.)44 Hattie Flyer (Chas. W.)
Mr. Cyrus S. Minor.Mrs. Oath. R. Minor (Cyrus S.)
Mrs. Jane M. Merrill (wid. James).Mr. William F. Barnard” Win. H. Teal.** Wm. E. Locke.44 Julius L. Danner.
On Profession.
i Miss Flora L. Minor.
December 27, DG-4, by Certificate.
Mr. Thomas Logan, dism. March 20, 1800.“ Mr. Benj. Vaughan Abbott, dism
March 0, DOG.Airs. Elizabeth T. Abbott (Brnj. B.) “
Caro lino A. Seely (Charles).Air. Liclul. Gidman.
44Cassius Al. Gilbert.
44 Daniel W. Fox, dism. Jan. 12, 1SGG.Mrs. Sarah Benton, (L. C.), dism. March
0, 1SGG.
Mary 11. Holmes (Wm. B.)Aliss Alary Titcomb, dism. Mar. 0, 1SGG.
February 25, 1*115, by Certificate.
Airs. Sophia C. Rand (Albert T.)• 4 Helen 1). Pitts (Jesse G,)' 4 Hannah C. llathawaj- (w. Tlios. E.)44 Henrietta K. Hollister (Sami. W.)
Mr. Charles JO. W hitehead.Airs. Rachel T. Whitehead (Chas. E.)
Annie M\ Palmer (Herbert F.)Mr. Joseph Parker, Jr.
On Profession.
Miss Elizabeth Day.Air. James Bigelow.
May 1,
1 5Go, by Certificate.
Airs. Clarissa T. Rockwell (w. Dr.Theron)Air. Horatio B. Howe.Airs. Martha B. Howe (Horatio B.)
44 Evelyn M. Hall (Elial F.)4’ Mary C. Pelton (Guy R.)
Air. Alosely il. Williams.
June 27, 18G5, by Certificate.
Air. John 11. Washburn.*’ Air. Jonathan Bowers Slade.
Airs. Lucinda Reed (Wilson D.)
August 20, lbGo, by Certificate.
Mr. John Kershaw.Mrs. Amelia F. Kershaw (John).
On Profession.
Air. Albert F. Monroe.
October Jl, 1 S(i5, by Certificate.
Air. AVilliam C. Witter.44 Daniel B. Dudley.44 Joseph Angwin.
On Profession.
Aliss Emma E. Smith.Mr. Herbert A. Loring.“ Joseph Rochester, d. Dec. 2G, 1SG£>.
“I
76 MANUAL OV TI1E
January 2, l SCO, by Certificate.
Mr. Ohas. P. Blanchard.“ John P. Do Meritt.
Mrs. Jennie V. Bunnell (Lyman B.)
Mr. William llenrv Wolcott.“ Allen P. Bissc'U.
Mrs. Mary C. Haviland (Chas.)
Mr. James B. 'Thomson.Mrs. Mary C. Thomson (Jas. B.)
Mr. Edward X. Pomeroy.“ Clius. Van Nordcn.
Mrs. Anna L. Hitchcock (John ().)
On Profession.
Mr. John G. Hitchcock.*4 Arthur B. Jennings.
Miss Margaret Williams.
Mr. Mortimer Smith.Miss E. Gertrude Forbes.
•• Anna Smith.“ Ida May Morse.
February 27, 1SGG, by Certificate.
Miss Mary E. Lyon.Mrs. Mary B. Robinson (Fred. M.)u Margaret McDonald (\v. Thus. It.)
Rev. A. Huntington Olapp.Mrs. Emily 1\ C lapp (Rev. A. H.)“ Elizabeth M. Owens (Thos.)
Miss Elizabeth C. Ward.
On Profession.
Mr. Win. August Scharlau.
Miss Maria Burt.
Mr. Edgar W. Moore.Mrs. Clarissa E. T. Moore (Edgar W.)Mrs. Antoinette Camp (Ainzi Lewis.)
April 15, 1SGG, by Certificate.
! Mr. Martin Luther Stowell.Mrs. Sarah K. Partridge (James H.)Mr. John Quince Adams.Mrs. Ada W A darns (John Q.)Mr. Albert II. Olmsted.Mr. Nathaniel B. Emerson.J )r. Slocum Wright.Mrs. Caroline L. Wright (I)r. Slocum).
•' Miss S. Josephine llall.
Mr. Charles A. Durlee.Mrs. Mary A. Colton (Rev. Krastus).
I
Mr. Samuel P. Putnam.1 Mrs. Jennie S. Putnam (Samuel I*.)
;
Mr. Ralph Lillie.
On Profession.
:
Mrs. Cornelinctt Smith (Harlan P.)
j
Mrs. Ancoletta Morse (Daniel P.)Miss Mary O. Dale.
|
Miss Phud.e Dale.Mr. John ('handler Partridge,
j
Miss Mary R. Dunn.Miss Melanie B. Durfee.Master William 11. Pratt.
Miss Fanny Isabel Reeve.Miss Elizabeth Bridge.Mrs. Elizabeth C. Ward (w. Frederick).
' *
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BROADWAY TABERNACLE CHURCH 77
INDI5X TO HISTORICAL CATALOGUE.
A.PAGE
Abbott, Austin 70 I
Abbott, Benjamin V 75Abbott, Elizabeth (Benjamin V.) 75 !
Abbott, Eilen L. G. (Austin) 70Abernethy, Charles 7:1
j
Abernathy, Cornelia 73 1
Abernethy, Maria (Charles) 73
Adams, Margaret T (50
Adamson, William S 72Adoniram, Rev. Bichard Judson 73 ,
Albert, llalpcrn 07!
Alden, Charles F 00
Aldcn, William T 71
Alexander. AgnesW 74
Alexander, Catherine 57Allen, Asa K 57
|
Allen, George 1 71
Allen, Harriet (John J.) 01
Allen, John J Cl
Allen, Louisa (Pliny) 00
Allen, Pliny . ....00Allen, Robert 00
Allen, William 73Allertou, Mary K 70
Allison, Lydia 72
Alvord, John B 04|
Ames, Henry 02
Ames, Isabel M 74j
Anderson. Alexander 05Andrews, Rev. Edward Waren 5s
j
Andrews, Sarah (George) 50 .
Angwin, Joseph 75Arbuckle, liethia 1). (Rev. James) 73Arbuekle. Eliza A 73 I
Arbuckle, Mary C 73Arbuckle. Sarah li 73 1
Atkins, Oliver S 00Atkins, Theodore L 00Austin, Alonzo E 70Austin, Elizabeth (William) Oil
Austin, Mary Ann 00Ayre, Robert 00
;
Avres, David 00j
B.
Bacon, Eliza II. (John). 57Bacon, John 59Badger, Clarissa M. (Milton) 72
PAGEBadger, George 72Badger, William 72Bailin', John 1 03Baldwin, Rev. Elijah C 71
Baldwin, llenry 71
Ball, Alonzo S 03Ball, Augustus F 01
Ball, Eliza W. (Alonzo S.)
Ball, Elizabeth (Augustus F.)Baneker, GerardBaneker, Phebe (Gerard)Barnard, William FBarmim, Isaac WBarnum, Jenetto (Isaac W.).Barnum, NathanielBarr, BeniaminBarratt, OliverBarrett. Frances EBarrows, Henry MBartlett, Amos GBartlett, Edward GBartlett, Georgiana ( AinosG.).. ..
Bartlett, Jane W. (Edward G.)Bartlett. Lydia J. (Phineas)Barton, Eliza (Brigham)Barton, Julia ABassett, Caroline ABatelu lder, John PBatyhelder, Lucy (John P.)
Bates. Edward SBates, Levi MBates, Martha ABates. Mary G. (Edward 3.)
Battell, Emily E. (A. T.)Beach, >arah (Daniel)Beard, Eleanor (George)Beard. GeorgeBecker. Mary Ann (Alexander) . ...
Beebe, Ciciiicnt E 03,
Beebe. David Nr
Beebe, Hiram EBeebe. Rebecca MBeeslev. Isaiah
Bcldeii, AbigailBell. Angeline A. (Charles)
Bell, CharlesBenedict. Anna E. (Seth W.)Benedict, Charles WBenedict, Emily JBenedict, Fanny RBenedict, Francis LBenedict, Henry M
22
23is33aa5£82222223V33222
22338383S:~
2g223£88k
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78 MAN 1' AL Ol*' Til K
l*AGEBenedict, Jane M. (Charles W.) 05
Benedict, Jesse W .5s
Benedict, I.. Ophelia (Henry M.) 07
Benedict, Sarah Frances OS
Benedict, Seth W 02, 70Bennett, Amanda (John L.) .00
Bennett. John L 00
Bennett, Marv B. (lU nn A.) 07
Bennett. William M . .
'.*>0
Benton, E. C 70
Benton, Elizabeth M 5s
Benton, Sarah (E. C.) 75Berry, Anna E. (Thomas 3.) 73Berry, Thomas S 73
Belts, Courtlandt 1’. 3.. 00Bigelow. James 75Bissell, Allen P 70
Bissell, Hannah 00
Black liter, Elizabeth (Bov. Joel) 73
Blackmon, Bov. Joel 73
Blackwood, Margaret 70
Blake, Anson 00
Blake, Mary C 00
Blanchard, Charles F 70
Blanchard. Eve 00
Blewett., William 05
Bloomingdalc, Catherine (David) 74
Bloomingdale, David 75Boltwood, Helen E. (Henry L.). . ..75Boltwood, Henry L 75Boozy, Elizabeth (Henry) 02
Bourne, David 57
Bowers, Sarah T 07
Bowles, Anne P. (James) 00
Bowles. James 00
Boyd. Frances A 04
Boyd, Frederick S 00
Boynton, Curtis OS
Boynton, Elizabeth G. (Curtis) ..... .OS
Boynton, Nathaniel A 72Boynton, Prudence W. (Nathaniel A.). 72Boynton, William B 0s
Brackett, Elsie M. (Samuel) 05Bradbury, Z. N 73
Bradley, Elizabeth S 5SBradley, Mary S. B. (Moses M.) 00Bradley, Moses M 59
Brewer, Lucy Ann 65Brewster, Harriet 0,1)
Brewster, Mary TO
Bridgeman, Sarah A. (William II.) . .73
Briditeinan, William Henry 73BrinkcrholF, Jacob 57, 05Brinkerhotf, Jacob, Jr 00, 05, 00
Brinkerhoff, Mary G. (Jacob) 57Bronson, Sarah 1). (William A.) 73Bronson, Dr. William A 73Brown, Anna J. ( Edward E.) 50Brown, Charles D 00Brown, Cordelia (John) 57Brown, Edward E 04Brown, Eunice (George) 07Brown, George 07Brown, lluldah G 03Brown, John 04Brown, Maria L. (Charles D.) 50Brown, Mary O. (Thomas) 04
PAGEBrown, MosesBrown, Sarah M. (Dr. Sami, if.)
Browning, Benjamin FBrowning. Mason I>
Bruorton, Mary (John)Buel, Clarissa
Bulklcy, Lydia WBunneil, Jennie V. (Lyman !>.).
Bunnell, Lyman BHurchard, EdwardUurekett, Charles FBurdell. JohnBurger, Thomas JBurstrand, Frick SBurt, MariaBush, Abby A. (John)Buxton, John B
C.
Cady, A. SCady, Rebecca HCiesar, Diana (Friend)Caldwell, Corinth NCaldwell, ElizaCaldwell, James GCaldwell, Wallace ECalhoun. Mary Jane (James C.)Calkins, Norman ACalkins. Mary C. (Norman A.)Camp, Bev. AmziCamp, Amzi LewisCamp, Ann Eliza
Camp, Antoinette (Amzi L.)Camp, Araty (Nathan)Camp. HenryCamp, Isabella J.
Camp, Joseph WalterCamp, Laura (Joseph Walter).
.
Camp, Nathan 01,
Camp, Nathan HenryCamp, Olinda A. (liev. Amzi)('amp. Phebc W. (Nathan) ..
Campbell, ArchibaldCampbell, NancyCarey, Mary (Thomas W.). .
.
Carnes, John D 50,
Carnes, Mary (Dennis)Carnes, Mary J. (John DCarpenter, Abigail II
Carpenter, JesseCass, John O('ass, John WCass, Susan HCass, Susan W. (John O.)
Caswell, AlansonCaswell, Mary (Alanson)Catlin, Frances 11
( hainberlain, Abigail (Moses)Chamberlain, Susan (Dr. 'William M.)Chamberlain. Dr. William MChamplin, Edmund LChamplin, Fanny (Edmund L.)(’handler, KateChandler. Margaret 74
('handler, Thomas C 60
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IJKOADW AY TABERNACLE CHURCH. 79
Chapin, Harriet Elizabeth (Joseph)..Chapin, .JosephChapman, John. ...
Chase, Julia E. (Unfits)
Cheater, Catharine W. (Elisha W.)...
Chester, Elisha \V
Ciiester. George FChester, Jane J. (George F.)
Chiehester, Clarissa
Chichester, DavidChichester, LewisChichester, SarahChristy, Harriet (Moses)Christy, Moses 01,
Church, Hannah (Caleb)‘Church, Sarah JaneClapp, Lev. A. HuntingtonClapp, ClintonClapp, Emily P. (ltev. A. II.)
Clark, CharlesClark, Charles 11
Clark, Edmund WClark, FrancesClark, MariaClark. Mary H. (Ezra, Jr.)
(Mark, Susan.Clil'tpn, Alice (Joseph).Clock, Edward AClough. Maria (Isaac)
Clover, Bridget (Lewis P.)
Clover, Lewis PClover, Martha JuneColburn, AlpheusColesworthy, Susan (Hiram F.)Collins, Elizabeth UColton, William HComstock. Albert L 63,
Comstock, Catharine IF. (Albert L.) 63,
Comstock, Catherine MComstock, Sarah EComstock, William SOonart, EmanuelConkling. Henry CConner, EdwardConner, Susan JConnolly. ElizabethConnolly. MariaConnor, Charlotte GConover, Lucy T. (Stephen, Jr.)
Conover, Sarah MConover, Stephen. JrConover. Thomas J)
Con verse, ( Uiarlie CCooke, George TCook, Elizabeth BCook, John SCook, Sarah Jane (John 3.)
Cooper, Phillis
Cornwall, Thomas ECorp, Sarah Ann (William)Corp, WilliamCurrie, Isabella
Currie, Willia.ni
Cousins, MaryCowper, Philinda PCrafts, Miranda W. (Myron II.)
Crafts, Myron II
,W|
(IS|
IN '
63|
™iW
i‘»7 i
71
71
757063507360
63
70
70
7461
60
67
63
63
63727261
63
62
Craig, Priscilla (John) 53(Mane, John W 57Crane. John W.. Jr 70( ’rawlerd. Charlotte. 57Crehore, Mary M 70I 'rocker, Leonard 57Crocker, Mary (Lemuel) .50( 'rocker. Penelope (Leonard) 57( ’rook. Eliza (Samuel) . . . 50( rook, llazen S 53Crosby. Ann 04Cross, Biehard S 60Cross, Sarali .Jane { Biehard S.) 63Crowe, John 63Oruikshank, James 5sCruikshank, Alary Ann (James) 5s(Tuikshnnk, Marv Ann (Theodore). . .60Curtis, Elizabeth' A. (CalviD) 57Curtis, Elizabeth S. A 60Curtis, Margaret A 60( 'urtis, Smith 67Cushman. William A 7tCutler. JohnS 73
1).
Dale, George L 701 )ale. Harriet. B 70Dale, Thomas N 59Danfort h, Catherine 73Danforth, Frances A 65Danforth, Henrietta 73Danforth, John 71Danforth, Lvdiu (William) 65Danforth. Philura 73Danforth. William 65Danner, Julius L 75Davidsoa. Amintor 60
Davidson, Mary Frances (Amintor). .. 63
Davidson, Nath aniel 50
Davies, Edgar W (54
Davies. Mary Ann (Thqmas) 65Davies, Thomas 65Davis, Henry G 74Davis, James 69Davis, Julia It 70
Davis, Louisa Jane (James) 60
Davis. Mary 0 70
Davison, Martha A. 71
Day. Anna W. (E. S.) 65
Dav, Edgar J 68Day. Elizabeth 75
Day, Martha Ann 61
Dean. James E. 1‘ 57
Delumater, Samuel 66
Demurest, Mary (Albert) 61
Do Meritt. John P 76
Dempsey, Mary It 75
Denham, Charles 60
Denham, Elizabeth 71
Denham, Emma 71
Denman. J. 3. (Jacob S.) 65
Denniston, Henrietta It 63
Dennison, Elizabeth W 61
Dibble, Mary (Biehard E.) 53Dibble, ltichard E 5S
,
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80 MANUAL OK TICK
Dickenson, George li
Dimomi, MaryDinning CatharineDoak, Elizabeth
Dodge, AlbertDodge, Jennie (J. (William A)...Dodge, William ADolson. Angeline (Gabriel L.)...
Dolson, Mary Isabella
Doolittle, ElishaDoolittle, TheresaDorman, ltiehard ADotey, FrancesDoyle, CatharineDrake, Chloe (William)Dinner, Isabella (llenry)Dresser, HoraceDresser, Lucy W. (Horace)Dry den, Barbara (George)Drydcn, GeorgeDubois, Eliza
Dudley, Daniel li
Dull', JamesDuff, Martha. (James)1 >11 n n, ltichard CDunham, Harriet L. (James II.)
Dunham, James II
Dunmore, George WDurfee, Adclphu S. (Charles). . . .
Duriee, Charles
Eaton, Theodore AEaton, Sarah Ann (Nathaniel)...Ebbctts, AlmiraEddy, Fanny SEddy, Kobert II
Edmonds, JamesEdmonds, Margaret (James)Edwards, Jane (ltichard)
Edwards, JohnEdwards ltichard
Elder, Elizabeth....Elder, SamuelElliott, Marcia L. (Key. Samuel).Ely, Jane (Isaac S.).
Kngeholm, Mary EEnseoe, Joseph.Ensign, Cornelia (James L.)Ensign, James LEpstein, Ephraim MErwin, Euclid (ltichard).
Evans, licnjamin DEvans, Deborah 0Evans, Esther (Thomas)Evans, John II
Everett, ElizabethEwing. Samuel
Karlin, Augustus 11 .
.
Farrand, CamillusFarrand, Edward F. .
.
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Farrand. Jenetto MFellows, J. \VFellows, Mary A. (J. W.)....Feraud, Hannah (Gustav J.).
Ferguson, HubertFerguson. Sophia M. (John).Fessenden. William W, 58Field, Dr. Henry M 75Field, Lydia M.‘(Dr. Henry M.) 75Field, Sarah T 74
Finch. Amelia 1. (Edward li.)
Finch, Edward BFinlay, WilliamFisher, Aaron AFisher, Elizabeth It
Fisher, Harriet EFisher, Joel E 70,
Fisher, Mary A. (Nathaniel)Fisher, Mima Ann (Samuel)Fisher, NathanielFisher, SamuelFisher, SarahFisher. Sarah It
Fisher. William I
Fitch, DavidFitch. David II
l'iteh, Luther 1*
Fitch. Mary C. (Clarke)
Fleming, SarahFletcher, Margaret MFletchhcr, William II
Fonda, Hiram JForbes, E. GertrudeForbes, Elizabeth WFowle, John AEowle, Margaret L. (George M.)
Fox, Daniel WFox, Mary W. (Constantine). ;
Franklin. Morris JFraser, William II
Frazier, ElizabethFrazier, MargaretFrazier, MaryFreeland, Jacob V
Freeman, Amelia TFrench, Hannah TFrench, James II
French, Mary W. (James II.)
Frisbie, Joanna E. (Myron J.)
Frisbie, M v run J
Fuller, Levi A
Ci.
Gaines. Elizabeth FrancesGale, Elizabeth 11
Gale, Sarah II
Gant, Harriet. (Francis S.)
Garretson, Mary JGates, CharlesGates, Hannah N. (William 11.).
Gavit, JosephGavit, MetaGavit, William EGavitt, MargaretsGaylord, Augustus
'
'
*
.
* - '
BROADWAY TABERNACLE CHURCH. 81
I'AOK
Gaylord, Joseph F 75Gaylord, Martha (Augustus) 07
Gazani, Gugliclmo 72
Gerry, Israel 11 74
Gerry, Josephine M. (Israel) 74
Gibbs, Jane A. (David) 04
Gidman, Richard 75Gilbert. Cassius M 75
Gileehrist, William 09
Gill. Jane C. (Elias) 01
Gill, Sarah (James) 02
Gillie, George 75
Gillie, Isabella (George) 75Gilman, Daniel G 05Gilman, Rev. Edward W f:8
Gilman, Eliza (William C) 08, 74
Gilman, Elizabeth 0 G3Gilman, Emily 05Gilman, Harriet L 04
Gilman, Maria 1* 08Gilman, William C 08,74Gilmore, Noah 08Gilson, Emma T 00Girling, Amelia M. (Robert) 09Girling, Frances Louise 74Girling, Robert 70Glossing, George F 08Golden, Mary Ann (Patrick J.) OSGolden, Patrick James 03Goodrich, Ezra W 05Gordon, Adella J. (Stephen T.) 72Gordon, Stephen 11 72Gordon, Stephen T 72Gould, Horace 05Gould, Sarah (Horace) 05Grant, John M 08. 70Gray. Amelia 75Gray. Hannah W. (John) 00Gray, Harriet (Stephen C.) 53Gray, Harriet (William) 75Gray, John 00Gray, Mary (John) 57Gray, Alary 11 72GrUy Sarah 57
Gray. Stephen (’ 53Gray, William 75Great bach. Joseph 03
Gregory. Harriet 59Grecnlcaf. Sarah E 00
Greenwood. Mary E. (Henry B.) 78
Gridlev. John S.*. 03
Griffith. Thomas 11 02
Griswold. Silvia 53Grovenor. Ruth 59
Grovesteen, Anna V. (James) (is, 71
Grovesteen, James II 03, 71
(luliek, Rev. Luther Halsey 07
Gustin. Thomas P 5s
IT.
Hack ley, Caleb B 75
Jlackley, Frances 74
llacklev, Simeon 74Hageman, Abiel B 57
Hale, Charlotte 0-4
PAOKHale, David 57Hale, David AHale, Isabella M. S. (David A.) .
Hale, Julia (Richard)Hale, Lucv S. ( David)Hale, Lydia (David)Hale, RichardHall, Amanda II. FHall, Aroline ('
Hall, Catharine J. (Henry)Hall, Charles LHall, CorneliaHall, Klial FHall, Elizabeth M. (George G.)Hall, Evelyn M. (Elial E.)Hall, Francis MHall, George VHall, George GoodwinHall. Henry CHall. John WHall. Joshua BHall. Marilla W. (Francis M.)Hall. Martha (Robert L.)Hall. Robert 1
Hall. Thomas Jllalse\ . Ann II. (Henry A.)I lalsey, ElizabethHalsey, Henrietta A. (Harlan P.)
Halsey. 1 feiirv AHalsey. 11 enrv CHalsey, Henry M1 lalsey. J ulia I)
Halsey. Lewis THalsted, James WHamlin. Channec} 1,
Harding. MaryHarris, Betsey AnnHarris. Frances (Joseph)Harris, JosephHarris. Sarah MHart; John I)., JrHart, Matilda J. (Seth)llart, Norman LHartshorn, Ann (Philander)Harvey, Alpha R. (Charles R.)
Harvey, Charles R 57,
Harvey. Ellen MHarvey. Olive MHarvey. Rebecca (Charles R.)
Harvey, Sarah B. (Willard)Harvey, Willard
'
Hankins. Robert \V
Haskins. William II
Hastings, HenryHatch. Edward BHatch, Jane S. (William B.)
Hatfield. AmaranthaHatfield, Charles RHatfield, Christian RHatfield, Christina M. (Charles R.). .
.
Hatfield. LauraHatfield, Oliver PHathaway, Hannah C. (Thos. E.)
llaviland, Mary C. (Charles)
Hawes, Elizabeth A. (George)Hawkins, Sarah (Willet)
Hawley, Frances A 71
.
'
82 MAM Al. OF TIIE
i\u;k
Hawley, Frederick S 05
Hawley. Mary A 71
Hayes. Fannie E. (Henry) 71
Hayes, Henry 71
Hayes. I.uey 72lla/eltine, Emma (Leonard, Jr.) 71
lla/eltine, Leonard. .!r 74
Heath. Aaron 15 00
Heath. Frances S 01
Heath. Henry To
Heath, Joseph 00lie • th, Malvina ( Aaron 15.) !iu
Hedges. l)r. David Anson 74
Henderson. Alexander *1 01
Henderson, Archibald 05
Henderson. Hannah ( Edward T.) 03
Henderson. Mary .lane till
Henderson. William till
Hendrickson. Eleanor (Furman) til
Hendrickson. Forman t>
!
Ilennell, Frederick 02
Henry, Aimes 75Herring, Elizabeth titi
lliekoek, Sarah E (ill
liickoek, William (' till
Higgins, Eleanor (.lames W.) 02
Higgins, Eleanor It <12
1 Muffins. .James W ti2
Highlield. Louisa (ill
Jlillier, George (it)
Hills, .Mary L. (Samuel C.) 02
Hills, Samuel G 57Ilimrod, Oliver W bo
Ilinehcy, .John 02
Hinckley, Elizabeth It 72
Hinckley, Zcnus It 72
I linman, George tit)
II inwood, Ann Eliza (Thomas) oil
II in wood. Thomas 00
Hitchcock, Anna L. (.John (4.) 70
Hitchcock, John (4 70
Holbrook, Marv F 00
Holder, William W 01
Holdridgc, Eliza G. (William) 07
lloldridge. William 07
Holly, Abner 15 72
Holly, Catharine J. (Abner 15.) 74
Hollister, Henrietta K. (Samuel W.)..75Holmes, Abbv 11 02
Ibdmes. Eleanor A ; 7 >
Holmes, Jane (John) 02
Ibdmes, Joanna L. (Daniel) 71
Holmes, Mary G 70
Holmes, Mary W. (William 15.) 77)
Holmes, Mary M 72
Holmes, Samuel 0s
Holmes. Samuel 1* 70
Holmes, William I* (is
Holton, Anna M 71
llolton, Francis It 71
Hooker, llonoria E. (Nath. W\) 71
Hopkins. Maria O oSHoward, Benjamin 70
Howard, Joel M 07
Howe, Horatio 15 77)
Howe. Martha 15. (Horatio 15.) 77)
lloxie, Jacqueline 7)7
l»AUF.
J
Hoyt, Calvin 05iHoyt. James 11 04Hoyt. Mary Ann (Calvin) 05Hoyt. Samuel 05Hull. Jennie A. (Calvin E.) 72Hull. John 1* 01
llulse. Aminda T 05lltilsc. Henry W tilt
llulse. Pamela Ann (Thus. E.) 0J
llulse. Tims. E tv’5
1 1 wlshart. t ‘i.riielius 15 51)
1 1 ulshart. Mary (Cornelius 15.) 5i>
Humphreys, Slar.ran t (John) 02Humphreys, Richard G. E 00
Hunt. Frances 1*. (Seth 15.) 78Hunt. Seth 15 72Huntington. Albeit W 531 1 uni ington, 1 )avid J 57Huntington. Ellen J. (Tims. T.) 74
Huntington. Emily S. ( David J.) 57
1 I unt ington. Emily S 71
I luntington, Frederick G 04
Huntington. Janette M 71
Huntington, Mary Ann 05
Hurd. Fanny (Marcus) .5?
Hurd, Marcus f>7
llustace. Augustus 57
Hustaee, Jane (Augustus) 00
II listed. Jerome OS
Hyatt. Archibald 05
Hyatt. Marv 72
Hyde, Elizabeth (Joseph P.) 73
Ilyde, Fannie 15 73
T.
Ingersoll, Marv J 70
Ingersoll. W. W 70
1 u wood, Marianne 00
I sham, Pierpont 74
Isham, Semantha S. (Pierpont) 74
;r.
Jackson, Genet (Walter) 07
Jackson. George 07
Jackson. Maria L. (Jeremiah) 07
Jackson. Mary L 50,72Jackson. Walter 67
Janes. Mary P. ( Elijah) 02
Jenkins. Clara 15 72
denning . Arthur P 70
Jennings. Joel A 78
Jennings. Susan F. (Joel) 73
Ji linings, William N 74
Jessup. Lydia (Benjamin) 60
Jewett. George (J 57
Jewett, Mary G 50
Jewett, Mary W. (George G.) 53
Johnson. Delia M. (Edward) 74
Johnson. Lev. Edwin 65
Johnson, Frederick II 50
Johnson. Julia 5S
Johnson. Julia 71
Johnson, Louisa (Robert) 60
.
I'
:>
N
BROADWAY TABERNACLE CHURCH. 83
1'AG E•Johnson, Robert (51
Johnston, Anna G. (John A.) (57
Johnston, John A (57
Join s, Ashuel <52
Jones, Cynthia (50
Jones, Kilen 71 '
Jones, Harriet M (5(5
Jones, Mary J. (Asluiel) (5*2|
Jones, Thomas 7o ;
Jonlon, Andrew (Joj
Judd, Elizabeth T. (Ilenry G.) (54!
Judd, Henry G <53'
Judson, Anna Maria 73
Judson, Eliza 73
Judson, Henry (57
Joy, Jesse : 73
lv.!
Kay, Charles 72 \
Keeler, llonier W (5sI
Kelsey, Sarah Y (52
Kershaw, Amelia 1<\ (John) 75j
Kershaw, John 75 ,
Ketchum, Amelia 59 !
Kimball, Elizabeth A. (William ().)... 73
Kimball, William 0 731
Kimmons, Rachel <>S
King, Amanda E (5s
King, William F (55
Kingman, Martin E (5(5
Kingman, Sophia 71
Kingsbury, Harriet 05
Kingsbury, Margaret (Ephraim) 5s
Knapp, Eliza C. (Samuel) 74
Knight, Adaline (Henry E.) 59I
Knight, Calvin S (50;
Knevuls, Caleb li 71
Kummeil, Emily P (51
Kyte, Francis II 71
PAGHLeonori, Robert GLeuber. LucyLewis, SarahLink, Christina LLink, FrederickLinton. Mary ALi pc, WalterLipe. Melissa ( Waller)Littlejohn, Agnes L. (David)Littlejohn, FrancisLittlejohn, Samuel BLocke, William ELockwood, Ann Louisa (Le Grand).,,Lockwood, Benjamin 53,
Lockwood, Charlotte (Munson)Lockwood. Eliza (Benjamin) 53,
Lockwood. FrederickLockwood, Helen MLockwood, Le GrandLockwood, MunsonLockwood. Olivia (Frederick)Lockwood, RuinsLogan, ThomasLombard, IL-rvey FLord, Sarah Ann (William)Lord. WilliamLuring. Herbert ALott, Isaac BLovett, Ann MariaLugar, Amelia MLugar, Frances ALugar, Harriet N. (Jeremiah)Lugar, Harriet NLugar, Jeremiah (4
Lyon, Mary E
M.Maedougul, Elva (William)..Magee, AlexanderMagee, AnnMagee, CatherineMagee, John AMaghee. Sarah 1*. (John H.).
Laid law. Elizabeth 04
Lambert, Dr. Edward W 73
Lambert, Ellen L 73
Lambert, Martha W. (Dr. Ed. L.) 73
Lambert, Sarah (William G.) 73
Lambert, William G 57, 73
I/Amie, Martha (James) (55
Lander, Isabella (John) (54
Lander, John <54
Lnndsdown, Charlotte (James P.) (59
Lane, Mary Ann (Thomas) (55
Lane. Thomas 5s
Lanphier, Jeremiah C (50
Latimer, Charles E (53
Latimer, Horace R 03
Latimer. Mary B. (Horace R.) 03
Lawrence, George 07
Lawrence, Sarah (William) 07
Leavens. Philo F 75
Lee, Elizabeth L 02
Leeds, Sarah P 75
Leonard, Ambrose 74
I
;
Manwaring. WilliamMarsh, Isabella DMartin. HenryMason, Ruins 0Mayer, Henrietta N. (Isaac O.)
Mayer. Isaac CMaycrrau, Susan (Bernard A.)
McBride. Harriet.
McBride, Mary (William)McCarty, Louisa C. (James J.)
McCombs, MargaretMcDonald, Margaret (Thomas K.)...
McDougall, Jaenctte AMcDougall, MatthewMcDougall, Susannah (Matthew)McGregor, SusanMcIntyre, Jaenctte Ellon
McMellen, Euphemia L. (Peter)
Meeker, Ann Eliza (Charles W.).
Meeker, ElizabethMeeker, Julia
Meeks, Harriet (James C.) 57
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84 MANUAL OF TUK
l’AGK
Megary, Maria C 72Mellish, Lucy M. (David B.) 74
Mcnair, Benjamin 01
Monair, Isabella (Benjamin) 01
Monair, James 02Monair, Jane (James) 01, 07
Mcnair, Martha 01
Merrium. Kdward C 72
Merrill, Henry A 03Merrill. Jane M. (James) 75Merrill, Sarah (Henry A.) 03
Merritt, Ann Eliza 5.3
Merritt. Elizabeth 00
Middleton, Mary (Reuben) 00
Miller Charles M 00Miller, Kmalinda do
Miller, lienrv M 03
Miller, Mary M 71
Miller, Ehcbo 00
Miller, Rose Ann do
Miller, William S 01
Millerd, Rev. Benjamin F 74
Millerd, Frances E. (Benjamin F.). . . .74
Millliiran, Rachel 50
Mills, Addle 74
Mills. Julia T 74
Minor, Catharine R. (Cyrus S.). ...01. 75
Minor, Charlotte L. (Israel) 57
Minor,’ Edwin .71
Minor, Emeline 71
Minor, Flora L 75Minor, Henry C 71
Minor, Israel 57
Minor, Israel. Jr 71
Minor. John C 71
Minor, Maria E 71
Mitchell, Betsey (Marcus) 05Mitchell. Marcus 05
Mitchell, Sarah 07
Moncll, Anna 71
Monfort,- William 00
Monroe. Albert F 75Montanye, Amanda (William) 03
Moore, Clarissa E. T. (Edgar W.) 70
Moore, Cornelia C 73
Moore, Edgar W 70
Moore, Mary 00
Moore, Sarah Maria (Lansing C.) On
Moore, William D 75
Moore, William II 50
Morgan, Roxana (William A.) 01
Morgan, William A 01
Morris, Isaac 01
Morris, Jonathan F 5>
Morris, Mary (Isaac) 01
Morse, Ida May 70
Morse, Lucy 04Morse, Samuel R 01
Morse, Sarah Jam j)( Samuel R.) 05Moseley, Eliza (William H.) 03Moseley, William II OnMoses, Dorothy (Aaron) 07Moses, Olive C
.(John) 07
Moses, Susan F. (Charles) 72Mott, Lawrence 1* 04Mott, Mary Frances (Lawrence. P.) 01
|
|
PAG K'
Mullincr, Mary 53Munson, Mary J 70Murdock, Jane II. (Thomas) 07Murdock, Thomas 07
INT.
Neatie. Cornelius 07Newcomb, II. Maria 71
Newhouso. Mary C 00Newton. Maria Louise 03
Nicol, Clorimla B 72N ieol. Francis B 72
Niles, Isabel W 71
Niles, William II 00Niles, W. W 71
North, Dr. Alfred 73Northup, Emeline M. (William W.) ..74
Norwood, Edward M 73
O.
Oakley, Sarah 51)
Oatalina. Lydia A 09O'Brien, John G 00Olmstcad, James 00Opdyke, Charles W 72
Orr. Susannah 57
Osborn, Aurelia 02
Osborn. Mary Ann 05
Owen, David 07
Owen, Maria 09
Owen. Thomas 01
Owens. Elizabeth M. (Thomas) 70
1\
Palmer, Annie W. (Herbert F.) 75Palmer, Eliza Jane ^ Charles W.) 03
Pardee, Almira M. (Walter) 74
Pardee. Mary E. (Dr. Ward C.) 70Panlee, Rebecca C 71
Pardee. Richard G 71
Pardee. Dr. Walter 74
Pardee, Dr. Ward C 71
Parker, Agnes C 74
Parker, Asa 57Perkor, Eliza 01
Parker, Harrison 71
Parker. Joseph. Jr 75
Parker. Lydia D 03
Parker, Mary E. (Asa) 04
Parker. Rebecca J. (Asa) 07
Parsons, Charles G 07
Patrick. Alexander 57
Patrick. Louisa (Alexander) 57
Payne, Jira G2
Pearson, Lydia (Oliver R.) 02
peek, Catherine Matilda (Benjamin). .53
Pelton. Mary C. (Guy R.) 75
Pelton. Sarah A 71
Pember, Martha A. (Henry II.) 75
Perry. Sarah B. (Oliver II.) 72
Peters, Rev. Absalom, D. 1) 75
BROADWAY TABE11NAOLK CHURCH. 85
I* AfiK
Peters, Harriet II 72
Peterson. Sarah J 70
Phelps, Benjamin K... 73
Phelps, Hannah M. (Benjamin K.). . . . 7a
'Pickering, Sarah ('. (Thomas A.) 75
Pierce, Bruce (U
Pierce, Edwin S 70
Pierce, Edwin S 04
Pierce, Mary Lavinia (Edwin S.) 02
Pierson, Sarah F 70
Pinney, Edward S ..01
Pitts. Helen 1). (Jesse G.) 75
Pitts, Rhoda P. (Samuel) 57
Pitts. Samuel 57
Place, Margaret (Robert) 04
Plummer, Abigail 05
Plyer, Charles W 73Plyer, Hattie (Charles W.) 75
Pollock, Fanny (George) 01
Pollock, George 02
Pomeroy, Edward N 70
Pond, Harriet (Lewis A.) 72
Pond, Harriet 70
Pond, Rev. Theodore. S 72
Pooler, Eliza. 70
Patter, Catherine (John) 57
Patter, Cynthia L. (Wilson) 75
Patter, Wilson 75
Powell, Ann R. (William R.) 58
Powell. William R. 58
Pratt, Charles G 58
Pratt, Charles 11 70
Pratt, Rev. Edward 08
Pratt, (leorge W 03
Pratt, Harriet L 70
Pratt, Mary (George W.) 03
Pratt, Sarah B. (Edward) 08
Pray, Sarah A. (Isaac C.) 73
Prentice, Mary A 74
Priest, Josiah A 00
Pringle, James Edward 00
Pritchard, Stephen 57
Probasco, Sarah (Samuel) 57
Provost, Stephen 11. 00
Pugh, Lewis 51)
Pugsley, Gilbert T 02
PugsleV, Julia B. (Gilbert T.) 01
Pundcrson, Ellsworth M 58
Q.
ickenboss, Lavinia 57
Her, Elizabeth 53
imby, Clara B. (Daniel O.) 72
imby, Daniel O 72
II.
Ramsdell, Susan ARand, Edward ARand, Sophia C. (Albert T.)Rankin, Edward ERanney, Adeline ERannev, Ambrose LRanney, Lafayette
PACKRanney, Mary A 71
Ranson, John 01
Ray, Abby Ann (William M.) 01Ray, Susan C. ( Edward C.) 74Ray, William M 57Raymond, William H
Reilford. Ann MItedford. JamesRedmond, JamesReed. Alvall
Reed, Deborah (James)Reed, Julia AnnReed, Lucinda (WiLon 1).)
Reed, Sarah E. (Jehiel)Reeve, JeremiahReeve, Mary (Jeremiah)Reid. Margaret 1). (Walter)Reid, WalterRice, HarrietRicker, Jane (John M.)Riggs, EdwardRigney, A Imira J
Rigney, Chloe W. (Thomas)Rigney, ThomasRipley, Erast us LRitter, AnnieRitter, DavidRitter. Delia M. (Thomas)Ritter, Louisa (C, II.)
Ritter, MariaRitter, TlmmasRobbins, DavidRolddns. L. AlmiraRobbins, ReliefRoberts, CharlesRoberts, Mary R. (Morris)Roberts, Morris. JrRobinson. Elizabeth (Jeremiah)Robinson. E. L. (Russell W.)Robinson,. Emma (Hamilton)Robinson, Frcderiek MRobinson, Jeremiah P
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Robinson, Mary B. (Frederick M )....
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Robinson, Mary CRobinson, Robert II
Robinson, Russell WRochester, .Joseph
Rochester. Susall (Joseph)Rockwell, Clarissa T. (Dr. Theron)...
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Rodger, Jane Shields (Robert)Rodger. RobertRodgers, Charles T
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Rogers, Emily H. (Arthur)Rogers, LucyRogers. Sarah M. (Charles T.)
Rose, Andrew WRoss, Hannah J
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Roundy, Henrietta (Tliomas)Rowe, Sarah Ann
71 Rozat. Sarah (Guilleaume)73 Rulitfson. Ellen w75 Rumsev, Cecilia
58 Russell, William 1)
71 Rutherford, Clementine D74 Rutherford. 1 hoinas71 Ryekman, Martha A. (R. W., Jr.) £S
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8(3 MANUAL OF THE
S.1* AG 1C I
Sage, Agnes (Loverett II.) bb'
Salter, Margaret (*>!*
j
Salters. Margaret (Daniel) I
Sand ford, Julia A. (D. R.) 71j
Sanford, Marcus 1» <>2I
Sartwell, Henry J <>0j
Saver)', John S >u
Saxton, Josiah C 72 !
Sayre, Franklin 5s
Schapp.s, Elizabeth (Cornelius) Os
Scharlau, William August TO
Schreiber, Mary D. C. . . . 4(51
Scotiold, Catherine (Seely) 01
Seolield, Seely Co
Scott, George’ Frederick »>4
Se.ott Martha Jane (Geo. Fred.) tit
Scovel 1, < Hiver P (id
Seoville, Clinton P 07
Sears, Esther 0~
Sears, Esther (John It.) 07
Sears, Hector b.s
Sears, Sarah J. (Henry P.) 7d
Sears, Susan T. (Hector) Ot
Seely, Caroline A. (Charles)! 7b
Seymour, Elizabeth S ... .71
Seymour Janu s 71
Seymour, Itev. John A 0>
Seymour. Lucy J. (Robert W.) 70
Shafer, O. Loretta (Abraham) 7d
Shannon, Sarah L. (Horatio N.) 7b
Shaw, Frances N 57
Sheldon, Electa M. (Rerthier M.) Ot)
Sheldon, Walter R 70
Sherman, Gideon Watts 0d
Sherwood, Frances A. F. (Thomas D.).7d
Shillington, Ann 11 01
«Shipman, Az.erbah C 07
Shipman, Lydia K. (Do Grass) bs
Shi wrick, Nathaniel 0b
Short, James 07
Short, John 07
Shot well, William R 00
Shriver, Eliza C. (Thomas) 7'-
Siekles, Rachel R <">7
Sickles, Sarah f>S
Simixson, Susan (Andrew) 00
Simms, Mary Ann 01
Simond, Mary 00
Slade, Jonathan Rowers 75
Sloan, John 01
Smedley, Frances 5b
Smith, Adon 71
Smith. Alfred W 57Smith, Anna 70
Smith, Anna 1) 04
Smith, Caroline M 04
Smith, Charles S 05Smith, Edward J 00
Smith, Elijah Herman 75
Smith, Elizabeth 11 0s
Smith. Ellen ,.0s
Smith, Emily W. (Isaac E.) bs
Smith, Emma bs
Smith, Emma E 75Smith, Flora A. (Thomas E.) 0J
Smith, Flora W 70
PAGRSmith, Hannah RSmith, Harriet T. (William If.)..
.
Smith, Helen A. (Harry D.)Smith, HenrySmith, Isaac ESmith, JamesSmith, James 1)
Smith. James HenrySmith, Jane LSmith, LouisaSmith, Margaret II. (Ilenry)Smith, MarySmith, Mary (Enoch)Smith. Mary (Silas C.)Smith. Mary AnnSmith, Mary AnnSmith, Mary Ann (James)Smith. MortimerSmith. Orange ASmith. Elioda Jane ( Darwin A.) .
.
Smith, Samuel St. JohnSmith, SarahSmith. SarahSmith, Sarah (J. Gorton)Smith, Sarah (John)Smith. Sarah II. ('
Smith. Sarah NSmith, Sarah W. (William D.)Smith, Sidney II
Smith. Silas CSmith. Thomas ESmith. WilhelminaSmith. William DSmith, William II
Smith. William WSnell, MarySnow, Amelia (William II)
Snow, Minerva R. (Joseph P.)
Snow, Joseph PSnow, William II
Snowden, licv. R. RSnyder, Jula 1
Snyder. Rebecca M. (John W.)...Snyder, T. L .*
Southmayd. Sarah A. (Stephen C.)
Springer, JohnStackhouse, JohnStamford. HenryStanley. Elizabeth (Charles II.). .
.
Stamnrd, CarolineStanton, Elizabeth LStaples. John CStarr, Mary M. (Matthew W.)Starr, Matthew WStartwell, Henry J
Stebbins, FranklinStebbins, Samuel NStem', John AStephenson, MargaretStevenson. Isabella GStitt s. George MStites. Maria LStockman, Elizabeth (Moses)Stone, Harriets. (Joseph)Stone, Maria A. (Thomas)Storey. RebeccaStores. Harriet 1’
BROADWAY TABERNACLE CHURCH. 87'
PAGK|
Stowell, Ellen K 74 I
Stratton, Ellwood Go i
Strickland Edwin F <;<
Strickland. Philomela .hi)
Stroldo, Catharine 66j
Stubcs, Abigail 62Sturges, Charlotte (it *
Stories, Theodore (Hi i
Sumner. Abigail (William S.) (17 i
Sumner. Maria (John) GsSutherland, Euphemia (John) r>!»
Sutherland, Joanna 50;
Swain, Betsey G. (William A.) 50Swain, William A. 50Sweet, Francis P 72Sylvester. Eliza M 71Sylvester. Isaiah W 72
rr.I
Talcott, Henrietta 15 (James) 72Talcott, James 72Taylor, Alanson 50Taylor, Eliza G. (Horace S.) 74
Taylor. Elizabetn (William) GOTaylor, Elizabeth P GOTaylor, George GGTaylor, Horace S 74Taylor, James 75Taylor, John C 72Taylos. Mary A 71
Tavlor, Mary S 71
Taylor, Olivia M. (James) 75Taylor, Rebecca B. (Alanson) 59Tavlor. Sarah 70Teal, William II 75Temple, Amos G7
Terry, Beulah Y. (Samuel) GSTerry, Joseph 61
Tcstman, Eliza (John) 61
Testman. Mary Elizabeth GGThayer, Mary E. (Normandus W.). . . .74
Thayer, Normandus W 73Thomas, Mary 84Thompson, Aaron Q 50Thompson, Abel K 61
Thompson, Artemus K 71
Thompson, Betsey 61
Thompson, Elizabeth ( Rev. Joseph P.).6S
Thompson Elizabeth 1> GGThompson Eunice (Rev. A. G.) 61
Thompson, Hannah 61
Thompson, Harriet B. (Aaron Q.) 50
Thompson, John II .71
Thompson, Rev. Joseph P ,D. 1) 03
Thompson, Lucy B 74
Thompson, Lucy O. (Rev. Joseph P.). .63
Thompson, MaryK 71
Thomson, Mary L 71
Thompson, Mary Ann 62Thompson, Melissa (Abel K.) Gl
Thompson, Sarah GO
Thompson, William 63
Thomson, Catharine L. (William II.). 73
Thomson, James B 76
Thomson, Mary C. (James B.) 76
Thomson, Dr. William HThurber, Iluldah (Ira A.)'Thurber. Ira A'Thurber, Ira E'Thurston, 'Thomas GTindall, Amanda (James A.)Tindall, EnochTindall, Rev. George P'Tindall, Janu s ATitcomb. MaryTovey. Eliza'Tovcy, RobertTowne. J ulia RTownsend. Louisa F.Tracy, T. F !
.
Treadwell. Edward ETreadwell. Rosina II. (Edward E.)Trembly, George WTureott, Ann Delia'Turner, Dr. A Ivan II
Turner. Charlotte STurner. Cornelia L'Turner. Sarah WTuttle, William PTyler, Charles ATyler. Cornelia F
XT.
IThler, MartinUnderwood, Elizabeth M. AUnderwood. Henry BUnderwood. Horatio
Vail Arsdale. Jane EVan Duyn, MaryVan Dviie, HannahVan Ness, Harriet E. (Giles I\).
Van Norden. CharlesVan Rypcr, Elizabeth AVan Sire, Sarah (Joseph)Van 'Tassel. AbrahamVan Tuyle. Catharine AVaughan, A. BVernon. JohnViekridge. James Edwin
W.Wait, Abigail Ann (Joseph)Wait, Joseph, JrWalcott, William HenryWalker, Charlotte (Joseph N.)Walker. GeorgeWalker, Minerva H. (George)Walley, Henry CWalley, SiinneyWallin, Elizabeth K. (James E. II.).
.
Wallin, James E. II
Walworth, Elizabeth C. (James J,)..
Walworth, James JW a user, Adeline (Samuel)
I
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.
' '
.
.
88 MAN lrAF. Ob' TIIK
FAGK :
Wnnzicr, Ann Eliza 5sWard, Edward 02
Ward, Edward Smith Gl>
Ward, Elizabeth (' 70
Ward, Langeon S (is
Ward, Mary E 7
2
Ward, Sophia (Edward) 02
Wareham, Sarah (Janu s J.) 02
Warner, Julia (Janus II.) 5s
Warren. ltev. Janu s II (id
Warriner, Thomas 01)
Washburn, Jams Ives (J. II.) 74
Washburn, John II 75
Washburne, Sarah (Joseph) 72
Waterbury, Benjamin 57
Waterbury, ('harles II 04
Watkins, Ann 57
Watkinson, Elizabeth Ann (Win.) 01
Wztkinson, Mary 1* 04
Watson, Charles C 75
Waugh. Elizabeth (.James L.) 01
Webb, Susan Rebecca 51)
Weed, Louisa 5sj
Wells, Edwant S 07
Welsh, Alexander F 02
West. James M 04
West, John 0s
West, John C 04
West. Laura (John ('.) 05
West, Mary C *0
West, Mary T. (William G.) 00
West, William F 70
West, William G 57
Weston. Caroline 11. (David). 71
Weston. Celia 72
Westervelt, Charles L 51)
Wetmore, Julia Ann 5S
Wheat, .Josephine C 74
Wheeler, Caroline (John) oS
Wheeler, Harriet 51)
Whelplev. Abigail B 71
White. Amos (' 74
White, Angeline 01
White, ( harles A 71
White, l)r. George It 74
White, Hannah 72
White, Harriet 1\ R 71
White, Henry Kirke 74
White, Morris M 74
White, ltebeeea (Dr. Geo. 11.) 74
White, Sarah 51)
White, Sarah K. (Elijah K.) 74
White, Sophia A. (Morris M.) 74
White, Willard W 71
Whitehead, Charles E 75
Whitehead, Kaehel T. (Charles E.)... .75
Whiting, Ann L. (William E.) 07
Whiting, Daniel 5s
Whiting, George W 07
Whiting, Pliny F 0s
Whiting, Susan P. (Daniel) 5s
Whiting, William E 07
Whitlock, CharlotteS 00
Whitlock, Elizabeth (William II.).... 59Whitlock, Joseph T 04
Whitlock, Mary L 59
Whitlock, Sarah A. (Joseph T.) 5S
PAG RWhitlock, William H 59Whitney, Ilezckiah 57Whitney, Samuel 59Whittelsey, Catharine A 06Whittelsey, Henry 01Whittem -ire, Atossa F. (Tlios. W.).. ..72Whittemore, ( 'harles 72Whittemoro, Maria F. (Charles) 72Whittemore, '1'hoinas W 72Wightman, John 70Wilbor, Mary EWilbor, Mary E. (William II.)..
.
Wilcox. Anna Maria (John M.)..Wilcox. John MWilde, Isaac LWilkie, OliveWilliams. Catharine I)
Williams, Charles FWilliams, David SWilliams, Eliza (Charles)Williams. Frances L. (Luther). .
.
Williams. GeorgeWilliams. Jane FWilliams, LutherWilliams, MargaretWilliams, Mary AWilliams. Moseley 11
Williams, Phila A. (David S.)...
Williams, Robert AWilliamson, Catherine (John). .
.
Williamson. JohnWills, JosephWills, JosephWills, Susan (Joseph)Wilson, Benjamin MWilson, Mary W. (Benjamin M.)Winchester, George S. .
Winnie. Margaret LWinship, Albert 1
Winship, HarrietWinslow, Dr. Edward II
Winslow Helen A. (Dr. Ed. 11.).
Witter, William CWood, Ann F ‘
Wood, AugustaWood, Maria (Ira)
Wood, ltebeeea (Benjamin)Wood, Sarah (Samuel)Wood, WilliamWoodbridge, Charles LWoodbridge, JosephWoodbridge, Joseph EWoodbrid-.ro. Saiait E. (Joseph E.) . .
.
Woodruff, UbertWoodruff, < 'vnthia
Woodruff. Harriet (Albert)Woodrutf, SarahWork. Ward AWright, Charles G...Wright. Josiah TWright, Mary Ann (John).Wright, Rosetta M
Y.Young, Jane 74
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BROADWAY TABERNACLE CIIURCH 89
THE FOLLOWING NAMED PERSONS UNITED WITH THE CHURCH
APRIL 15, 1600, SINCE ABOVE INDEX WAS ARRANGED.
paok
Attains, John Quincy TOAdams, Ada W. (John Q.) TO
Bridge, Elizabeth TO
Colton, Mary A. (Rev. Erastus) 70
I )u rfee, Charles A 70Durfoo, Melanie J> 70
Emerson, Nathaniel B 70
Gale, Mary O 70Gale, Pluebe TOGunn, Mary R 70
Hall, S. Josephine 70
Lillie Ralph 70
1*AGE
Morse, Ancoletta (Daniel P.) 76
Olmsted, Albert II.... . 7G
Partridge, John Chandler 70Partridge, Sarah K. (James II.) 70Pratt, Win. II 70Putnam. Jennie S. (Samuel P.) 70Putnam, Samuel P 70
Reeve, Fanny Isabel 70
Smith, Cornelinett (Harlan P,) 70Stowell, Martin Luther 70
Ward, Elizabeth O. (\v. Frederick).. ..70Wright, Dr. Slocum 70Wright, Caroline L. (Dr. Slocum.). . ..70
.
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, v*.‘ ' '
90 MANUAL, RTO.
S U M M A R YOK
ADDITIONS REMOVALS
IN TUB
BROADWAY TABERNACLE CHURCH
SINCE ITS ORGANIZATION.
DATE.
Additions. Removals.
Total
Number
or
Members.
Letter.
I
1
Profession.
!
Total.
! 1
Letter.
!
Died.
Fellowship withdr’n.Excommu-
nicated.
11
Total.
|1
July 6, 1S40 07 G7 07
Mar. 1, 1S41 37 3 40 107Feb. ‘28, 1S42 87 15 102 7 1 8 201Feb. ‘27, 1843 03 59 122 33 2 ‘ 35 ! 2SSFeb. ‘27, 1844 58 37 95 29 4 33 ! 350Feb. ‘25, 1845. 19 17 30 29 I 2 ’i 32
!354
Feb. 24, 1840 38 8 40 33 1 l 40 300Mar. 9, 1847 80 50 80 40 2
*244 402
Feb. 29, 1843 23 19 42 32 3 35 409Feb. 27, 1819 25 12 37 39 7 40 400Feb. 20, 1850 22 17 39 24 10 i 35 404Feb. 25, 1851 . .
.
24 5 29 39 3 42 391Mar. 1, 1S52 39 24 Oil 78 7
*5 ‘292 302
Mar. 1, 1853. . .. 19 15 34 40 5 23 2 70 i
|
320Feb. 27, 1854 20 20 32 8 14 54 i
i298
Feb. 27, 1855. ... 15 0 21 43 2 5 50 1 209Feb. 20, 1850 20 11 31 27 2 0 85 I 205Feb. 24, 1857 27 11 88 24 1 8 33 270Mar. 1, 1858 18 4 22 14 3
;
l 18 274Mar. 1, 1859 00 41 101 29 4
1
5 ’i 391
336Feb. 28, 1SG0 44 9 53 27 2 3 1 33
j
356Feb. 20, 1801 39 ft 44 30 3 83 367Feb. 20, 1802 102 12 114 22 7 3 ‘i 33 448Feb. 24, 1803 .... 3S io
!54 30 5 1 3G ! 406
Mar. 1, 1804 35 28j
63 22 10;
8 i 41 4SSFeb. 28, 1805. ... 89 47 32 5
j
1 8S 497Feb. 27, 180G 33 13 i 40 29 0 I
35 i 508April 15, 1800 21 10 l 87 16 2 1
_ 2L* .—L*IS 527
D ^^ “"C/
1
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. MANCHESTER,INDIANA