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Harvard Divinity School Library is part of Harvard Library, whose resources are available to all faculty, staff, and students at HDS. Harvard Library's collection has over six million digitized items, 20 million print volumes, 400 million manuscripts, one million maps, tens of millions of digital images, and rare and special collections.
Cutter was born in Boston, Massachusetts.His aunt was an employee of the regional library in Boston. [1] In 1856 Cutter was enrolled into Harvard Divinity School.He was appointed assistant librarian of the divinity school while still a student there and served in that capacity from 1857 to 1859.
The lectures were initiated by Harvard president Charles W. Eliot in 1896. They are now generally known as The Ingersoll Lectures on Human Immortality. On May 21, 1979, the Ingersoll Lecture Fund was transferred to the endowment of Harvard Divinity School, which continues to organize and host the lectures. [2] The lectures were to be published.
Harvard Divinity School bio; Strugnell on the Biblical Archaeology Society website "John Strugnell". The New York Times. City Seminary of Sacramento acquires the Strugnell Library Archived 6 December 2010 at the Wayback Machine; Detroit Jewish News, 12/1/2002, on sale of his library through Dove Books [permanent dead link
Cadbury accepted the Hollis Professorship of Divinity (1934–1954). He also was the director of the Harvard Divinity School Library (1938–1954), and chairman (1928–1934; 1944–1960) of the American Friends Service Committee, which he had helped found in 1917.
The historical papers and sermons of Hosea Ballou are in the Harvard Divinity School Library at Harvard Divinity School in Cambridge, Massachusetts. "Hosea Ballou". Archived from the original on December 13, 2013 in "Dictionary of Unitarian and Universalist Biography
Karen Leigh King (born February 16, 1954, raised in Sheridan, Montana) [1] is a historian of religion working in the field of Early Christianity, who is currently the Hollis Professor of Divinity at Harvard University, in the oldest endowed chair in the United States (since 1721) She was the first woman to be appointed to the position.
He attended the Boston Latin School, and later graduated from Harvard College in 1829, and Harvard Divinity School in 1833. [1] Ordained into the Unitarian church he first became an active minister at Louisville, Kentucky, then a slave state, and soon threw himself into the national movement for the abolition of slavery. [2]