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Samuel Phillips (February 17, 1690 [a] – June 5, 1771) was an American Congregational minister and the first pastor of the South Church in Andover, Massachusetts.His son, John Phillips, was the founder of Phillips Exeter Academy, and his grandson, Samuel Phillips Jr., was the founder of Phillips Academy Andover and briefly the lieutenant governor of Massachusetts.
Gravestone of Ann Blanchard, South Church Cemetery, Andover, MA. A cemetery adjacent to the church was established soon after the founding of the parish. The first person to be buried there was Robert Russel in December 1710 however the earliest surviving inscription is on Mrs. Ann Blanchard's stone, who died on February 29, 1723.
no regular minister 1889–1895; Howard Nicholson Brown, minister 1895–1921; Harold Edwin Balme Speight, minister 1921–1927; John Carroll Perkins, minister in charge 1927–1931, minister 1931–1933 (guardian of Emily Hale) Palfrey Perkins, minister 1933–1953; Joseph Barth, minister 1953–1965 (d. 1988) no regular minister 1965–1967
Jemaat Allah Global Indonesia (JAGI), internationally known as Unitarian Christian Church of Indonesia (UCCI), was founded in 1998 and formally registered in 2000, headquarter in Semarang, Java, includes several congregations, member of ICUU. For the church are observed some Law of Moses practices, such as dietary laws and seventh-day Sabbath. [11]
John Smith was a 19th-century industrialist in Andover, Massachusetts, whose Smith & Dove Co. mill employed up to 300 people spinning twine and thread from flax. Smith was also a philanthropist who inspired the building of the town's Memorial Hall Library and an abolitionist who co-founded the Free Christian Church on the principle of freedom for all people.
Records pertaining to the Unitarian Universalist Church of Medford are in the Andover-Harvard Theological Library at Harvard Divinity School in Cambridge, Massachusetts. Annual Reports, 1984/1985-1990/1991; First Universalist Church In Medford. Record Book, 1905-1910; Second Universalist Parish in Medford, Massachusetts. Records, 1889-1894
He was a mentor of Ralph Waldo Emerson when Emerson studied for the ministry in the 1820s. The son of Henry Ware, he was born in Hingham, Massachusetts. After attending Phillips Academy in Andover, Massachusetts and completing his Harvard A.B. in 1812, Ware was minister of the Unitarian Second Church in Boston beginning in 1817. In 1830 Ware ...
Rev. Francis Dane (20 November 1615 – 17 February 1697) was an English minister who was active in Andover, Massachusetts in the latter half of the 17th century. He was baptized in Bishop's Stortford, England, where it is possible he was also born. [1]