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William Smith (September 7, 1727 – May 14, 1803) was an Episcopal priest who served as first provost [1] of the College of Philadelphia, which became the University of Pennsylvania. He also founded Washington College in Chestertown, Maryland , and St. John's College in Annapolis, Maryland .
The entry to the Prophet's Grave site. The Reverend William Smith had been the minister in the then village of Largs for only three years when he died, aged about 28 years of age, at Middleton in the Brisbane Glen whilst tending to his flock who had moved to nearby Outerwards [9] and then built temporary dwellings [8] in this secluded site in the hope of escaping the pestilence or plague that ...
William Richardson Davie (June 20, 1756 – November 29, 1820) was an American statesman, politician, military general, Founding Father of the United States [1] who served as the 10th Governor of North Carolina from 1798 to 1799.
William Smith (3 July 1819 – 16 March 1892) was a Catholic clergyman from Scotland. He served as the Archbishop of the Archdiocese of St Andrews and Edinburgh . Life
Rev. Smith also served as Acting President of Centenary College of Louisiana, 1932–33. Rev. Smith was a delegate to the Ecumenical Conference of 1931. He was elected a delegate from his Annual Conference to the General Conference of the M.E., S. Church in 1934 and 1938, and of The Methodist Church in 1944.
William Bartley Smith (August 4, 1939 – January 24, 2009), was a Roman Catholic priest and professor of moral theology from the New York area in the United States of America. In addition to teaching at St Joseph Seminary in Yonkers, New York , Smith made many appearances on national media presenting a conservative Catholic viewpoint to ...
ST. PETERSBURG — The founder and former president of Florida Dream Center has admitted to “multiple indiscretions” while he was working at a new nonprofit. Bill Losasso, a pastor, quit his ...
William Carr Smith (1857–1930) was a Church of England priest, best known as the rector of St James' Church, Sydney from 1896 to 1910, whose Anglo-Catholic and Christian socialist ideals transformed Sydney's oldest church. Carr Smith's teaching was said to be "continuous, methodical, very direct, very plain, and quite fearless".