Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Thomas De Witt Talmage (January 7, 1832 – April 12, 1902) was a preacher, clergyman and divine in the United States who held pastorates in the Reformed Church in America and Presbyterian Church. He was one of the most prominent religious leaders in the United States during the mid- to late-19th century, equaled as a pulpit orator perhaps only ...
Thomas Talmage may refer to: Thomas De Witt Talmage, American preacher, clergyman and divine; Thomas G. Talmage, mayor of Brooklyn This page was last edited on 5 ...
Thomas Goyn Talmage (October 22, 1801 – May 4, 1863) was an American politician and Mayor of Brooklyn. Early life. Talmage was born on October 22, 1801, in ...
David Talmage (1919–2014), American immunologist; James E. Talmage (1862–1933), American Mormon apostle, author, and academic; John Van Nest Talmage (1819-1892), American Protestant missionary in China; May Booth Talmage (1868–1944), American Mormon missionary in Europe; Thomas De Witt Talmage (1832-1902), American preacher and writer
Thomas De Witt Talmage, brother John Van Nest Talmage (18 August 1819 – 19 August 1892), was a Protestant Christian missionary to Amoy , Fujian , China. He was sent by the Reformed Church in America from 1847 to 1890.
Talmage was born on July 24, 1832, in Clinton, New Jersey, the son of Thomas Goyn Talmage and Dorothy Miller. [1] He grew up in New York City until he was eight, after which he lived in Brooklyn . His father was Mayor of Brooklyn , and his uncle Jacob W. Miller was a United States Senator from New Jersey. [ 2 ]
James E. Talmage, the first son of Susannah Preater and James Joyce Talmage, was born on 21 September 1862 and raised in Hungerford, Berkshire, England. [1]: 481 [2] He was born in the Bell Inn, a hotel in Hungerford, where his father was the manager.
John James Tallmadge was the seventh of eight children born to James Tallmadge and Anne (née West). [4]The Tallmadge family were descendants of Thomas Talmadge, who emigrated from England to the Massachusetts Bay Colony in 1631.