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07003 - Bloomfield [4] FIPS code: 34-08110 [5] [6] GNIS feature ID: ... In 1795, the Dutch Reformed Church of Stone House Plains (now Brookdale Reformed Church) was ...
Pages in category "Reformed Church in America churches in New Jersey" The following 27 pages are in this category, out of 27 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
Catholic Family News: Monthly 1993 The Catholic Worker: 25,000 7 times a year 1933 Commonweal: 20,000 Monthly 1924 Crux (online newspaper) Weekly 2014 Homiletic and Pastoral Review: Biweekly 1900 National Catholic Register: 39,000 [30] Biweekly 1927 National Catholic Reporter: 35,000 Biweekly 1964 Our Sunday Visitor: 45,000 Biweekly 1912 The ...
Northeastern Bible College was founded by Charles W. Anderson and first opened in September 1950 as Northeastern Bible Institute, at the Brookdale Baptist Church in Bloomfield, New Jersey. The college relocated to a campus in Essex Fells in the fall of 1952. The name was changed in 1964 to Northeastern Collegiate Bible Institute, and finally in ...
Brookdale's Nick LoVarco celebrates his homerun during the first inning of the Rowan College of South Jersey - Cumberland vs. Brookdale baseball game at Brookdale Community College in Lincroft, NJ ...
Bloomfield is a township in Essex County, in the U.S. state of New Jersey, and an inner-ring suburb of Newark.As of the 2020 United States census, the township's population was 53,105, [8] [9] an increase of 5,790 (+12.2%) from the 2010 census count of 47,315, [18] [19] which in turn reflected a decline of 368 (-0.8%) from the 47,683 counted in the 2000 census. [20]
More conservative clergy and members united to form the Eureka Classis of the RCUS, in order to continue classical Reformed worship and polity. In 1934, the RCUS merged with the Evangelical Synod of North America (ESNA) to form the Evangelical and Reformed Church. ESNA featured a mix of both Lutheran and Reformed theology, reflecting the ...
Cadmus was born about 1736, [1] and was baptized at the Reformed Church of Second River in Newark Township (now Belleville), New Jersey, the sixth child of Geertie Bras (1699-) and third child of her second husband, Abraham Cadmus (1708-1759), a lumber and stone merchant and storekeeper.