Wikipedia contributions by 1549bcp

Overview of pages created and edited by this user

Pages created

  • Philobiblon ClubCreated 3/24/2026, 2:23:58 AM

    [[WP:AES|←]]Created page with ''''The Philoblon Club''' is a [[bibliophilia|society of bibliophiles]] founded in 1887, in [[Philadelphia]]. It is part of the [[Fellowship of American Bibliophilic Societies]]. ==Notable members== *[[Samuel W. Pennypacker]] ==Publications== *''Dickens's Doctors: A Paper Read Before the Philobiblon Club, May 28, 1903'' *''A fragment of the chronicles of Nathan Ben Saddi'' (1904) *''Samuel W. Pennypacker: An Address Delivered before the Philobiblon Club, O...'

  • Bible and Common Prayer Book SocietyCreated 2/24/2026, 9:37:37 PM

    [[WP:AES|←]]Created page with 'The '''Bible and Common Prayer Book Society''' of the Episcopal Church is a non-profit organization founded in 1809 by [[John Henry Hobart]] in the [[Episcopal Diocese of New York]]. It is a 501(c)(3) Public Charity with 2024 assets of $4,261,630. It claimed total revenue of $266,469 in 2024. ==Board== *Mr. Stephen Storen, President *The Rev. Jacob A. Smith, Vice President *Neva Rae Fox, Secretary *Anne Bardol, Treasurer *Thomas K. Chu, Esq. *John E. Coló...'

  • Ormonde PlaterCreated 1/30/2026, 10:27:31 AM

    [[WP:AES|←]]Created page with ''''Richard Ormonde Plater''' (September 6, 1933 - August 6, 2016) was a notable [[Episcopal Church (United States)|Episcopal Church]] author who influenced North American practices around the Christian diaconate. ==Bibliography== *Intercession: A Theological and Practical Guide ==External links== *[https://www.episcopaldeacons.org/ormonde-plater-archive.html Deacon Ormonde Plater - Archived Documents] from the Association for Episcopal Deacons {{DEFAULTS...'

  • Selina SchultzCreated 12/8/2025, 1:19:54 PM

    [[WP:AES|←]]Created page with ''''Selina Schultz Gerhard Schultz''' (16 Sep 1880 - 19 Jul 1969) was an important American scholar of the Schwenkfelder Church. She was born in Palm, Pennsylvania and died in Paoli, Pennsylvania. The uncommon repetition of the surname Schultz in her name comes from her having received her mother's maiden name Schultz as a middle name, and then the identical married surname from her husband USDA potato scientist Eugene Schultz Schultz (1884-1969). Schultz w...'

  • Athanasius PekarCreated 11/14/2025, 8:05:34 PM

    [[WP:AES|←]]Created page with ''''Vasily Athanasius “Basil” Pekar''' OSBM (1 Mar 1922 - 28 Sep 2011) was a notable American Ukrainian Catholic priest and academic. == Bibliography == *''Saint Josaphat (1580-1623)'' (Basilian Fathers, 1967) *''Historical Background of the Eparchy of Prjashev'' (1968) *''Our Martyred Bishop Romzha'' (1911-1947) (Byzantine Seminary Press, 1977) *''The Bishops of Mukachevo Eparchy'' (1979) *''The History of the Church in Carpathian Rus' '' (Columbia Un...'

  • Tobias WitmerCreated 8/28/2024, 12:56:24 AM

    [[WP:AES|←]]Created page with ''''Tobias Witmer''' (October 8, 1816 - August 14, 1897) was an American inventor, surveyor, civil engineer, and a notable poet in the [[Pennsylvania Dutch language]]. ==Bibliography== *''T. Witmer's patent musical scale, shewing the transpositions of the scale by sharps and flats for the use of singing school teachers'' (1857) *''Witmer's phonetic orthography'' (1880) *''Witmer'z fonografik charts'' (1881) ==References== *[[Earl C. Haag]], ''[https://bo...'

  • Albert F. BuffingtonCreated 8/20/2024, 11:47:48 PM

    [[WP:AES|←]]Created page with ''''Albert Franklin Buffington'' (July 11, 1905 - June 18, 1980) was a major figure in 20th-century [[Pennsylvania Dutch language|Pennsylvania German]] [[linguistics]]. He was born in [[Pillow, Pennsylvania]], and received his doctoral degree at [[Harvard University]]. Buffington taught German at [[Arizona State University]] until his retirement and emeritus appointment in 1965. Buffington developed a standardized German-based orthography with his colleague...'

  • Edward HermanyCreated 8/18/2024, 11:20:49 PM

    [[WP:AES|←]]Created page with ''''Edward Hermany''' (December 23, 1832 – July 24, 1896) was an American poet who wrote in both English and the [[Pennsylvania Dutch language]]. == Sources == Harry Hess Reichard, ''Pennsylvania-German Dialect Writings and Their Writers: a paper prepared at the request of the Pennsylvania-German Society'' (1918) *"[https://www.familysearch.org/search/catalog/1035701 Edward Hermany: A Pennsylvania German Poet]," ''Proceedings of the Lehigh County Historic...'

  • Moncure BiddleCreated 8/10/2024, 2:12:33 AM

    [[WP:AES|←]]Created page with ''''Moncure Biddle''' (1882–1956) was an American banker, book collector, and philanthropist. He was a member of the prominent Philadelphia [[Biddle family]], the son of [[Algernon Sydney Biddle]] and Frances Brown. Moncure Biddle was a son in law of [[Ernest Fenolossa]] through his marriage to Fenolossa's daughter Brenda (1883-1959). Biddle was a patron of the rare book collection at the [[Free Library of Philadelphia]]. ==References== *''The Distinguish...'

  • Cornelius WeygandtCreated 6/1/2024, 3:43:58 PM

    [[WP:AES|←]]Created page with ''''Cornelius Weygandt''' (13 December 1871—31 July 1957) was an American journalist, professor of English and Irish literature at the University of Pennsylvania, and popular author of [[Pennsylvania German]] descent. ==Bibliography== *''The Red Hills: A Record of Good Days Outdoors and in, with Things Pennsylvania Dutch'' (1929) *The Wissahickon Hills: Memories of Leisure Hours out of Doors in an Old Countryside (Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania,...'

  • John Fulton (priest)Created 5/28/2022, 2:07:42 AM

    [[WP:AES|←]]Created page with ''''John Fulton''' (April 2, 1834-April 24, 1907) was a Scottish-American Episcopal priest, church historian, journalist, and canonist who was one of the founding editors of ''[[The Living] Church]'' magazine with [[Samuel Smith Harris]] from 1878 to 1879. He was born in Aberdeen and died in Philadelphia. After ordination in the [[Episcopal Diocese of Louisiana]] in 1857, he served as a priest in several parishes before becoming Professor of Canon Law at the...'

  • John Edward Bazille-CorbinCreated 5/14/2022, 9:16:47 PM

    link is to archival resource

  • MeniolagomekaCreated 5/14/2022, 2:12:13 PM

    [[WP:AES|←]]Created page with ''''Meniolagomeka''' (also '''Meniolágoméka''') was a [[Moravian]] settlement of German missionaries and Lenape converts on the Aquashicola Creek near Kunkletown in [[Monroe County, Pennsylvania]]. Moravian workers included Brothers Bernhard Adam Grubè/Grube, John Joseph Bull (Schebosh), Nathanael Seidel, Georg Jungmann, Johann Peter Yarrel, Georg Jungmann, Abraham Bünninger, Johann Jacob Schmick, and Sisters Anna Margarethe Jungmann (née Bechtel, widow...'

  • Abraham R. HorneCreated 5/11/2022, 2:51:04 AM

    [[WP:AES|←]]Created page with ''''Abraham Reasor Horne''' (middle name also '''Reeser''' or '''Reaser''', March 24, 1834 — December 23, 1902) was a prominent American Lutheran pastor, botanist, publisher, and Pennsylvania German writer. He was born in Springfield Township, Bucks County, Pennsylvania. Horne was ordained in 1859 after a teaching career in Bethlehem and Bucks County. He founded ''The National Educator'' newspaper in 1860 and continued as its publisher and editor until hi...'

  • Lee Light GrumbineCreated 5/11/2022, 12:53:14 AM

    [[WP:AES|←]]Created page with '{{Short description|American lawyer, local historian, Pennsylvania German writer}} [[File:Lee_Light_Grumbine.png|thumb|Ezra L. Grumbine]] '''Lee Light Grumbine''' (July 25, 1858 - August 18, 1904) was an American attorney, local historian, and published columnist and poet in the [[Pennsylvania Dutch language|Pennsylvania German language]]. His dialect pseudonym was "Der Old Schulmashter." Grumbine was born in [[Fredericksburg, Pennsylvania]] and died in ...'

  • Felix L. CirlotCreated 5/10/2022, 6:40:52 PM

    [[WP:AES|←]]Created page with ''''Felix Lossing Cirlot''' (August 3, 1901 — March 30, 1956) was a notable American [[Anglo-Catholic]] writer in the [[Episcopal Church (United States)|Episcopal Church]] during the twentieth century. Cirlot published a wide variety of publications on controversial topics, including Episcopal-Presbyterian ecumenical proposals and the apostolic succession. He was born in [[Mobile, Alabama]] and graduated from [[Spring Hill College]] and the General Theo...'

  • House of Prayer Episcopal Church, PhiladelphiaCreated 5/10/2022, 1:18:16 PM

    [[WP:AES|←]]Created page with '{{short description|Church in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States}} {{Infobox church | name = House of Prayer | fullname = House of Prayer Episcopal Church | image = File: | image_size = | alt = | caption = | pushpin map = Pennsylvania#USA | pushpin label position = | pushpin map alt = | pushpin mapsize = | relief...'

  • Ezra Light GrumbineCreated 5/10/2022, 4:18:47 AM

    [[WP:AES|←]]Created page with ''''Ezra Light Grumbine''' (February 1, 1845 - February 16, 1923) was an American medical doctor, local historian, and published columnist and poet in the Pennsylvania German language. His dialect pseudonym was "Wendell Kitzmiller." He was born in [[Fredericksburg, Pennsylvania]] and died in [[Lebanon, Pennsylvania]]. ==Bibliography== *''Der Prahl-Hans: An Epic of 1812'' (1895) *''An Early Educational Project of Lebanon Town'' (1905) *''Folk-lore and Supers...'

  • DeLancey Divinity SchoolCreated 5/10/2022, 4:00:47 AM

    [[WP:AES|←]]Created page with ''''DeLancey Divinity School''' was a seminary of the Episcopal Church in the United States of America located in [[Geneva, New York]], and Buffalo. It was founded in 1850 by [[William Heathcote DeLancey]] (1797-1865), first Bishop of the [[Episcopal Diocese of Western New York]] as a diocesan seminary at Geneva. The Rev. Dr. William Dexter Wilson (1816-1900) was its first warden, and it operated until 1858. On February 1, 1861, DeLancey opened a diocesan sc...'

  • All Saints', WynnewoodCreated 5/10/2022, 2:34:18 AM

    [[WP:AES|←]]Created page with ' {{short description|Church in Wynnewood, Pennsylvania, United States}} {{Infobox church | name = All Saints' | fullname = All Saints' Episcopal Church | image = File:All_Saints',_Wynnewood.jpg | image_size = | alt = | caption = | pushpin map = Pennsylvania#USA | pushpin label position = | pushpin map alt = | pushpin mapsize = | re...'

  • Moses DissingerCreated 5/9/2022, 5:32:33 PM

    [[WP:AES|←]]Created page with ''''Moses Dissinger''' (aka '''Mose''', March 17, 1824 — January 25, 1883) was born in Schaefferstown, Lebanon County, Pennsylvania. He was a licensed minister of the East Pennsylvania Conference of the Evangelical Association form 1854 to 1879. Dissinger was characterized as a "fighting parson" for the style of his sermon deliveries in Pennsylvania German and English. From 1879 until his death in 1883, he served in the Kansas Conference of the Evangelica...'

  • Christ Episcopal Church, PottstownCreated 5/8/2022, 12:48:37 AM

    [[WP:AES|←]]Created page with '{{short description|Episcopal church in Pottstown, Pennsylvania, United States}} {{Infobox church | name = Christ Episcopal Church, Pottstown | fullname = | image = | image_size = | alt = | caption = | pushpin map = Pennsylvania#USA | pushpin label position = | pushpin map alt = | pushpin mapsize = | relief = | map...'

  • Carl E. GrammerCreated 5/7/2022, 8:59:31 PM

    [[WP:AES|←]]Created page with ''''Carl Eckhardt Grammer''' (November 11, 1858 - March 17, 1944) was a prominent Episcopal priest, author, and commentator on American Indian affairs. He was an exponent of liberal evangelical positions in church controversy. Grammer was born in [[Smyrna, Delaware]] and studied at Johns Hopkins (B.A. 1880), the [[Virginia Theological Seminary]] (1884), and Trinity College, Hartford (S.T.D. 1895). He was ordained to the priesthood on July 3, 1889 and served...'

  • American Church UnionCreated 5/5/2022, 2:27:15 AM

    Wordpress material is archival, only source available

  • Joep NicolasCreated 5/3/2022, 2:47:43 AM

    [[WP:AES|←]]Created page with ''''Joep Nicolas''' (Josephus Antonius Hubertus Franciscus Nicolas, October 6, 1897-July 25, 1972) was a Dutch-born French ecclesiastical artist specializing in stained glass and sculpture. He was also a muralist and portrait painter. Josep Nicolas (also spelled Joseph Nicholas) was born in Roermond and married to Belgian sculptor Suzanne on April 26, 1924 in Belgium. In 1935, Nicolas applied for a patent for a glazing technique he described as ''vermurail''...'

  • Church of the Annunciation, PhiladelphiaCreated 5/2/2022, 2:44:37 AM

    [[WP:AES|←]]Created page with '{{short description|Episcopal Church in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States}} {{Infobox church | name = Church of the Annunciation | fullname = Church of the Annunciation of the Blessed Virgin Mary | image = | image_size = | alt = | caption = | pushpin map = Pennsylvania#USA | pushpin label position = | pushpin map alt = | pushpin map...'

  • St. Alban's Church, OlneyCreated 4/25/2022, 9:32:17 PM

    [[WP:AES|←]]Created page with '{{short description|Church in Olney, Pennsylvania, United States}} {{Infobox church | name = Church of St. Alban the Martyr | fullname = St. Alban's Church | image = | image_size = | alt = | caption = | pushpin map = Pennsylvania#USA | pushpin label position = | pushpin map alt = | pushpin mapsize = | relief = | map...'

  • French Church of St. SauveurCreated 4/24/2022, 5:30:53 AM

    [[WP:AES|←]]Created page with 'The '''French Church of St. Sauveur''' (''Église Episcopale Française du Saint-Sauveur'') was organized on September 3, 1871 and chartered in February, 1872 to provide French-language services to Christians in the [[Episcopal Diocese of Pennsylvania]]. It served Francophones of French, Swiss, Belgian, German, Haitian, and American nationalities between 1872 and 1954. In the representative year of 1922, it had 361 members and 111 active communicants. The...'

  • St. David's Church, ManayunkCreated 4/23/2022, 4:35:59 PM

    [[WP:AES|←]]Created page with '{{short description|Episcopal church in Manayunk, Pennsylvania, United States}} {{Infobox church | name = St. David's Church | fullname = St. David's Episcopal Church | image = | image_size = | alt = | caption = | pushpin map = Pennsylvania#USA | pushpin label position = | pushpin map alt = | pushpin mapsize = | relief...'

  • St. Timothy's Episcopal Church, RoxboroughCreated 4/22/2022, 3:06:58 PM

    [[WP:AES|←]]Created page with '{{short description|Episcopal church in Roxborough, Pennsylvania, United States}} {{Infobox church | name = Church of St. Timothy | fullname = St. Timothy's Episcopal Church | image = | image_size = | alt = | caption = | pushpin map = Pennsylvania#USA | pushpin label position = | pushpin map alt = | pushpin mapsize = | relief...'

  • Church of St. Alban, RoxboroughCreated 4/15/2022, 3:53:04 AM

    [[WP:AES|←]]Created page with '{{short description|Church in Roxborough, Pennsylvania, United States}} {{Infobox church | name = Church of St. Alban the Martyr | fullname = St. Alban's Episcopal Church | image = | image_size = | alt = | caption = | pushpin map = Pennsylvania#USA | pushpin label position = | pushpin map alt = | pushpin mapsize = | relief...'

  • Society for the Maintenance of the FaithCreated 4/11/2022, 2:05:25 PM

    [[WP:AES|←]]Created page with 'The '''Society for the Maintenance of the Faith'' is an [[Anglo-Catholic]] organization in the [[Church of England]] founded in 1873. As of 2022, it holds 94 [[Advowson|advowsons]] or rights of patronage for church appointments. ==Presidents== # Lord Eliot (1873-1878) # Octavius Leefe (1878-1881, 1889-1901) # Lord Edward Spencer-Churchill (1881-1889) # Henry Pelham-Clinton, 7th Duke of Newcastle-under-Lyne (1911-1928) # Lord Mamhead (1928-1945) # Sir Henry...'

  • Horst WeigeltCreated 4/9/2022, 1:42:53 AM

    [[WP:AES|←]]Created page with ''''Horst Weigelt'' (born 1934 in [[Liegnitz]]) is a German Protestant theologian. From 1975 to 2002 he was Professor of Historical and Systematic Theology at the [[Otto Friedrich University[[ of Bamberg. His research focuses on the Reformation, Pietism and Enlightenment in the early modern period. He has also written specifically on Schwenkfelders. After studying Protestant theology for four years at the [[University of Erlangen]] and the University of T...'

  • Earle H. MadduxCreated 4/8/2022, 4:59:41 AM

    [[WP:AES|←]]Created page with ''''Earle Hewitt Maddux''' SSJE (June 18, 1906 — December, 1974) was a notable American [[Anglo-Catholic]] liturgist in the Episcopal Church during the twentieth century. He is known best for his edition of ''The American Missal'', first published in 1951. Maddux was born in [[Fairfield, Iowa]] and ordained to the priesthood on June 15, 1930 in [[Denver, Colorado]]. Maddux was chaplain to the All Saints Sisters of the Poor in [[Catonsville, Maryland]] fr...'

  • Sisterhood of the Holy NativityCreated 4/8/2022, 3:54:00 AM

    [[WP:AES|←]]Created page with 'The ''Sisterhood of the Holy Nativity''' (SHN) is founded in 1882 by Charles Chapman Grafton SSJE. Three sisters and six novices of the [[Society of St. Margaret]] (SSM), associated with the Cowley Fathers, left SSM in 1882 to establish the new order. Sister Ruth Margaret Vose was its first mother superior. The order was incorporated in Wisconsin on May 29, 1921. Sister Abigail assumed office as reverend mother in 2012. The sisterhood's bishop visitor is t...'

  • United Anglican ChurchCreated 4/8/2022, 12:10:02 AM

    [[WP:AES|←]]Created page with 'The '''United Anglican Church''' is a small American Continuing Anglican denomination formed through the merger of the [[Traditional Episcopal Church]] (TEC) and the [[Anglo-Catholic Church in the Americas]] (ACTA). It has parishes in [[Pennsylvania]], [[Delaware]], and [[Virginia]]. It also sponsors the Laud Hall Theological Seminary as an institution for theological education. The bishop of the United Anglican Church is the Right Rev. Barry Yingling, CSSS...'

  • Congregation of the Companions of the Holy SaviourCreated 4/7/2022, 7:30:40 PM

    [[WP:AES|←]]Created page with 'The '''Congregation of the Companions of the Holy Saviour'' (CSSS for Congregatio Sociorum Sancti Salvatoris) is an [[Anglo-Catholic]] religious order founded in 1891 at the former Church of the Evangelists, Philadelphia (now the [[Fleischer Art Memorial]]). It was subsequently affiliated with the former S. Elisabeth's Church, Philadelphia. The order's core members are called "companions," and must be celibate men in holy orders (or candidates for holy orde...'

  • David L. ValuskaCreated 4/3/2022, 1:47:28 AM

    [[WP:AES|←]]Created page with ''''David Lawrence Valuska''' (born 1938) is an American historian and author specializing in African American history and [[Pennsylvania German]] history. He was president of the [[Pennsylvania German Society]] from 2005 to 2009. He was professor of history at [[Kutztown University]] from 1971 to 2005, where he held the Freyberger Chair in Pennsylvania German Studies. In 2003 he was awarded the Officer's Cross of the Order of Merit of the Federal Republic...'

  • Michael YeltonCreated 3/30/2022, 7:04:52 PM

    [[WP:AES|←]]Created page with ''''Michael Yelton''' is an English lay authority of the history of the [[Church of England]]. He is secretary of the Anglo-Catholic History Society and a retired county court judge. ==Bibliography== *''Peter Anson: Monk, Writer and Artist: An Introduction to His Life and Work'' (2005) *''Alfred Hope Patten and the Shrine of Our Lady of Walsingham'' (2006) *''Empty Tabernacles: Twelve Lost Churches of London'' (2006) *''Alfred Hope Patten: His Life and Time...'

  • Mahlon HellerichCreated 3/30/2022, 6:43:00 PM

    [[WP:AES|←]]Created page with ''''Mahlon H. Hellerich''' (January 20, 1919 — January 17, 2010) was an American Lutheran local historian and president of the [[Pennsylvania German Society]] from 1973 to 1979. He was also executive director of the [[Lehigh County Historical Society]] from 1974 to 1976. Hellerich was Muhlenberg College valedictorian in 1940, and received his M.A. at Columbia University (1947) and Ph.D. from the [[University of Pennsylvania]] in 1957. He was Academic Dean...'

  • Loren N. GavittCreated 3/30/2022, 3:18:36 PM

    [[WP:AES|←]]Created page with ''''Loren Nichols Gavitt''' (February 13, 1900 — March 23, 1972) was a notable American [[Anglo-Catholic]] liturgist in the Episcopal Church during the twentieth century. His devotional manual ''St. Augustine's Prayer Book'' has been in print continuously since 1947. Born in Westerly, Rhode Island, Gavitt was graduated from the [[General Theological Seminary]] and ordained to the priesthood in 1927 by . He served a curacy at S. Clement's Church, Philadelp...'

  • Paul R. WieandCreated 3/29/2022, 7:55:50 PM

    [[WP:AES|←]]Created page with ''''Paul Richard Wieand''' (March 3, 1907 - May 3, 1993) was a major [[Pennsylvania German]] artist, playwright, folklorist, and linguist. He was born in Guths Station, Pennsylvania, and earned a bachelor's degree from Kutztown State Teachers College in 1940. He was elected secretary of the Pennsylvania Guild of Craftsmen and its first treasurer in 1945. He was a radio broadcaster in the Pennsylvania German language on the Allentown radio station [[WSAN]] be...'

  • Anglicans OnlineCreated 3/29/2022, 4:14:14 PM

    [[WP:AES|←]]Created page with ''''Anglicans Online''' (sometimes abbreviated as AO) is an unofficial online resource of the [[Anglican Communion]]. Its editorial staff is private and unaffiliated. A project of the Society of Archbishop Justus founded in 1994, AO includes more than 35,000 links and claims more than 250,000 readers. Its editorial line is liberal theologically. The site includes listings of Anglican organizations, official websites and parish websites. Continuing Anglican...'

  • Julius F. SachseCreated 3/27/2022, 11:22:24 PM

    [[WP:AES|←]]Created page with ''''Julius Freidrich Adolph Sachse''' (November 22, 1842 — November 15, 1919) was an American scholar of the history of Pennsylvania, particularly of the [[Ephrata Cloister]] and sectarian [[Pennsylvania German]] groups, as well as of [[American Freemasonry]]. He was born in Philadelphia and graduated from [[Muhlenberg College]]. Sachse was president of the [[Pennsylvania German Society]] for 1914. Sachse died in Philadelphia and is buried at West Laure...'

  • Arthur D. GraeffCreated 3/27/2022, 7:57:09 PM

    [[WP:AES|←]]Created page with ''''Arthur Dundore Graeff''' (September 23, 1899 — March 28, 1969) was an American local historian and author in the [[Pennsylvania German]] language. Born in Adamstown, Pennsylvania, he was an alumnus of Franklin and Marshall College in Lancaster. Between 1938 and 1969, Graeff wrote the "Scholla" column three times a week in the ''[[Reading Times]]''. Following a long career teaching at Overbrook Senior High School in Philadelphia, he taught at Kutztown...'

  • G. Gilbert SnyderCreated 3/27/2022, 1:26:06 AM

    [[WP:AES|←]]Created page with ''''George Gilbert Snyder''' (June 15, 1897 — November 17, 1956) was an American [[German Reformed]] layman and prominent author and radio broadcaster in the [[Pennsylvania German]] language. He was born in [[Stouchsburg, Pennsylvania]]. His dialect pseudonym was ''Die Wunnernaus vun Baricks Kaundi'' (the busybody from [[Berks County]]). Alternative spellings include Wunnernaas, Wundernaus, and Wunnernaws. Snyder was a high school principal and school sup...'

  • Clarence G. ReitnauerCreated 3/26/2022, 11:20:48 PM

    [[WP:AES|←]]Created page with ''''Clarence George Reitnauer''' (November 12, 1900 — April 5, 1989) was an American [[German Reformed]] layman and prominent author in the [[Pennsylvania German]] language. His dialect pseudonym was ''Der Shdivvel Knecht'' or ''Der Schtiwwelgnecht'', and he wrote for the [[Pennsburg, Pennsylvania|Pennsburg]] ''Town and Country'' newspaper as a columnist beginning on October 6, 1966. He was a cabinetmaker and carpenter by trade, working for the Allen Orga...'

  • Pierce E. SwopeCreated 3/26/2022, 6:42:21 PM

    [[WP:AES|←]]Created page with ''''Pierce Edward Swope''' (August 15, 1884 — December 9, 1968) was an American [[German Reformed]] clergyman and prominent author in the [[Pennsylvania German]] language. Swope was born in [[Meckville, Pennsylvania]] (Berks County), and was a graduate of [[Lebanon Valley College]] and [[Ursinus College]]. He was ordained on July 31, 1913. His dialect pseudonym was ''Der Kaspar Hufnagel''; beginning in 1947, he used this name over a weekly Pennsylvania Ge...'

  • Emmanuel RondthalerCreated 3/26/2022, 5:35:36 PM

    [[WP:AES|←]]Created page with ''''Emmanuel''' or '''Emanuel Rondthaler'' (July 27, 1764 — June 6, 1847) was a German [[Moravian]] educator and poet, widely recognized as the author of the first published poem in the [[Pennsylvania German]] language. Rondthaler's poem, first published as "Abendlied," in Philip Schaff's ''Deutscher Kirchenfreund'' in August 1849, is known better as "Morgets und Owets" or "Maryets un Owets (Owetlied)." Rondthaler was a tutor at Nazareth Hall in Nazareth...'

  • Astor C. WuchterCreated 3/26/2022, 3:33:03 PM

    [[WP:AES|←]]Created page with ''''Astor Clinton Wuchter''' (February 4, 1856 1856 — August 24, 1933) was an American Lutheran pastor and author in the [[Pennsylvania German]] language. Born in [[Jacksonville, Pennsylvania]], he was graduated from the [[Millersville State Normal School]] and taught in public schools from 1874 to 1878. He was ordained in 1885 after studies at the [[Lutheran Theological Seminary]] in Philadelphia. Wuchter was a pastor at Lutheran churches in Pennsylvania...'

  • Earl C. HaagCreated 3/26/2022, 2:51:39 PM

    [[WP:AES|←]]Created page with ''''Earl C. Haag''' (born June 24, 1929) is a major American scholar and author in the [[Pennsylvania German]] language. His dialect pseudonym is ''Der Alt Professor.'' Haag's newspaper column in the dialect, ''Es Neinuhr Schtick,'' has been in continuous publication since April 5, 1984. ==Bibliography== *''[https://books.google.com/books/about/A_Pennsylvania_German_anthology.html?id=T2xiAAAAMAAJ A Pennsylvania German Anthology]'' (1988) {{ISBN|97809416642...'

  • William S. TroxellCreated 3/26/2022, 3:13:12 AM

    [[WP:AES|←]]Created page with ''''William Stahley Troxell''' (June 11, 1893 — August 10, 1957) was a major American writer in the [[Pennsylvania German]] language. Born in [[Rising Sun, Pennsylvania]], Troxell's dialect pseudonym was ''Pumpernickel Bill''. He was a frequent author of dialect columns in the Allentown ''Call-Chronicle'' (later ''[[Morning Call]]'') newspaper from 1925 to 1955 and served as president of the [[Pennsylvania German Society]] from 1952 to 1957. Troxell was a...'

  • Richard DruckenbrodCreated 3/26/2022, 2:16:47 AM

    [[WP:AES|←]]Created page with ''''Richard Druckenbrod''' was a major twentieth-century [[Pennsylvania German]] language teacher, historian, pastor, and writer. He graduated from [[Franklin and Marshall College]] and [[Lancaster Theological Seminary]] and was ordained in the [[United Church of Christ]] in 1954. He was president of the [[Pennsylvania German Society]] from 1980 to 1992, and the author of the column "Es Deitsch Schtick" in [[The Morning Call]] newspaper. Druckenbrod was a fr...'

  • Granville M. WilliamsCreated 3/25/2022, 1:40:55 AM

    [[WP:AES|←]]Created page with ''''Granville Mercer Williams''' SSJE (December 31, 1889 — August 11, 1980) was a prominent American [[Anglo-Catholic]] priest, monk, and author during the twentieth century. Williams was born in [[Utica, New York]] to a prominent New England family and studied at Columbia University (1911) and Harvard Divinity School (1920). He was ordained to the priesthood in 1920 and served as rector of St. Paul's Carroll Street, Brooklyn from 1926 to 1930, rector of t...'

  • Thomas RicheyCreated 3/23/2022, 4:01:59 PM

    [[WP:AES|←]]Created page with ''''Thomas Richey''' (November 1, 1831 — June 3, 1905) was a prominent Irish-American [[Anglo-Catholic]] priest, professor, and author in the Episcopal Church. He was born in [[Newry]], [[County Down]], in [[Northern Ireland|Ireland]] and had settled in [[Pittsburgh]] by 1847, following his graduation at 16 from [[Queen's College]], Belfast. Richey was a tutor at St. James College, Hagerstown, Maryland under [[John Barrett Kerfoot]] from 1848-1851. He was...'

  • Catholic Clerical UnionCreated 3/23/2022, 3:57:57 AM

    [[WP:AES|←]]Created page with 'The '''Catholic Clerical Union''' is an American [[Anglo-Catholic]] organization founded in 1886 as the Clerical Union for the Maintenance and Defence of Catholic Principles. It has the following objects: # The Affirmation and proclamation of the Catholic doctrine concerning the Person of our Lord Jesus Christ as contained in Holy Scripture and expressed in the Creeds and in the decisions of the seven Ecumenical Councils of the undivided Church. # The uniq...'

  • Albert J. duBoisCreated 3/21/2022, 5:43:46 AM

    [[WP:AES|←]]Created page with 'Canon '''Albert Julius duBois''' (June 9, 1906 — June 6, 1980) was an influential American [[Anglo-Catholic]] during the twentieth century. Born in [[Neenah, Wisconsin]], he was the son of Albert Julius du Bois and Emma Luella (Thurston) du Bois. He was a PBK graduate of Lawrence College, and received the STB from the [[General Theological Seminary]] in New York City in 1931. He was ordained to the priesthood on November 1, 1931 by Bishop Reginald Heber...'

  • Donald L. GarfieldCreated 3/20/2022, 2:21:07 AM

    [[WP:AES|←]]Created page with ''''Donald Lothrop Garfield''' (May 4, 1924 — April 8, 1996) was a prominent American [[Anglo-Catholic]] priest and liturgist during the twentieth century. Garfield was born in [[Cambridge, Massachusetts]], and his undergraduate studies were interrupted for two years by service in the [[United States Navy]] as a communications officer on [[Okinawa]] during the [[Second World War]]. Following degrees at [[Harvard University]] (BA, 1946) and the General Th...'

  • Benjamin I. HaightCreated 3/17/2022, 12:22:54 AM

    [[WP:AES|←]]Created page with ''''Benjamin Isaac Haight'' (October 16, 1809 — February 21, 1879) was a prominent Episcopal priest, author, and seminary professor of the nineteenth century, as well the first appointed [[Custodian of the Standard Book of Common Prayer]] in the United States. Haight served as professor of pastoral theology at the [[General Theological Seminary]] (GTS) in New York from 1837 to 1855. Born in [[New York City]], Haight was graduated from [[Columbia College]]...'

  • C.P.A. BurnettCreated 3/14/2022, 1:32:47 AM

    [[WP:AES|←]]Created page with ''''Charles Philip Augustus Burnett''' (June 5, 1849 — November 14, 1933) was a major American [[Anglo-Catholic]] priest, liturgist, and author in the Episcopal Church. Born in [[Skaneateles, New York]], he was graduated from the [[General Theological Seminary]] in 1878, and ordained to the priesthood "with full literary qualifications" (i.e. no undergraduate degree) in 1879 by Bishop [[Horatio Potter]] of the [[Episcopal Diocese of New York]]. Burnett wa...'

  • Frank L. VernonCreated 3/13/2022, 7:23:29 PM

    [[WP:AES|←]]Created page with ''''Frank Lawrence Vernon''' (March 17, 1873 — May 24, 1944) was a Canadian-American [[Anglo-Catholic]] priest, author, convent chaplain, retreat conductor born in [[St John, New Brunswick]]. He was educated at [[Trinity College, Toronto]] (BA 1893) and the former [[Episcopal Theological School]] in Cambridge, Massachusetts (1896). He received his honorary [[Doctor of Divinity]] degree from Trinity. Vernon married Alice Esther Whiton in St. Stephen's Chu...'

  • Grieg TaberCreated 3/13/2022, 1:51:10 PM

    [[WP:AES|←]]Created page with ''''Grieg Taber''' (January 21, 1895 - April 8, 1964) was a prominent [[Anglo-Catholic]] priest in the American Episcopal Church during the twentieth century. He was born in [[Omaha, Nebraska]] and educated at the former St. Stephen's College, [[Annandale-on-Hudson]] (BA) and the former Seabury Divinity School (BD 1919). He was ordained to the diaconate in June 1919 and to the priesthood in December 1919. Initially a priest-educator, Taber was master at the...'

  • Episcopal Theological Seminary of the CaribbeanCreated 3/13/2022, 1:22:11 PM

    [[WP:AES|←]]Created page with 'The '''Episcopal Theological Seminary of the Caribbean''' (ESTC) was a seminary of the American Episcopal Church in [[San Juan, Puerto Rico]]. It was founded in 1961 and dedicated by Presiding Bishop Arthur Lichtenberger. It closed in 1976. == Notable faculty == *[[Louis Weil]] ==Notable alumni== *[[Francisco Reus-Froylan]] *[[Victor Scantlebury]] [[Category:Episcopal Church (United States)]] [[Category:Anglican seminaries and theological colleges]] Ca...'

  • Plato E. ShawCreated 3/12/2022, 8:34:36 PM

    [[WP:AES|←]]Created page with ''''Plato Ernest Oliver Shaw''' (April 2, 1883 — August 5, 1947) was an American historian and seminary professor born in [[Athens]], Greece. A graduate of [[Yale Divinity School]], [[Columbia University]], [[Union Theological Seminary]], the [[University of Edinburgh]], and [[Oxford University]], he was professor at [[Hartford Theological Seminary]] from 1924 to 1941. His major research focus was relations between Anglicans and Orthodox Christians. He was...'

  • Sibyl HartonCreated 3/11/2022, 1:37:05 PM

    [[WP:AES|←]]Created page with ''''Sibyl Harton''' (1898-1993) was a major [[Church of England writer]] during the twentieth century. She was a correspondent with [[Thomas Merton]] during the 1960s, and visited him at the [[Abbey of Our Lady of Gethsemani]] in [[Bardstown, Kentucky]]. She is generally associated with an [[Anglo-Catholic]] perspective in theological writing. Harton was a frequent contributor to ''[[The Living Church]]'' magazine in the United States and published book revi...'

  • North American Academy of LiturgyCreated 3/11/2022, 2:06:13 AM

    [[WP:AES|←]]Created page with 'The '''North American Academy of Liturgy''' (NAAL) is an ecumenical and inter-religious association of liturgical scholars who collaborate in research. "Academy members are specialists in liturgical studies, theologians, artists, musicians, and persons in related disciplines, whose work affects liturgical expression and furthers liturgical understanding." It was founded at the [[University of Notre Dame]] in January 1975; the first official meeting was held...'

  • Louis WeilCreated 3/10/2022, 8:14:15 PM

    [[WP:AES|←]]Created page with ''''Louis Weil''' (May 10, 1935 — March 10, 2022) was an American Episcopal priest, liturgical scholar, and seminary professor. A graduate of [[Southern Methodist University]] (1956) and Harvard (MA 1958), he was ordained to the priesthood in January 1962 to the priesthood by the Right Reverend [[Joseph Harte]] of the [[Episcopal Diocese of Arizona]] following studies at the [[General Theological Seminary]] in New York. Weil taught at the former Episcopal...'

  • William H. VibbertCreated 3/7/2022, 12:50:11 AM

    [[WP:AES|←]]Created page with ''''William Henry Vibbert''' (1839 — August 27, 1918) was a prominent American Hebraist and priest of the Episcopal Church. Born in [[New Haven, Connecticut]], he was educated at [[Trinity College, Hartford]] (1862, ΔΨ and ΦΒΚ) and [[Berkeley Divinity School]] in [[Middletown, Connecticut]]. Following ordination to the priesthood by Bishop John Williams in 1863, he was Professor of Hebrew at Berkeley Divinity School, and rector of Christ Church, Mid...'

  • Plainsong and Medieval Music SocietyCreated 3/4/2022, 5:51:17 PM

    [[WP:AES|←]]Created page with 'The '''Plainsong and Medieval Music Society''' is a registered charity in the United Kingdom. Founded in 1888 to promote the study of medieval church music, it has been a registered charity since 27 August 1987. The object of the charity is "the advancement of public education in the art and science of music and in particular plainsong and medieval music by the presentation of concerts and other activities. In furtherance of this object and not otherwise:...'

  • William E. ScudamoreCreated 3/4/2022, 3:11:57 PM

    [[WP:AES|←]]Created page with ''''William Edward Scudamore''' (1813-1881) was a prominent Church of England priest, historian, liturgist, and devotional author. He was a nephew of the eminent physician Sir [[Charles Scudamore]]. Educated initially in Belgium, he received the B.A. (1835) and M.A. (1838) at St. John's College, Cambridge. He was admitted as a fellow of the college on March 14, 1837. ==Bibliography== *''Manual of Devotions for Confirmation and First Communion'' (1848) *''A...'

  • Henry R. GummeyCreated 3/4/2022, 1:25:04 PM

    [[WP:AES|←]]Created page with ''''Henry Riley Gummey, Jr.''' (January 12, 1870 — May 29, 1941) was a prominent Episcopal priest and author active in Pennsylvania, Bermuda, and New Jersey. Gummey was born in Philadelphia and educated at Germantown Academy and Episcopal Academy, followed by studies at the [[University of Pennsylvania]], the [[General Theological Seminary]] in New York, and the former [[Philadelphia Divinity School]] (PDS). He received the D.D. from PDS, where he served...'

  • "Henry R. Gummey"Created 3/4/2022, 1:24:20 PM

    [[WP:AES|←]]Created page with ''''Henry Riley Gummey, Jr.''' (January 12, 1870 — May 29, 1941) was a prominent Episcopal priest and author active in Pennsylvania, Bermuda, and New Jersey. Gummey was born in Philadelphia and educated at Germantown Academy and Episcopal Academy, followed by studies at the [[University of Pennsylvania]], the [[General Theological Seminary]] in New York, and the former [[Philadelphia Divinity School]] (PDS). He received the D.D. from PDS, where he served...'

  • "John Walter Lea"Created 2/18/2022, 7:09:18 AM

    [[WP:AES|←]]Created page with ''''John Walter Lea''' ( - February 29, 1888) was a prominent lay [[Church of England]] author affiliated with the later Tractarian Movement. He was a fellow of the [[Royal Historical Society]] and the [[Geological Society of London]]. The younger of a pair of twins (his brother died during childbirth), Lea was born at [[Blakebrook]], [[Kidderminster]] with one arm, and this was considered an impediment to ordination in the Church of England. He received the...'

  • John Thomas SeccombeCreated 2/18/2022, 6:16:52 AM

    [[WP:AES|←]]Created page with ''''John Thomas Seccombe''' (1834 - January 27, 1895) was an English medical doctor, translator, and [[episcopus vagans]] associated with Frederick George Lee and [[Thomas Wimberley Mossman]] in the [[Order of Corporate Reunion]]. Seccombe received the M.D. from the [[University of St Andrews in 1862]], and was a member of the [[Royal College of Surgeons]]; he was also fellow of the [[Royal Astronomical Society]] and a member of the [[Odd Fellows]]. Seccom...'

  • Churches Beyond BordersCreated 2/17/2022, 9:05:48 PM

    [[WP:AES|←]]Created page with ''''Churches Beyond Borders''' is an ecumenical grouping of Anglicans and Lutherans in North America. It includes The Episcopal Church, the [[Anglican Church of Canada]], the [[Evangelical Lutheran Church in America]], and the [[Evangelical Lutheran Church of Canada]]. Through the heads of communion in each member church, the group issues regular statements on the Doctrine of Discovery, climate change, racial reconciliation, gender justice, and other matters...'

  • Christ Episcopal Church (Stroudsburg)Created 2/17/2022, 7:01:15 PM

    [[WP:AES|←]]Created page with ''''Christ Episcopal Church''' is a parish of the [[Episcopal Diocese of Bethlehem]] in [[Stroudsburg, Pennsylvania]]. It was founded in 1897 in a private residence in East Stroudsburg. The cornerstone for the current church building was laid on June 8, 1904, and the church was consecrated on November 21, 1905. In 1908, a pipe organ, costing $1,790, was installed, and the ten-room house next door at 701 Thomas Street was purchased for $7,000 to serve as a re...'

  • Thomas Wimberley MossmanCreated 2/17/2022, 4:34:42 PM

    [[WP:AES|←]]Created page with ''''Thomas Wimberley Mossman (1826 - July 6, 1885) was a [[Church of England]] priest, novelist, translator, [[episcopus vagans]] and Ritualist leader associated with the [[Order of Corporate Reunion]] (OCR). He was born in Skipton, North Yorkshire. Ordained priest on May 26, 1850 following studies at St. Edmund Hall, Oxford, he became curate of [[Donington on Bain]] (of which his uncle was non-resident rector) as deacon in 1849. He was curate of Panton, L...'

  • Edward O. HendricksCreated 2/13/2022, 6:26:08 AM

    [[WP:AES|←]]Created page with ''''Edward Oscar Hendricks''' (May 3, 1929 - January 19, 1980) was a prominent American [[Anglo-Catholic]] priest who served most notably as rector of S. Clement's Church, Philadelphia from 1965 to 1978. A graduate of the [[University of Texas]] at Austin (1951), he was rector of the Church of the Holy Family, [[McKinney, Texas]] and the former Christ Church, [[Elizabeth, New Jersey]] (burned January 16, 1988) before coming to S. Clement's. He died of liver...'

  • Francis C. FitzHughCreated 2/13/2022, 5:50:45 AM

    [[WP:AES|←]]Created page with ''''Francis Coulbourn FitzHugh''' (August 23, 1928 - October 12, 1984) was a prominent American [[Anglo-Catholic]] priest who served as rector of S. Clement's Church, Philadelphia from 1979 until his death. Born in [[Cape Charles, Virginia]], he studied at [[Bishop's University]] in Quebec and at Oxford before his ordination to the priesthood in 1956. He was a senior member of the [[Society of the Holy Cross]] (SSC) in the United States and the Society of...'

  • Arthur Ritchie (priest)Created 2/13/2022, 4:31:21 AM

    [[WP:AES|←]]Created page with ''''Arthur Ritchie'' (June 22, 1849 - July 9, 1921) was a prominent American [[Anglo-Catholic]] priest, author, and leader. He was born in [[Philadelphia]] and graduated from the [[University of Pennsylvania in 1867. He was next graduated from the [[General Theological Seminary]] in New York in 1871. He was appointed rector of [[Mount Calvary Church]], Baltimore. He served as rector of the Church of the Ascension, Chicago from 1875 to 1884 and most notably...'

  • Robert Ritchie (priest)Created 2/13/2022, 2:07:24 AM

    [[WP:AES|←]]Created page with ''''Robert Ritchie''' (March 6, 1845 - January 7, 1907) was a prominent American Anglo-Catholic priest, author, and leader. He was born in [[Philadelphia]] and graduated from the [[University of Pennsylvania]] where he was a member of the [[Philomathean Society]] (1862); he was next graduated from the [[General Theological Seminary]] (1867) in New York. He was made deacon on June 30, 1867 and ordained to the priesthood in 1869. Ritchie served as curate at bo...'

  • Henry S. SpackmanCreated 2/12/2022, 10:39:58 PM

    [[WP:AES|←]]Created page with ''''Henry Spencer Spackman''' (March 11, 1811 - February 9, 1875) was a Pennsylvania politician and clergyman who served as the first rector of St. Mark's Church, Frankford, Pennsylvania, S. Clement's, Philadelphia and Trinity Church, Williamsport, Pennsylvania. He was born in Philadelphia as a son of shipping magnate Samuel Spackman (1780-1852) and Ann Bellerby (1777-1842). He was graduated from the [[University of Pennsylvania]] and admitted to the Philad...'

  • George Herbert MoffettCreated 2/12/2022, 9:38:34 PM

    [[WP:AES|←]]Created page with ''''George Herbert Moffett'' (1858 - November 12, 1904) was a prominent American Anglo-Catholic priest and Ritualist leader. Born in Cincinnati, he was graduated from [[Trinity College, Hartford]] (salutatorian, 1878) and the [[General Theological Seminary]] in New York (1881) before ordination to the diaconate on June 12, 1881 by Bishop [[Horatio Potter]] of the [[Episcopal Diocese of New York]]. He served as curate at Mount Calvary Church, Baltimore from...'

  • Charles S. HutchinsonCreated 2/12/2022, 9:03:25 PM

    [[WP:AES|←]]Created page with ''''Charles Samuel Hutchinson''' (March 22, 1871 - November 9, 1942) was a prominent American [[Anglo-Catholic]] priest born in [[Lowell, Massachusetts]]. He attended St. Stephen's College, Annandale on Hudson, New York, and was graduated from the [[General Theological Seminary]] in New York in 1896. He was ordained to the priesthood on June 11, 1897 by Bishop William Lawrence of the Episcopal Diocese of Massachusetts and served as curate at All Saints, Ashm...'

  • William ElwellCreated 2/12/2022, 8:07:28 PM

    [[WP:AES|←]]Created page with ''''William Elwell''' (September 15, 1901 - December 29, 1977) was a prominent American Anglo-Catholic priest who fostered devotion to [[Our Lady of Walsingham]] in the American Episcopal Church. A native of [[Sheboygan, Wisconsin]], he was ordained to the priesthood on May 22, 1927 after studies at [[Nashotah House Theological Seminary]]. He was appointed rector of Grace Episcopal Church in Sheboygan, Wisconsin in March, 1938 after serving as assistant und...'

  • Theodore M. RileyCreated 2/12/2022, 5:43:14 PM

    [[WP:AES|←]]Created page with ''''Theodore Myers Riley''' (June 9, 1842 - December 1, 1914) was a prominent American [[Anglo-Catholic]] priest, author, and seminary professor born in [[Carlisle, Pennsylvania]]. A Civil War deserter, he was ordained in June 1863. He served briefly as rector of All Saints, Navesink, New Jersey in the [[Episcopal Diocese of New Jersey]] and St. Paul's Church, St. Paul, Minnesota, but achieved some national prominence as rector of S. Clement's, Philadelphia...'

  • Duncan ConversCreated 2/12/2022, 4:44:02 AM

    [[WP:AES|←]]Created page with ''''Duncan Convers''' (August 2, 1851 - April 22, 1929) was a prominent American Anglo-Catholic priest, author, and social commentator. He was born in [[Zanesville, Ohio]] and made deacon on June 11, 1876 and ordained priest on December 20, 1876. == Bibliography == *''Once Married, Married Till Death: A Sermon Preached (in Substance) in St. Clement's Church, Philadelphia, at the Night Service on the Second Sunday After Easter, April 27th, 1884'' (Philadelp...'

  • Oliver Sherman PrescottCreated 2/12/2022, 3:15:31 AM

    [[WP:AES|←]]Created page with ''''Oliver Sherman Prescott''' (March 24, 1824 - November 17, 1903) was a prominent American [[Anglo-Catholic]] priest and activist who was active in the foundation of the [[Society of St. John the Evangelist]]. He was born in [[New Haven, Connecticut]], and baptized at [[Trinity Church on the Green]] in that city. Prescott attended [[Trinity College, Hartford]] from 1840 to 1842 and [[Yale College]] from 1843 to 1844; he was graduated from the General The...'

  • Henry R. PercivalCreated 2/5/2022, 5:56:23 AM

    [[WP:AES|←]]Created page with ''''Henry Robert Percival''' (April 30, 1854 - September 22, 1903) was a prominent Episcopal priest and author. After studies at the [[University of Pennsylvania]], he was made a deacon on May 27, 1877 and ordained to the priesthood on June 10, 1878. He received an honorary doctorate of divinity degree from [[Nashotah House Theological Seminary]] in 1891. He is buried at St. Peter's Episcopal Churchyard in Philadelphia. == Bibliography == * [http://angli...'

  • Henry Harrison OberlyCreated 2/5/2022, 12:35:59 AM

    [[WP:AES|←]]Created page with ' '''Henry Harrison Oberly''' (June 19, 1841 - March 19, 1914) was a prominent Episcopal priest and author. He was born in [[Easton, Pennsylvania]] and baptized at the First Presbyterian Church; he was a student of [[James DeKoven]] at [[Racine College]], where he was confirmed in the Episcopal Church. After studies at [[Trinity College, Hartford]] (B.A. 1865, M.A. 1868), and the [[Berkeley Divinity School]], he was ordained to the diaconate in 1867 and to...'

  • Orby ShipleyCreated 1/16/2022, 1:44:03 AM

    [[WP:AES|←]]Created page with 'Orby Shipley (July 1, 1832 - July 5, 1916) was an English clergyman, editor, liturgist, translator, publisher, and hymn-writer. An Anglo-Catholic convert to Roman Catholicism from the [[Church of England]], he had been a priest of the [[Society of the Holy Cross]] before his conversion. Shipley served at [[St Thomas the Martyr's Church, Oxford]] and [[St Alban's Church, Holborn]] as an Anglican priest. == Works == *[https://archive.org/details/lyraeucharis...'

  • Royal Martyr Church UnionCreated 1/9/2022, 7:00:07 PM

    [[WP:AES|←]]Created page with 'The ''Royal Martyr Church Union" (RMCU) is a [[Church of England]] devotional society dedicated to the restoration of the observance of [[King Charles the Martyr]] in the calendar of the [[Book of Common Prayer]]. It was founded in 1906 by Captain Henry Stuart Wheatly-Crowe (1882-1967). Like the [[Society of King Charles the Martyr]], the RMCU hosts an annual commemoration of the beheading of [[Charles I of England]]. It has historically had close connectio...'

  • Kameyama HachimangūCreated 12/8/2021, 5:59:22 AM

    [[WP:AES|←]]Created page with ''''Kameyama Hachimangū''' (福山八幡宮, ''Kameyama Hachimangū'') is a [[Shinto]] shrine located in [[Shimonoseki]], [[Yamaguchi Prefecture]], Japan. It is a [[Hachiman shrine]], dedicated to the [[kami]] [[Hachiman]]. The [[kami]] it enshrines include [[Emperor Ōjin]], [[Empress Jingū]], and [[Emperor Chūai]]. It was established in 859, and has an annual festival on October 15. The shrine can be reached by bus from [[Shimonoseki Station]]. {{Commo...'

  • Fukuyama HachimangūCreated 12/8/2021, 5:45:23 AM

    [[WP:AES|←]]Created page with ''''Fukuyama Hachimangū''' (福山八幡宮, ''Fukuyama Hachimangū'') is a [[Shinto]] shrine located in [[Fukuyama, Hiroshima]] Prefecture, Japan. It is a [[Hachiman shrine]], dedicated to the [[kami]] [[Hachiman]]. The [[kami]] it enshrines include [[Emperor Ōjin]], [[Empress Jingū]], and Himegami (比売神). {{Commons category|Fukuyama Hachiman-gū}} == See also == *[[List of Shinto shrines in Japan]] *[[Hachiman shrine]] == External links == *[https:...'

  • Iino HachimangūCreated 12/8/2021, 5:33:38 AM

    [[WP:AES|←]]Created page with ''''Iino Hachimangū''' (飯野八幡宮, ''Iino Hachimangū'') is a [[Shinto]] shrine located in [[Iwaki, Fukushima]] Prefecture, Japan. It is a [[Hachiman shrine]], dedicated to the [[kami]] [[Hachiman]]. The shrine was founded in either 1063 or 1186, and its annual festival is on September 14. The [[kami]] it enshrines include [[Emperor Ōjin]] as Hondawake no mikoto (品陀別命), [[Empress Jingū]] as Okinagatarashihime no Mikoto (息長帯姫命), and...'

  • Koshiō ShrineCreated 12/8/2021, 5:15:46 AM

    [[WP:AES|←]]Created page with ''''Koshiō Shrine''' (古四王神社, ''Koshiō jinja'') is a [[Shinto]] shrine located in [[Akita (city)]], [[Akita Prefecture]], Japan. It enshrines the [[kami]] of Ōhiko no mikoto (大彦命) and [[Takemikazuchi]] no mikoto (武甕槌命). Its annual festival takes place on May 8. According to legend, was established in 658. ==See also== *[[List of Shinto shrines in Japan]] ==External links== *[http://akita-jinjacho.sakura.ne.jp/tatsujin_etc/kennsaku...'

  • Toyamaken Gokoku ShrineCreated 12/8/2021, 4:51:15 AM

    [[WP:AES|←]]Created page with ''''Toyamaken Gokoku Shrine''' (富山縣護國神社, ''Toyamaken gokoku jinja'') is a [[Shinto]] shrine located in [[Toyama]], [[Toyama Prefecture]], Japan. It enshrines the [[kami]] of "martyrs of the state" (国事殉難者) and its annual festivals take place on April 25 and October 5. It was established in 1913. {{Commons category|Toyamaken-Gokoku-jinja}} ==See also== *[[List of Shinto shrines in Japan]] ==External links== *[http://www.toyama-gokoku...'

  • Miyagiken Gokoku ShrineCreated 12/8/2021, 4:30:02 AM

    [[WP:AES|←]]Created page with ''''Miyagiken Gokoku Shrine''' (宮城縣護國神社, ''Miyagiken gokoku jinja'') is a [[Shinto]] shrine located in [[Sendai]], [[Miyagi Prefecture]], Japan. It enshrines the [[kami]] of "martyrs of the state" (国事殉難者) and its annual festivals take place on April 30, May 1, and October 23. It was established in 1904 and originally referred to as ''Shōkonsha'' (招魂社). Its current name dates to 1939. {{Commons category|Miyagiken-Gokoku-jinja}}...'

  • Atago Shrine (Sendai)Created 12/8/2021, 4:11:40 AM

    [[WP:AES|←]]Created page with ''''Atago Shrine''' (愛宕神社, ''Atago jinja'') is a [[Shinto]] shrine located in [[Sendai]], [[Miyagi Prefecture]], Japan. It enshrines the [[kami]] [[Kagu-tsuchi]] (軻遇土神), and its annual festival takes place on July 24. {{Commons category|Atago-jinja (Sendai)}} ==See also== *[[List of Shinto shrines in Japan]] ==External links== *[https://atago.org Official website] {{Shinto shrine}} [[Category:Shinto shrines in Miyagi Prefecture]] {{Shint...'

  • Tsukubasan ShrineCreated 12/8/2021, 3:44:58 AM

    [[WP:AES|←]]Created page with ''''Tsukubasan Shrine''' (筑波山神社, ''Tsukubasan jinja'') is a [[Shinto]] shrine located in [[Tsukuba]], [[Ibaraki Prefecture]], Japan. It enshrines the [[kami]] [[Izanagi]] (伊弉諾尊) and [[Izanami]] (伊弉冊尊). The shrine is located on [[Mount Tsukuba]]. {{Commons category|Category:Tsukubasan-jinja}} ==See also== *[[List of Shinto shrines in Japan]] ==External links== *[https://www.tsukubasanjinja.jp Official website] {{Shinto shrine}} [...'

Recent edits