Showing Collections: 1–4 of 4
Filtered By
Filter Results
Additional filters
- Subject
- Clergy 3
- African Americans -- Religion 1
- Bible -- Publication and distribution -- Societies, etc. 1
- Boston (Mass.) -- Description and travel 1
- Charities 1
- Christian education 1
- Church charities 1
- Church meetings 1
- Church societies 1
- Church work 1
- Clergy conferences 1
- Diaries 1
- Ecumenical movement 1
- Great Britain -- Religion 1
- International relief 1
- Jews 1
- Learned institutions and societies 1
- New Haven (Conn.) -- Religion 1
- New Haven (Conn.) -- Social life and customs 1
- New York (State) -- Description and travel 1 ∧ less
- Names
- American Bible Society 1
- American Doctrinal Tract Society 1
- American Revision Committee 1
- American Sunday-School Union 1
- American Tract Society 1
- British and Foreign Bible Society 1
- Brotherhood of the Kingdom 1
- Catholic Church 1
- Croswell, Harry, 1778-1858 1
- Federation of American Zionists 1
- Fifield, James W., 1899-1977 1
- Hall, Charles H. (Charles Henry), 1820-1895 1
- Hibernian Bible Society (Dublin, Ireland) 1
- Interseminary Movement 1
- Lee, Witness 1
- Local Church 1
- National Conference of Christians and Jews 1
- New England Tract Society 1
- Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge (Great Britain) 1 ∧ less
Harry Croswell Papers
Charles Henry Hall Papers
More than 1500 manuscript sermons and other writings document Hall's work as a clergyman. Charles Henry Hall (1820-1895) was an Episcopal clergyman in New York, South Carolina, and Washington D.C.
Records of Religious and Benevolent Societies, Organizations, and Meetings
This collection contains publications of primarily American and British organizations, societies, conferences, and councils. The publications provide primary source documentation of organizations that focused on a wide variety of issues, ranging from sabbath observance to tract and Bible distribution to support of widows to religious education to ecumenical programs, etc.
Otis Olney Wright Papers
Sermons, scrapbooks, notes, and writings document the work of Otis Olney Wright, an Episcopal clergyman in New England during the last part of the 19th century and the first two decades of the 20th century. Wright served St. John's Church in Sandy Hook, CT from 1891 to circa 1917.