USA > New York > New York City > A history of the parish of Trinity Church in the city of New York, pt 3 > Part 42
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. "' Right Reverend Father, The Gospel tree which was first planted and which has been continually nourished by your hand, has not been
475
Address of the Oneidas
1829]
unfruitful. Its branches have expanded far and wide. Ignorance and vice cannot find any repose under its shade. The upright in heart only can enjoy its protection. To them its fruit is pleasant to the taste. Many of your children have leaned against this tree, as their only support in the trying hour of death; it has never been known to fail them; we have seen them depart with a pleasant countenance, and with hymns of praise upon their tongues.
"'Right Reverend Father, Your children would avail themselves of their present opportunity to express their gratitude to the Reverend Clergy who have frequently visited and broken to them the bread of life. We feel particularly grateful for the services of the Rev. Mr. Nash, who came among us as soon as the day began to dawn. Also for the services of the Rev. Mr. Hollister, whose ears have always been open to the calls of his red brethren. We still hold in remembrance the kind attentions we received from the Rev. Mr. Anthon, who is now seated close by your side in the City of New- York. His eye was upon us while the wind was wafting our father across the big waters. We are also much indebted to the Rev. Mr. Williams, who now resides at Green-Bay. His valuable services are too well known to our father to need any commendation from us.
"' Right Reverend Father, We have a few more words to say. This day is a day of gladness to our nation. Ample provision is now made for the spiritual wants of your children. The young man whom you have commissioned has been long among us. We have tried him. He is found faithful. We have held a talk with him, and he has expressed an entire willingness to remain with us for life. Should this arrange- ment meet the approbation of our Right Reverend Father, it is our desire, that he should give his assent to the same. This is all your children have to say.
"'CORNELIUS BEARD
" 'PETER JOHN
"'COBUS HILL
" 'MARTIN DENNY
"'JOHN CORNELIUS
" 'MOSES SCHUYLER
"'Dated ONEIDA, Sept. 14, 1829.'"
" The above address, which we think must be read with the deep- est interest by every one, was written by the young native who read it. His name is Peter Augustine. He has received a good English education, and promises to be very useful among his own people.
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476
History of Trinity Church
[1829-
"After the above address, the chiefs continuing in the same position as before, the foremost chief laid his hand upon the shoulder of Mr. Davis, who took the Bishop by the right hand, thus forming what they call 'a chain of friendship' expressive of their union with each other, and with the Bishop, who addressed them in substance as follows :
"' My Children, I thank you in my own name, and in the name of my Reverend Brethren, for your grateful recollection of our services among you. We pray God that we may be enabled to promote your spiritual interest. You will be always near our hearts.
"'My Children, I rejoice especially to hear you say that you will lay up carefully in your hearts the words of truth which have been delivered to you. I rejoice to hear you say that you will keep to the old path in which you are now walking. It has been indeed sprinkled with the blood of martyrs, who now rest with God, and who will here- after unite with the host of the redeemed, in celebrating the praises of him who loved them and strengthened them to glorify him, even unto death.
"'My Children, Deep indeed are the roots, and wide-spread the branches of the gospel tree which has been planted among you. It will support you in the most trying hour; its shade will afford you rest; its fruit will be for the strengthening of your souls unto everlasting life.
"'My Children, I rejoice to hear you express your confidence in the young man whom I have this day vested with a full commission to minister among you in holy things. Unless God's providence order otherwise, he is ready, as you desire, to be your pastor for life, and as such I shall consider him. May he be faithful, and may you be obedient.
"'My Children, The chain of Christian fellowship connects us. May it increase in strength and lustre, until fixed at the throne of God, it unites us before him, never to be separated, and shines forth with the brightness of divine glory. God bless you. Farewell.' " 1
On the First of October, 1829, the Bishop met the clergy and laity in the Diocesan Convention. At the open- ing session he delivered his fifth charge upon "The duty of the Clergy with respect to inculcating the Doc- trine of the Trinity." In it he emphasizes the importance of holding it firmly and fully, as
' The Christian Journal, November, 1829, vol. xiii., No. 11, pp. 328, 329.
.
477
Diocesan Convention
1829]
" The principal source of every objection to the doctrine of the Trinity is this reprehensible desire to be 'wise above what is written,' and to bring to the level of human understanding that infinite and divine Mind whom by searching none can find out."
The Bishop proceeds to show that although it is a doctrine which cannot be demonstrated by human reason or discovered by philosophic speculation, it is not contrary to human reason, and comments on the various opinions that have at various times been held on the Holy Trinity.
"It is not fair, therefore, to confound these opinions with the mystery of the Trinity, and to assert that if we advocate the latter even though we cannot comprehend it, we cannot consistently oppose the former. The distinction is obvious and admitted between things con- tradicting our reason and things transcending it. Not only the divine essence, but the essences of all created things, the causes of their properties, of their peculiar constitution and mode of existence, tran- scend the powers of the human mind; and therefore in these particu- lars they are not legitimate subjects of human reasoning. In all these respects we must receive concerning them, the evidence of revelation, of reason and of our senses. But the moral perfections and character of the Divine Being, the properties of matter and of mind, are within the scope of the human intellect, and in regard to them, whatever, thoroughly understood, contradicts fully, absolutely, and necessarily the principles and conclusions of that intellect can not be true, in the nature of things, can not come from the pure and divine source of truth.
"We do not then call on men to receive a doctrine contradictory to reason, though confessedly transcending it, when we demand their belief on the authority of that revelation which God has made of his eternal essence, that the Father, the Son and the Holy Ghost are each of them God, and yet there is but one God."
After describing the office of each Person of the Blessed Trinity, he thus concludes :
" And on no other theory can we account for the ascription in every part of the sacred volume, of the names, the attributes, and the operations of Deity to the Son, and to the Holy Ghost, and of the ren- dering to them of homage and worship. To present to you the
478
History of Trinity Church
[1829-
evidence of this truth has not been my design. The Church universal in her dispersed branches, the great body of Christians, divided as they are on other topics unite in 'acknowledging the glory of the Eternal Trinity.' The members of our Church make this acknowledgment in the language of that ancient creed, which, but little more than three centuries after Christ, a body of Bishops from every part of the Chris- tian world, assembled for the purpose of establishing on this point what had been received as the sense of Scripture, set forth as the hallowed symbol of Christian verity. Is it reasonable to suppose, that, almost within the precincts of the apostolic age, the great body of the Christian Clergy should not have been able to ascertain what had been the uniform faith of the Church received from the Apostles concern- ing the doctrine of the Trinity ? And if they determined as a fact that from the apostolic age the professors of the Christian name had not only believed in one God the Father, but in the Son as 'the only begotten of the Father before all worlds, God of God, Light of Light, very God of very God; and in the Holy Ghost 'the Lord and Giver of life, proceeding from the Father and the Son,' shall we be safe if we discard their testimony, stamped almost by apostolic authority, and listen to the doubts and to the scoffs which an arrogant reason may cast on this fundamental doctrine of Christian faith ?
"Let us with affectionate and faithful diligence admonish those com- mitted to our charge, to consider what precious hopes would they then renounce, and what inestimable consolations forego. The sacred book where they are to look for the record of the mode of their salvation, unequivocally teaches that we are redeemed by the Son of God, and that by the Spirit of God we are sanctified. Are the Son, by whom we are redeemed, and the Spirit by whom we are sanctified frail and fallible beings like ourselves? The redemption of sinners from the bondage of sin, their sanctification in all the powers and affections of their fallen nature, must be an omnipotent, and divine work.
"Let us then proclaim to a guilty and condemned world the Son as mighty to redeem-for his are the power and perfection of the God- head. Let us hold forth to a corrupt and sinful world the Holy Ghost as all powerful to sanctify; for his are the truth and the grace of the Godhead. And therefore, now and evermore to the Son, and to the Spirit, with the Father, who gave the Son to redeem, and with the Son sent the Spirit to sanctify us, three persons in one living and eternal God, be ascribed honour, and dominion, and majesty, and praise, and glory." 1
' The Christian Journal, December, 1829, vol. xiii., No. 12, pp. 355, 358.
.
479
Columbia College
1830]
We consider it fitting to give these extracts from the consideration and presentation of a great subject. They represent the mature thought of the Bishop.
In his capacity as a trustee of Columbia College the Bishop served on important committees and often shaped the course of legislation.
The agitation for a new institution of higher learning in the city, which resulted in the establishment of the New York University, had caused the trustees of Columbia College to consider the advisability of broadening its scope. Bishop Hobart, Mr. Thomas L. Ogden, Colonel Nicholas Fish, and Mr. Clement C. Moore were upon a committee which reported in January, 1830, a statute proposing to es- tablish a scientific and literary course in addition to the actual curriculum of studies. In that course was to be in- cluded all the studies pursued in the college except Latin and Greek ; provision was then made for special students in any one or more subjects. Public lectures were also to be given by the Professors upon special subjects, for which they were permitted to charge such fees as they thought fit.
Dr. Turner was made Professor of the Hebrew Language and Literature ; Don Mariano Valesquez de la Cadena, LL.B., Professor of the Spanish Language and Literature; the Rev. Manton Eastburn, Rector of the Church of the Ascension, Lecturer in Poetry, and William Ellet, M.D., Lecturer on Elementary Chemistry.
The view we reproduce is taken from the New York Magazine of 1789.
The passage of this statute by such a conservative body as the Trustees of Columbia College showed that Bishop Hobart and others were ready to meet the needs of the newer generation and to find in the wonderland of science, then beginning to be explored, legitimate objects of study and investigation.
480
History of Trinity Church
[1830-
On Monday, June 7, 1830, the Bishop consecrated St. Andrew's Church, Harlem. Morning Prayer was read by the Rev. Augustus Fitch, of St. Ann's Church, Fort Washington, assisted by the Rector, the Rev. George L. Hinton. The Instrument of donation was presented by Mr. John Smalley and the sentence of Consecration was read by the Rev. Robert W. Harris. The sermon was by the Bishop from St. Luke xix., 46.
On the 30th of June the Bishop set forth a form for the laying of a corner-stone which was used for many years in the Diocese and elsewhere.1
In July the Bishop made a brief visitation to several towns on the Hudson River, including Hudson, and spent a few days in the Catskill region, where he visited Green- ville, Durham, Rensselaerville and Windham. He held an ordination at Christ Church, Poughkeepsie, on July 25th, when Mr. Thomas Croswell Reed was made deacon. On Sunday, August Ist, he held a special ordination in Trin- ity Church, when Mr. John Murray Forbes and Mr. Henry J. Morton were made deacons. On the 13th of August he consecrated Zion Church, Little Neck, Long Island, and on Tuesday, August 24th, he consecrated St. Luke's Church, Mechanicsville, Saratoga County, and ordained the Rev. Orange Clark, priest. He proceeded westward, and at Rochester, August 29th, the Twelfth Sunday after Trinity, he instituted the Rev. Henry J. Whitehouse as Rector of St. Luke's Church, Rochester. His subject was : "The reciprocal Duties of Minister and People." The text was from I Thessalonians v., 12, 13. And the sermon dwelt upon the fond and intimate rela- tions which a clergyman ought to bear to his people. What they are to do in unison as regards the worship and
" It is printed in The Christian Journal for August, 1830, vol. xiv., No. 8, pp. 225, 226.
1
Columbia College , 1789
8
481
Hobart's Last Public Utterance
1830]
ordinances of the Church, the preaching of the Word, and the duties of a parish were separately treated with the skill and lucidity characteristic of the Bishop. In his address to the minister and people he said words which in view of the fact that they were his last public utterance, are almost prophetic in their summary of his life's work :
" At that altar he has this day made a devotion the most awful and entire that man can make, or that God can receive. He has de- voted himself soul, body and spirit, with all his powers and faculties, to the service of his divine Lord in the salvation of the souls of men, and in advancing that Church purchased by his blood, awful indeed, and most responsible devotion. Who is sufficient for it-Who can fully discharge its momentous duties, Who can fully acquire the heavenly spirit and tempers to which it pledges! To that Master, who has promised that his grace will be sufficient for us, and that his strength will be made perfect in our weakness, let our supplications continually ascend for guidance, aid, and support, in the discharge of the arduous duties of watchmen over the souls of men, of messengers from the Most High, of stewards of the Lord's family. To my rever- end brother, who has many claims on my esteem, whom I have long known and valued as a friend, I can only say Go on, faithful, diligent, and devoted to your Master's service. His favours are above all earthly estimation. His rewards transcend all temporal glories. May his grace be your guide, your defence, your abundant consolation. And may the reward that awaits those who turn many to righteousness terminate-long may it be before it does terminate-the course of your ministry in the Lord.
" People of the congregation, you this day receive a minister over you-you too have made vows-you have promised to render him who is over you in the Lord your confidence, affection and support. These engagements have not been lightly made. They are not to be lightly regarded. Your vows, and the vows of your pastor have now been offered in the presence of that Divine Head of the Church who is finally to sit in judgment on him and on you. Ever bear in mind that he acts by no human power; but that his ministrations are sanctioned and enforced by the commission and power of the Most High. He is the ambassador of Christ; acting in his name. Receive then, with humility and thankfulness, the messages of truth which he proclaims. They will make you wise unto salvation. Accept in penitence and VOL. III .- 31.
482
History of Trinity Church [1830
faith, the offers of mercy which he is commissioned to make-you will have peace with God through the Lord Jesus Christ. He who is over you is the steward of the mysteries of God. Attend humbly and reverently on the ordinances which he dispenses; they will nourish and strengthen you unto everlasting life. Encourage and strengthen him by your kind attentions and your prayers. 'Know him who has the rule over you, and admonishes you in the Lord, and esteem him very highly in love for his work's sake; and be at peace among yourselves.'
"There is a day of account, for both minister and people. The minister and people must stand at that tribunal at which the world is to be judged. Your minister must then render an account of his minis- trations among you-and you of the improvement which you have made of them. On the unfaithful minister and the disobedient people the tremendous sentence will be pronounced,-' Cast ye the unprofita- ble servant into outer darkness.' But if on that day it shall appear that while your pastor faithfully dispensed the means of grace, you improved them to the sanctification of your souls, and abounded in the work of the Lord, pastor and people will triumph in the plaudit- ' Well done, good and faithful servants, enter ye into the joy of your Lord.'" 1
The closing words of this sermon on the Blessed Trin- ity befit the end of this volume. The record of the services which, as a good and faithful servant, John Henry Hobart rendered to the Parish, the Diocese, and the Church at large, is complete. It remains, only, to give some extracts from the correspondence after his return from Europe, and an account of his last illness and death. For these, the reader is referred to the next volume of this work, in which will be found a record of the history of the parish during the administration, and down to the date of the death, of my immediate predecessor, William Berrian.
1 The Reciprocal Duties of Minister and People. New-York: T. and J. Swords, 1830.
APPENDIX.
483-484
APPENDIX.
CONTENTS.
I .- INDEX TO THE HOBART MANUSCRIPTS IN THE CUSTODY PAGE
OF THE REGISTRAR OF THE GENERAL CONVENTION . 487
II .- REPORT OF COMMITTEE OF BOARD OF HEALTH ON PRE- VENTION OF SMALL-POX . 497
III .- LETTER FROM "AN EPISCOPALIAN " TO THE "CHRISTIAN JOURNAL," MAY, 1827 · 499
IV .- LIST OF PAMPHLETS IN THE HOBART-CHASE CONTROVERSY 5º3
V .- INVENTORY OF COMMUNION PLATE BELONGING TO
TRINITY PARISH . 503
VI .- PROGRAMME OF ORATORIO HELD IN ST. PAUL'S CHAPEL ON THE OCCASION OF GENERAL LAFAYETTE'S VISIT TO NEW YORK . .
. 519
VII .- ADDRESS OF THE CLERGY TO BISHOP HOBART AND HIS REPLY
VIII .- PERSONS IN ATTENDANCE AT LECTURE IN ST. PAUL'S CHAPEL, MARCH 13, 1828 · 524
·
521
IX .- LIST OF WORKS REFERRED TO IN PART III. . 526 INDEX . .
. 531
485-486
I.
INDEX TO THE HOBART MANUSCRIPTS IN THE CUSTODY OF THE REGISTRAR OF THE GENERAL CONVENTION.
Only the loose letters and papers are here included. About an equal num- ber of letters are mounted in blank books. The numbers in brackets indicate the number of letters, and where no date is given it is because the letter it- self is undated.
A
Abercrombie, Jas. . 1798-1827 (23)
Adams, H
1828-1830 (4)
Adams, J ..
1826-1828 (2)
Adams, Parker
1807-1829 (II)
Affleck, Lady.
1824 (2)
Agnew, Daniel.
1795
(2)
Allen, B ..
1817-1830
(3)
(One to Dr. Beasley, 1806).
Ambrosie, Jas.
. 1824-1825
(5)
Andrews, E.
1828-1829
(2)
Anthon, Charles.
. 1825-1829
(2)
Anthon, H
1816-1830 (25)
Auld, J.
1818 (2)
Axtill, Henry
1796-1797 (2)
ONE LETTER ONLY
Abbot, A .. 1825
Abeel, John
1796
Biddle, Mary
1825
(2)
Adams, H. 1828
Adams, N. H. 1827
Albert, P. A.
1805
Alden, Timothy 1812
Alexander, J. M. 1793
Allinson, D.
1820
Ambler, J. B
1829
Andrews, G. B. 1819
Andrews, Joseph R. 1819
Anthon, John.
1817
Armitage, J. 1818
Armstrong, Joseph. 1826
Aspenwall, G.
1816
Atkinson, E.
1828
Atterbury, L ..
1813
Attwater, H. S. 1830
Attwater, R.
1820
Austin, D.
1826
B
Babcock, Deodatus. . 1818-1822 (7)
Barclay, Thomas
I823
(2)
Bard, William
1828-1829
(3)
Barlow, William
1820-1825
(3)
Barrow, Thomas
1820
(3)
Barry, E. D 1805-1825 (6)
Bartow, J. V.
Bartow, Susan
1803-1807
(2)
Bayard, Lewis P.
1811-1830 (47)
Bayley, Cornwall.
. 1805
(3)
Beasley, Frederic ..
1804-1828
(2)
Beebe, J. S ..
1826-1828
(2)
Bend, Joseph Grove J. . 1804-1828 (2)
Berrian, William
1813-1829
(8)
Birge, Ben ..
1819
(3)
Blake, J. L.
1814-1817
(3)
Bloomfield, Mary E ... 1829-1830 (2)
Bold, Thomas
1823-1827
(2)
Boldock, Lieut ..
. 1824
(2)
Bolton, Thomas
1823-1826 (10)
Bowden, J.
1809-1810 (2)
(One to Bp. Moore).
Bowden, Mary
1820-1821 (18)
Brady, John.
. 1811-1816 (6)
(One from Dr. Kewley).
Breintnall, Thomas. . 1822-1824 (2)
Brenton, Frances.
. 1808-1820
(2)
Brown, Benjamin.
1820-1825
(3)
Brown, Clark
. 1805-1815
(5)
(One to Dr. Lathrop).
487
1803-1807
(2)
488
History of Trinity Church
Brown, David. 1818-1830 (18)
Brown, Jacob.
. 1803 (2)
Brown, John ...
. 1815-1827
(4)
Brownell, Thomas C. 1816-1829 (II)
Bruce, N. F.
1820-1829 (6)
Bunsen, Chevalier
Christian.
1823-1825
(5)
Burge, Lemuel.
1817-1822
(3)
Burgess, Nathaniel B. 1813-1827
(3)
Burt, Moses.
1821-1825
(3)
Burrow, E. J.
Bush, Leverett.
1819-1821
(3)
Bute, Lady.
1823
(2)
Butler, David.
1814-1818
(2)
ONE LETTER ONLY
Ball, J. 1829
Ballard, E .. 1829
Bard, Samuel. 1813
Barlow, Miss M. L. 1829
Barnard, C.
1823
Barten, Dr.
1815
Barton, Jacob
1826
Barton, W ..
1814
Batchelor, J.
1821
Bayard, Sam.
1830
Bayard, William. 1804
Beach, Abraham 1827
Beers, A.
1815
Bell, Dr. 1824
Benwell, Ed. L. 1820
Beman, Samuel. 1827
Betts, Stephen.
1817
Bexley, Lord.
1824
Binney, Horace
1805
Bixby, Lewis.
1822
Blackford, Edward
1815
Bleecker, Anthony. 1817
Bloodgood, James 1820
Bloodgood, Susannah
1823
Boliat, Thos .. 1827
Booth & Son, Jonas.
1829
Boyle, Isaac.
1821
Bragg, George.
1820
Brainard, L.
1819
Branch, Jno
1830
Breck, Miss.
1798
Brenton, E. C.
1825
Bridge, B ..
1826
Bridgeman, Geo. G. 1830
Brinley, George.
1819
British Consul.
1828
Bronson, Tillotson,
1819
Brooks, Chas.
1827
Brooks, F
1828
Brown, B ..
1822
Brown, James
1814
Brown, Levi 1822
Brown, Saml.
1829
Brown, Wm., and Thomas Col-
lister.
1819
Browne, I ..
1823
Bruce, D. & G. 1816
Bullock, W. B., and J. Bond Read 1819
Burges, J.
1829
Burroughs, Charles. 1812
Busti, Paul ..
1825
1827
Buxton, Sir Francis
C
Cadle, Richard F.
1819-1823 (2)
Chapman, J.
1807 -- 1823 (17)
Chase, Philander. . ... 1803-1816 (6)
Chauncey,
Commo-
dore ...
. 1827-1829 (4)
Croes, John, (Bishop
of New Jersey). ... 1808-1828 (19) March 26, 1818, license as lay- readers to Messrs. John Griggs and William Richmond.
Croes, John, Jr ..
.. 1821-1822 (4)
Croes, Robt. B ..
. 1819-1830 (9)
March 9, 1830 encloses letter from
J. W. French, Candidate for Holy
Orders.
Crosby, A. H.
1826-1829 (4)
Cuming, F. H.
1818-1829 (16)
ONE LETTER ONLY
Casey, Mrs. 1826
Chapman, G. T. 1828
Chapman, J., Commd'r R. N.
1819
Clark, William A.
1817
Clinton, Charles.
1828
Clinton, De Witt.
1810
Coit, Thos. W.
1826
Columbia College Trustees, Re-
solution of
1828
Cone, Francis.
1823
Cotton, C. 1803
Croes, Miss
1819
Crusé, C. F.
1830
Cumming, Hooper.
1814
D
Dalhousie, Lord.
1823 (2)
Dando, Stephen.
1826 (2)
Dash, D. B.
1825 (17)
Davis, A ..
1809-1829 (3)
Davis, Edward
1827-1828 (9)
Dayton, A. O.
1829 (2)
Dayton, E. B.
1803-1826 (43)
Boulton, H. J. 1829
Braithwaite, Anna
1829
489
Index to the Hobart Manuscripts
Dayton, J. T .. ... . 1803-1829 (II)
Delaplaine, Joseph.
. 1814-1822 (12)
Denison, Jos. & Co .. . 1824-1825
(5)
De Lancey, J. P
1815-1823
(2)
De Peyster, F.
1807-1820
(3)
Doamely, W.
. 1822-1829
(7)
Doane, G. W
1824-1829
(9)
Dorr, B.
1822-1823
(4)
Douglas, Sutherland.
I828
(4)
Ducachet, H. W ..
1822-1823
(5)
Duché, Sophia, Correspond-
ence with
John Henry
Hobart.
1798 (6)
Duer, W. A.
1816-1826 (14)
Duffie, C. R ..
. 1815-1826 (8)
Pencilled Note of Rev. W. H.
Delancey to Rev. J. H. Hopkins
on
request
to consecrate
St.
Thomas's Church, November 21,
1825
Dunn, James.
.1828-1830
(2)
Dunscomb, William E. 1818-1827 (3)
Dwight, Jonathan.
.1828-1829
(5)
Dwight, Theo.
1819-1823
(2)
Dyer, Palmer.
1822
(3)
ONE LETTER ONLY
Daubeny, Charles.
. 1824
Da Ponte, Lorenzo.
1830
Davies, Jno.
1820
Davis, M. K
1813
Davis, S.
1823
Not from him, but a certificate from the Evangelical Lutheran Church, Pastor and Trustees, of his qualifications as organist.
Day, William. 1809
Dayton, T. B. C.
829
Delancey, W. H.
1819
De Peyster, Jas. F.
1827
Depositions in Case of Rev. R.
Ãshe.
1837
Dodge, F.
1825
Dove, W. J.
1828
Duanesburgh, Statement, Ex- penditures by Mrs. Duane for Christ Church 1818
Ducachet, H. W.
I822
(To Dr. Quackenboss).
Duer, Jno ..
1828
Dwight, S. E.
1825
E
Eaton, A.
1809-1826
(4)
ONE LETTER ONLY
Eastburn, James.
Edwards, J.
. 1828
Egan, Michael R.
1822
Elliott, Charles P
1823
Elliott, Henry H
1829
Ely, E. Stiles.
1813
Ernst, John Fredrick.
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