Rhode Island Episcopalians 1635-1953, Part 12

Author: Tyng, Dudley, 1879-
Publication date: 1954
Publisher: Providence : Little Rhody Press
Number of Pages: 172


USA > Rhode Island > Rhode Island Episcopalians 1635-1953 > Part 12


Note: The text from this book was generated using artificial intelligence so there may be some errors. The full pages can be found on Archive.org (link on the Part 1 page).


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The latest parish, St. Michael's and All Angels in Rumford, was begun as a parochial mission of St. Paul's, Pawtucket. More recently, under the leadership of Archdeacon Parshley and of its Vicar, John W. Haynes, formerly rector of Trinity Church, Pawtucket, a splendid rectory and church basement has been built. The building of this last, owing to vandalism and an underground stream, has proved unexpectedly costly. The heavy debt thereby incurred has nevertheless been steadily amor- tized. Charles P. Gilson, a former missionary in China and for three years Vicar in South County, is the present incumbent. A new church building is now on the way.


The oldest parish in East Providence is St. Mary's, located in the older section of the town near the Washington bridge. It also has grown slowly over the years and was, in 1950, slightly smaller and slightly richer than St. Mark's, Riverside. For many years it was one of the four Anglo-Catholic parishes of the Diocese, the other three being St. Stephen's, Providence, St. John's, Newport, and Trinity, Bristol. Ralph L. Tucker is the present rector.


This chapter has been a rapid sketch of the growth of the Church in Newport and Bristol Counties. There has been an increase in every area, before 1925 chiefly in the Newport region, since then, most largely in East Providence and Barrington. This region, also, has as much Episcopal strength as many dioceses and missionary districts throughout


-- 96 -


the whole United States, from Vermont to the Pacific, and from Delaware southwest to Arizona and New Mexico.


CHURCH STATISTICS-SOUTHEAST RHODE ISLAND-1850-1950


PLACE


DATE PARISH


COMMUNICANTS


CHURCH SCHOOL PUPILS


1850 1875 1900 1925 1950 1850 1875 1900 1925 1950


Newport


1852


Emmanuel


211


380


838


757


102


220


299


260


114


Newport


1833


St. George's


152


136


145


332


616


170


120


124


178


152


Newport


1882


St. John's


175


125


90


Newport


1698 Trinity


209


290


463


534


920


150


188


356


261


245


Middletown


1895


St. Columba's


60


18


22


Portsmouth


1847


St. Mary's


25


61


94


148


326


50


60


40


75


105


Portsmouth


1834


St. Paul's


23


60


62


124


167


25


60


40


60


40


Tiverton


1900


Holy Trinity


118


147


34


50


409


758 1413 2720 3284


497


648 1094 1011


818


Bristol


1720


St. Michael's


300


330


304


571


584


120


265


222


116


151


Bristol


1876


Trinity


92


40


Warren


1829


St. Mark's


140


138


157


300


326


100


123


157


74


62


Barrington


1869


St. John's


51


144


160


491


33


82


57


215


Barrington


1900


St. Matthew's


20


48


42


E. Providence 1893


St. Mark's


99


144


512


51


143


230


E. Providence 1871


St. Mary's


28


159


281


462


115


190


113


149


E. Providence 1943


St. Michael


and All Angels


152


87


440


547 1061 1765 2906


220


536


814 661 1023


Newport County


409


758 1413 2720 3284


497


648 1094 1011


818


849 1305 2474 4485 6190


717 1284 1908 1672 1841


PLACE


CONTRIBUTIONS


PLACE


CONTRIBUTIONS


1925


1950


Emmanuel


$17,455.49


$16,513.13


St. Michael's


13,330.93


24,050.51


St. George's


6,578.76


12,610.42


Trinity


5,052.19


19,065.96


St. John's


13,164.38


12,782.26


St. Mark's


6,880.59


8,275.72


Trinity


21,015.07


43,909.79


St. John's


4,227.83


31,797.88


St. Columba's


4,159.68


6,709.69


St. Matthew's


1,553.68


2,526.52


St. Mary's


3,885.71


11,631.40


St. Mark's


3,259.69


10,654.24


St. Paul's


7,330.17


8,274.76


St. Mary's


4,680.13


13,386.56


Holy Trinity


4,544.01


6,455.53


Grace Memorial


1,486.34


6,638.17


$78,133.27


$118,886.98


St. Michael's and All Angels


7,757.81


40,471.38


124,153.37


Newport County ..


78,133.27


118,886.98


$118,604.65


$243,040.35


41


148


107


198


166


52


38


132


195


E. Providence 1916


Grace Memorial


105


70


87


1925


1950


- 97 ----


228


478


244


X


Such, in brief outline, has been the history of the growth of the Episcopal Church in the Colony and State of Rhode Island and Provi- dence Plantations. Its early success has been matched by its growth after 1800. For, by 1723, it had four parishes, when Massachusetts had but two, King's Chapel and the Old North Church in Boston, and Con- necticut but one, the church in Stratford. At the present day, Rhode Island has the thickest concentration of Episcopalians, as well as of Roman Catholics, of any State in the Union.


The largest single factor in this notable increase has been the heavy industrialization of the State. In 1820 Rhode Island was 90% rural. Today, it is 90% urban.


The fact that this industrialization was largely textile meant heavy English immigration, cotton workers from Lancashire, woolen workers from Yorkshire, and lace weavers from Nottingham. In the little village of Alton in South County, for instance, where there is a lace mill, the tinkle of coin on the collection plate is seldom heard, only the rustle of bills. Lace weavers are highly skilled, closely organized and highly paid.


In 1860 there were 160 cotton mills in the State, doing a considerable part of the cotton manufacturing of the country. These mills have largely disappeared, although, up to 1950 at least, 15% of the wools and worsteds of the United States were made up in Rhode Island, and 25% in near-by Massachusetts, with Boston still the raw wool market of the country.


Thus it came to pass that, in Rhode Island, by the little cataracts of the Blackstone and Branch Rivers, of the Woonasquatucket, the Mo- shassuck, the Pocassett, the Pumgansett, the Ponagansett, the Pawtuxet and the Pawcatuck, there arose the many mills of Woonsocket, Burrill- ville, Gloucester, Smithfield, Scituate, Cranston, Warwick, Central Falls, Pawtucket, Providence and Westerly. Where cotton has moved South, wool, lace, jewelry and metal products have moved in. The Corliss engine was a famous product of Providence seventy-five years ago. The Brown and Sharpe Company of Providence is today one of the largest makers of precision machinery and tools in the world. In all of these enterprises, workers from England, Scotland, Ireland and Quebec found abundant employment. The reason for the heavy concentration of Episcopalians and Roman Catholics in Rhode Island is thus clear.


The Episcopal Church in this State has, then, drawn heavily from the Yankees of the cities and from the Protestant immigrants, mostly English, in the mill villages, as well as the cities. In fact, two of the cities, Woonsocket and Pawtucket, are nothing but a conglomeration of mill villages glued together by time and growth, and spreading, resi- dentially, outward. From 1830 to 1930 Yankee money and British man- power were heavily responsible for building up the Church in Rhode Island. British immigration now has virtually ceased and Yankee money goes in large quantities into the maw of Uncle Sam.


-98-


Another factor, always present, but more acute now than ever, is the constant movement of people into and from this little State. The latest census gives 599,000 people born in Rhode Island as resident elsewhere in the Union. Likewise it reveals that 20,000 more people came into the State between 1940 and 1950 than left it. Migration is apt to result in dislocation and church membership loss. The agricultural migrations of a century or more ago to the West affected Rhode Island Baptists and Quakers more than Episcopalians. The removals of textile workers fifty years ago from Rhode Island to Massachusetts or vice-versa, did not entail as much loss as now. For the migrant usually went to another British community and another "English church". Now matters are different. We lose more than we gain by removals.


The three factors already mentioned, the cessation of Protestant immigration, high income taxes, and constant removals, would account, in large measure, for the lag in church growth between 1940 and 1950. A fourth factor would be the decreased birthrate of the Depression. A fifth factor, affecting the Church Schools rather than the communicant list, would be the earlier age of Confirmation. This means, too often, an earlier age for leaving Church School and an earlier age for imitating the ways of non-churchgoing parents.


Nevertheless, Rhode Island does not seem to be worse off, by and large, than the Church as a whole. Whatever ails Rhode Island Church- men, too much or too little liberalism, too much or too little Catholicism, too few children, or what not, is true of the country as a whole. From 1940 to 1950 the Episcopal Church in none of the New England States, except Vermont and New Hampshire, has quite kept up with the growth of the population. From 1925 to 1950 the Episcopal Church in America grew only 36%, while the chief Protestant denominations hovered at about the same figure. Even Roman Catholics gained only 53%. The only denominations which made large progress numerically were the Holiness sects, the negro churches, certain Orthodox and Lutheran groups ( thanks to the Kremlin) and the two anti-thetical denominations of Unitarians and Southern Baptists. The last two groups, the first small and the second large, doubled their numbers in twenty-five years.


The lag and lethargy which might seem to beset the Church in Rhode Island is, thus, common to most of the country. The constantly increasing proportion of baptized membership in the people of America, a rise from 7% to nearly 70% from 1810 to the present, has meant more social service and missionary giving, but not better church attendance. Whereas once congregations outnumbered members, at least in the North, three to one, the difficulty now is to get more than a third of the member- ship to Church and Sunday School on any one Sunday. Even 70% on Easter seems high in most places.


The task and difficulty of the Episcopal Church in Rhode Island is then, not radically different from that of the Church throughout the world. It calls not so much for new methods and techniques as for a renewal of the old spirit. The golden era of the Episcopal Church, as


- 99 -


well as of Protestantism as a whole, was the heyday of the older and newer Evangelicals in the last century. It was the time in Protestantism of Finney, Beecher, Torrey, Moody and Mott; in the Episcopal Church of Griswold, Henshaw, Milnor, Tyng, Bedell, Johns, Meade and McIlvaine, of Phillips Brooks and Thomas March Clark. Even if the Biblical and historical presuppositions of the old Evangelicalism seem outmoded, it surely is still possible to recapture the old Evangelical fervor, even if clothed in other theological forms. Only by the glow will come the glory.


- 100 -


REPRESENTATIVE


DIOCESAN


BUILDINGS


ALTON, ST. THOMAS Once a Union Church


APPONAUG, ST. BARNABAS


X


BARRINGTON, ST. ANDREW'S SCHOOL CHAPEL


BRISTOL, TRINITY


+


CENTRAL FALLS, ST. GEORGE'S


CENTREDALE, ST. ALBAN'S


COVENTRY, CHRIST CHURCH


EAST GREENWICH, ST. LUKE'S


FOSTER, CHURCH OF THE MESSIAH


GREENVILLE, ST. THOMAS


&


$2.3


LONSDALE, CHRIST CHURCH


+


HARRIS, ST. ANDREW'S


NARRAGANSETT, ST. PETER'S


NEWPORT, ST. GEORGE'S


NEWPORT, TRINITY


NORTH PROVIDENCE, ST. JAMES


NORTH PROVIDENCE, ST. MARY'S HOME


NORTH SCITUATE, TRINITY


PASCOAG, CALVARY


GROUP AT THE PASCOAG CONFERENCE CENTER


PAWTUCKET, CHURCH OF THE GOOD SHEPHERD


0


PAWTUCKET, ST. PAUL'S


PORTSMOUTH, ST. MARY'S


PROVIDENCE, ALL SAINTS


PROVIDENCE, CATHEDRAL OF ST. JOHN


PROVIDENCE, GRACE CHURCH


PROVIDENCE PUBLIC


19135


PROVIDENCE, CHURCH OF THE MESSIAH


PROVIDENCE, CHURCH OF THE REDEEMER


PROVIDENCE, CHURCH OF THE SAVIOUR


PROVIDENCE, ST. ANSGARIUS'


"EDWARDS HOME" OR "BISHOP McVICKAR HOUSE" 66 BENEFIT STREET, PROVIDENCE


-----


1


ï


=


PROVIDENCE, ST. MARTIN'S (before enlargement )


PROVIDENCE, ST. PAUL'S


PROVIDENCE, ST. STEPHEN'S


/-


-


--


1


-


1


I'LL6


11117


-


PROVIDENCE, ST. THOMAS


RIVERSIDE, ST. MARK'S


RUMFORD, ST. MICHAEL AND ALL ANGELS


SAUNDERSTOWN, ST. JOHN'S


SOUTH SCITUATE, ST. TIMOTHY'S


WAKEFIELD, CHURCH OF THE ASCENSION


WESTERLY, CHRIST CHURCH


WICKFORD, ST. PAUL'S


WOONSOCKET, ST. JAMES'


Appendix


Index of Names


Allen, Rev. H. V. B.


89


Alling, Rev. Roger


79


Alton, St. Thomas


92,98


Anglo-Catholicism


41, 42, 55


Appleton, Rev. Frank


76, 79


Apponaug, St. Barnabas


59, 91


Arcadia, Transfiguration


59


Armitage, Rev. W. T.


90


Ashton, St. John's


36, 37, 78, 81


Auchmuty, Robert


6


Aucock, Rev. Arthur M.


74


Ayrault, Pierre


2


Babcock, Rowse and Edwin


88


Badger, Rev. Moses


5,6


Baptists


8, 99


Barbour, Rev. James E.


79, 80


Barrington, St. John's


32, 95


Barrington (West), St. Matthews 96


Bass, Rt. Rev. Edward


6


Bassett, Rev. F. J.


75


Bassett, Rev. Henry


75


Beattie, Rev. Charles F.


71, 94


Bedell, Rev. G. T.


31


Bennett, Rt. Rev. G. G.


58, 62, 85


83


Berkeley, Dean and Bishop of Cloyne 2


Bernon, Gabriel


2, 3, 4


Blackstone, Rev. William


1,3


Blake, Rev. John


16


Board of Education 20


Bolles, Rev. Hebert W. 89


Bradner, Rev. Lester


50


Bray, Rev. Ralph


83


Brent, Rt. Rev. Charles H.


39, 50


Bridge, Rev. Christopher 3


Brinley, William


2


Bristed, Rev. John


18


Bristol, St. Michael's


3, 6, 11, 12, 14, 15, 18, 32, 93, 95, 97


Bristol, Trinity


36, 95, 97


Broad Churchmen


41, 42, 46


Brooks, Phillips


37, 38, 45, 46, 52


Brewer, Rev. D. R.


88


Broburg, Rev. Philip


76


Brown, Harold


38, 69, 70


Brown, John Carter


69


Brown, Mrs. John Carter 69


Brown, John Nicholas, Sr. 69


Brown, Mrs. John Nicholas


69


Brown, John Nicholas


70


Brown, Rev. Joseph


16


Brown, Rev. Marmaduke


2


Brownell, Rt. Rev. T. C.


23, 31


Budding, Rev. J .. A.


83


Burgess, Rt. Rev. George 32


Burrows, Rev. Charles D.


89


Burrows, Joseph C.


86


Campbell, Rt. Rev. D. J.


75


Canonchet, St. Elizabeth's


86, 92


Carpenter, Rev. Alvah E.


82


Carlson, Rev. C. Lennart


61, 84


Catholic Oak


1


Catholicism, Roman


27, 28, 35, 98


Central Falls, St. George's


37, 54, 80


Centredale, St. Alban's


83, 84


Channing, William Ellery


31


Chapin, Rev. Wm.


95,96


Chase, Rt. Rev. Carlton 14


Chase, Rt. Rev. Philander 23


Chase, Rev. William S. 82


4


Chepachet


25,


59


Civil War Inflation


Clark, Rt. Rev. T. M.


21, 29-45,


Early Life 29-31, Theology 41, 52


Cocroft, Rev. T. J.


75, 82


Coleman, Rt. Rev. F. J. 24, 45


Collins, Rev. F. I. 75


Collings, Walter


87


Colwell, Rev. James


Congregationalists


83


8


Convocation


20


Coventry, Christ Church 86


Crabtree, Rev. Albert


54, 81


Crane, Rev. Silas A.


24, 88


Cranston, Ascension ( Auburn) 38, 90, 92 Cranston, St. Bartholomew's .. 37, 89, 92 Cranston, St. David's ( Meshanticut Park ) 59, 90, 92


Cranston, Transfiguration


(Edgewood )


38, 60, 90, 92


Cranston, Trinity (Pawtuxet )


Cricket Clubs


38, 60, 89, 90, 92


36, 85


Crocker, Rev. N. B. ...


6, 13, 15, 26, 71


Crompton, St. Philip's


24, 25, 87


Dart, Rev. Edward M.


91


Dehon, Rt. Rev. Theodore


6, 7


Depository


25


DeWolf, John


11


33


Belden, Rev. Francis H.


88


Bennett, Rev. E. C.


Checkley, Rev. John


Doane, Rt. Rev. G. W. 23, 32


Doane, Rt. Rev. W. C. 45


Donegan, Rt. Rev. H. W. B. 63 Hobart, Rt. Rev. J. H. 7,8


Dorrance, Rev. S. M. 80 Hobbs, Rev. J. M. 76


Dowling, Rev. H. J.


89


Dowty, Rev. W. E.


80


Duncan, Rev. J. M. 84, 90


Dunstan, Rev. Arthur M. 84, 95


Durkee, R. P. Fund 70


Eames, Rev. James H.


83


Eastburn, Rt. Rev. Manton


13, 20


Eastern Diocese


6, 7, 13, 14


East Greenwich, St. Luke's


19, 88, 92


East Providence, St. Mary's


36, 97


Eastwood, Rev. Benjamin


79


Edwards, Rev. Levi B.


48, 71,90


Emerson, Ralph Waldo


31


Endowments


34, 68, 69, 70, 71, 72


Episcopal Elections


7, 21, 26, 39, 50, 58, 62


Episcopal Theological School


14, 52, 55, 56


Evangelicals


19, 20, 100


Evans, Rev. I. A. 83


Evolution


30, 41


Fayerweather, Rev. Samuel


3


Field, Russell W.


95


Fiske, Rev. George M. 42, 49, 50, 73, 74


Fitzgerald, Rev. G. L. 83


Foster, Church of the Messiah


60,85


Gammell, Memorial ( Olneyville)


75


Gardiner, Silvester


3


Gardiner, Rev. S. J. S.


7


Kewley, Rev. John


23


Gardner, Rev. John A. 95


Gardner, Rathbone


49, 50


Gardner, Robert


2


Gilson, Rev. Charles P. 96


Graves, Rev. John


5


Greenville, St. Thomas


25, 59, 82, 83


Greer, Rt. Rev. D. H.


39, 51


Griswold, Rt. Rev. A. V.


6, 7, 9, 13, 14, 19, 20, 21, 22


Groton, Rev. W. M.


88


Hall, Rev. C. M.


82


Hamlin, Rev. Julian 84


Handy, John 6


Handy, T. H. 81


Harris, St. Andrew's


38, 85


Harris, Judge Samuel 61


Harrisville


25


Hart, Rev. Samuel


39


Hathaway, Rev. G. B. 18


Hawk, Rev. Willis B. 80


Hawks, Rev. F. L.


26


Henshaw, Rt. Rev. J. P. K. 21, 23, 28,


Theology 27-28, 83


Higgins, Rt. Rev. John S. 61, 62, 75


Hilliker, Rev. Albert M. 80


Holcomb, Rev. G. N. 86


Honeyman, Rev. James 2, 4


Hopkins, Rt. Rev. J. H.


13, 14, 23, 32


72


Horr, Mary R.


59


Hotchkiss, Rev. W. M.


86


Hoxsie, St. Mark's


59, 60


Hubbard, Rt. Rev. Russell S. 75


Hughes, Rev. S. C.


94


Hutton, Rev. H. L.


79


Institutions ----


St. Andrew's School


40, 54


St. Elizabeth Home


40


St. Mary's Home


40


St. Dunstan School


56, 70


St. Michael's School


56


Seamen's Institute


56


Ives, T. P.


69


Jamestown, St. Matthew's 18, 19, 89, 92


Jaggar, Rt. Rev. T. A.


45


Jarvis, Rt. Rev. Abraham


7


Jenkins, Jeremiah F.


6


Johns, Rt. Rev. John


23, 24


Kay, Nathaniel


2


Keeler, Rt. Rev. Stephen E.


63


Kennan, Rev. V. E.


58


Kennedy, Rev. Dana F. 82


Kierstead, Rev. P. P.


81


King Philip's War 1


King's Church


4


King, George Gordon 70


Kinsolving, Anne


70


Kite, Rev. W. L.


88


Knight, B. B. & R. 37


Knight, S. D.


35, 36


Knight, Webster


70,91


Krusen, Rev. H. P.


80


Laird, Florence M.


63


Landolt, Rev. F. J.


90


Larned, Rev. A. C.


84, 89, 90


Law, Rev. Marion


16, 79


Lawrence, Rt. Rev. W. Appleton


72


Lawrence, Rt. Rev. William


38, 45


Learned, Lewis D.


56


Lippet, Moses


3


Locke, Rev. Dr. 95


Lockyer, Rev. John 2


Lonsdale, Christ Church


16, 17, 77,80


Lonsdale Company


17, 37


Lowry, Rev. Charles W.


62


Henshaw, Rev. Daniel


71


Lyte, Rev. J. B.


62, 74


Horner, Rev. C. H.


MacColl III, Rev. J. R. 62, 74


Macdonald, Rev. E. H. 80


Mackie, Rev. Nelson W. 84, 91


Manton, St. Peter's 25, 70


Manville, Emmanuel 16, 17, 18, 78, 81 Marks, Rev. Hervey B. 87


Maryon, Rev. Frederic B. 90


Mather, Cotton and Increase 1


McSparran, Rev. James 3, 4


McVickar, Eweretta C. 45


McVicar, John A. 45


McVickar, Rt. Rev. William N.


39, 45, 46


McVickar House


45, 71


Meader, Rev. Charles H.


88, 90


Mercer, Rev. Alexander G. 71


Mercer, Rev. R. H.


94


Middletown, Holy Cross


26


Middletown, St. Columba's


97


Mitchelson, Elizabeth 9


Moore, Rt. Rev. Benjamin 6


Mortimer-Maddox, Rev. Richard 95


Moore-Browne, Rev. P. G.


76


Munroe, Rev. Ephraim


17


Narragansett Church


3,5


(See Wickford )


Narragansett, St. Peter's


36, 89


Newburyport


6, 29


Newport, Town of


1


Newport, Emmanuel


25, 70, 93, 97


Newport, St. George's


18, 94, 97


Newport, St. John's


38, 94, 97


Newport, Trinity


1, 2, 6, 15, 18, 70, 93, 97


Nicholson, Governor Francis


2


North Providence, St. James (Holy Spirit ) 84


Norwood, Resurrection


60


(See Warwick )


Oldtime High Churchman


19


Onderdonk, Rt. Rev. B. T.


23


Orem, Rev. James 3


Orthodox, Russian 18


Orthodox, Ukrainian


18


Osborn, Rev. D. C.


96


Parker, Rt. Rev. Samuel 6


Parker, Theodore


31


Parshley, Rev. A. R. .. 59, 62, 79, 86, 95


Pascoag, Calvary


25, 84


Pascoag Conference Center 61


Pawtucket, Advent


38, 78, 80


Pawtucket, Good Shepherd 78, 79


Pawtucket, St. Luke's 79


Pawtucket, St. Martin's 80


Pawtucket, St. Paul's


15, 16, 32, 55, 60, 70, 77, 79


Pawtucket, Trinity 32, 77


Pearse, William 11


Perry, Rev. James DeWolf 51 Perry, Rt. Rev. James DeWolf, Jr.


50, 53, 55, 57 24


Phenix


Philip, King


1


Phillipsdale, Grace Memorial 59, 96, 97


Pickells, Rev. J. L.


88


Pierce, Daniel G. and Emily A. 70


Pigot, Rev. Samuel


4


Pine, Rev. G. S. 34, 76


Piper, Rev. H. J. 88


Pontiac, All Saints 37,91


(See Warwick )


Porter, Rev. Emery H.


77, 79, 93


Portsmouth, St. Mary's


18, 43, 97


Portsmouth, St. Paul's


18, 43, 97


Presbyterianism


30


Pressey, Rev. William 81


Providence, All Saints


25, 60, 71, 74


Providence, Calvary


15


Providence Christ Church 25, 76


Providence, Epiphany


36, 71


Providence, Grace


15, 21, 24, 32, 33, 35, 55, 60, 71, 72


Providence, Messiah


'30, 75


Providence, Redeemer


32, 75


Providence, St. Andrew's


25, 38, 59


Providence, St. Ansgarius


38, 75


Providence, St. Gabriel's


36


Providence, St. James


36, 76, 79, 84


Providence, St. John's


4, 5, 7, 14, 15, 32, 50, 71, 74


Providence, St. Martin's


54, 75


Providence, St. Paul's


36, 54, 76


Providence, St. Stephen's


15, 42, 71


Providence, St. Thomas


38, 54, 76


Providence, The Saviour


15, 32, 60, 75, 76


Provoost, Rt. Rev. Samuel


7


Quakers


1,8,99


Randolph, Rt. Rev. A. M.


45


Rationalism


41


Redlawn, Rev. Leonard


91


Revelation


41


Rhode Island Episcopal Convention


5, 6, 25


Richardson, Rev. Carl H.


61


Ritualism


41


Riverside, St. Mark's 38,96


Robinette, Rev. J. H. 90


Roebuck, Rev. A. F.


62, 79, 94


Roman Catholics 8


Rousmaniere, Rev. E. S. 37


Rousmaniere, Sophie Knight 70


Rumford, St. Michael and


All Angels


60, 96


Russell, Mrs. Hope Brown


69


Satterlee, Rt. Rev. H. Y. 45


Saunderstown, St. John's 92


Schweitzer, Gustave A. 91


Scaife, Rt. Rev. L. L.


94


Warren, St. Marks


18, 32, 95


Scaringi, Rev. Gene


61, 76


Scituate, Town of


34


Scituate, St. Timothy's 60, 85


Scituate, Trinity


32, 60, 35


Seabury, Rt. Rev. Samuel


6, 10


Seilhammer, Rev. R. A.


79


Shannock, Holy Spirit


59, 60, 92


Shaw, Rev. S. B.


95


Sherrill, Rt. Rev. H. K.


52, 61, 63


Shumaker, Rev. William 80


Silliman, Professor


30, 31


Sisters of the Holy Nativity


42


Slater, Samuel


16, 93


Slater, Esther


16


Smith, Rev. William 5


Smiths, Richard


1,3


Social Conditions


35, 40, 46


Society for the Propogation of the


Gospel


4,5


Statistics 64, 65. 66, 67, 77, 82, 87, 92


Stone, Rev. J. S.


10


Stone, Rev. G. Lucien 84


Stone, Rev. W. Owings


95


Strong, Rev. T. B.


77, 79


Stuart, Gilbert


3


Study Hill


1


Sturges, Rev. Philemon F.


72


Taft, Rev. George


16, 17, 77


Talbot, Rev. B. P.


82


Temple, Rev. C. H.


90


Thornton, Holy Nativity


85, 90


Tiogue, Good Samaritan


59


Tiverton, Holy Trinity


59


Tobin, Rev. G. Edgar


88


Toll, Rev. E. F.


81


Tomkins, Rev. Floyd W. 72


Tourtellot, Rev. A. M. 76


Tower Hill


19


Townsend, Rev. W. T.


80,96


Trotter, Rev. William


36


Tucker, Rev. W. P.


39


Tuttle, Rt. Rev. D. S.


50


Tyng, D. A.


7


Tyng, Rev. Dudley


76, 80, 83, 85, 86


Tyng, Rev. S. H.


21


Updike, Daniel


2


Updike, History of Narragansett


Church


Preface


Usher, John, Sr.


4


Usher, John, Jr.


5, 6


Vail, Rt. Rev. T. H.


88


Viets, Rev. Roger


9


Vinton, Rt. Rev. A. H.


50


Vivian, Rev. N. G.


90


Vose, Everett


81


Wakefield, Ascension


19, 60, 89


Ward, Rev. John


6


Ward, Rev. Warren R. 73


Warwick, All Saints ( Pontiac) .... 91, 92 Warwick, Resurrection (Norwood) 91, 92


Warwick, St. Barnabas ( Apponaug) 91, 92


Warwick, St. Marks ( Hoxsie)


91, 92


Warwick, St. Mary's


38, 91, 92


Washburn, Rev. Arthur


50, 75


Waterman, Rev. Henry


20, 71, 72, 73


Waterman, Preserved


72


Watson, Rev. A. J.


79


Webb, Rev. Samuel 76, 82


Weir, Edith


Weis, Rev. R. L. 76


Welch, Rev. Elbridge 75


Westerly, Christ


19, 32, 88


Wheaton, Rev. Salmon


15, 18


White, Rt. Rev. William 7,8


Whitehall


2


Whitehead, Rev. W. Y.


83


Whittaker, Rt. Rev. O. W.


45


Whittingham, Rt. Rev. W. R.


23


Wickford, St. Pauls ( originally Narragansett Church )


3, 5, 13, 14, 19, 60, 88


Wicks, Rev. Asaph M.


79


Wilks, Mrs.


70


Williams, Rev. D. Q.


91, 94


Williams, Rt. Rev. John


26,32


Williams, Roger


1,2


Wood, Rev. A. M.


90,91


Woonsocket, St. James


Wright, Rev. J. H.


16, 17, 32, 77, 78, 81


89


Wyatt, Rev. J. R.


89


23-


4


HECKMAN BINDERY, INC. Bound-To-Please®


APRIL 04


N. MANCHESTER, INDIANA 46962





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