hide Matching Documents

The documents where this entity occurs most often are shown below. Click on a document to open it.

Document Max. Freq Min. Freq
Medford Historical Society Papers, Volume 6. 2 2 Browse Search
Medford Historical Society Papers, Volume 11. 1 1 Browse Search
Medford Historical Society Papers, Volume 15. 1 1 Browse Search
View all matching documents...

Your search returned 4 results in 3 document sections:

Medford Historical Society Papers, Volume 6., The Baptist Church of Medford. (search)
was contributed by Henry S. Washburn. In the evening there was a special service of song, including a hymn written for the occasion by one of the members of the church. Rev. Dr. Howe of Cambridge, with his crown of eighty-five years, Rev. James L. Hill, D. D., pastor of the Mystic Church, Rev. L. D. Bragg, of the Medford Methodist Episcopal Church, occupied the platform. A portion of the Scriptures was read by Deacon C. H. Clark, and a chapter from Baptist Chronicles, the contribution o town, Dr. E. Hunt, superintendent of Medford schools, Deacon Wilcox of the Mystic Church, Hon. James M. Usher of the Universalist Church, Mr. S. N. Mayo of the Methodist Church, Rev. W. S. Woodbridge, pastor of the Universalist Church, Rev. James L. Hill, D. D., pastor of the Mystic Church, and many others, added words of cheer. In the evening further services followed, and the two days celebration—red-letter days in the history of the First Baptist Church of Medford—was brought to a close.
Papers and addresses. 1907-8. Monday Evening course. October 21.—Jamaica. Illustrated. Mr. Rosewell B. Lawrence. November 18.—A Story of Gettysburg. Gen. Luther Stephenson of Hingham. December 16.—The Old State House. Mr. Charles F. Read of Brookline, clerk of the Bostonian Society. January 20.—Jamestown and the Jamestown Colony. Rev. James L. Hill, D. D. of Salem. February 17.—The First Parish in Medford. Rev. Henry C. DeLong. March 16.—Annual Meeting. April 20.—Our first railroad and how it was built. Illustrated. Mr. Moses W. Mann. May 18.—Old-fashioned Medicinal Remedies. Charles S. Ensign, Ll.B. of Newton. Saturday Evening course. December 7.—Some Pictures of the Far East. Illustrated. Dr. Walter G. Chase of Boston. January 4. —Samuel Adams. Mr. Charles G. Chick, President of the Hyde Park Historical Society. February 1. (Postponed to February 1.)—Some Brick-makers of Medford. Mr. George S. Delano. March 7.—A Pupil's Life in Mystic
ily News. The Rev. Hosea Ballou, President of Tufts College, wrote the Ancient History of Universalism, many pamphlets, and edited several hymn books. His sermons and newspaper articles have been reprinted. The Rev. Edward B. Hall wrote a Memoir of Mary L. Ware, Life and Character of Samuel Howe, and the Atonement. The Rev. Elias Nason published several biographies, a gazetteer of Massachusetts, and edited a hymn book. The Rev. E. C. Towne printed many of his sermons. The Rev. James L. Hill, retired from the ministry, now devotes his entire time to literary work. He has written the Growth of Government; Seven Sorts of Successful Sunday Evening Services, 1904; an election sermon preached before the Governor and Legislature in 1878, and numerous pamphlets on religious, social and historical topics. The Rev. Frank Ilsley Paradise is the author of The Church and the Individual, a book that has received wide and favorable comment. David Atwood Wasson was one of the mo