Page images
PDF
EPUB

40 families. A meeting-house was completed in 1714. Dr. Williams's settlement was £200 a year; his salary was £55 a year, for five years, then to receive additions of £5 a year till it should reach £70. Dr. Williams's ordination sermon was preached by Mr. Williams of Hatfield, from Matt. ix. 38. Before his settlement in Longmeadow, he kept a school in Hadley one year. He had eight children. Stephen was ordained at Woodstock, Ct., Nov. 17, 1747, and died April 20, 1795; Warham was ordained at Northford, Ct., June 13, 1750, and died April, 1788; Nathan, D. D., ordained at Tolland, Ct., April 30, 1760, and died at a very advanced age. Dr. Williams's second wife was Mrs. Sarah Burt. Mr. Breck, of Springfield, preached his funeral sermon from 2 Kings ii. 9—12. In 1769, a new meeting-house was completed.-Mr. Storrs was early adopted into the family of Rev. Richard Salter, D. D. of Mansfield, Ct., and under his tuition was prepared for college. Mr. Storrs's funeral sermon was preached by Dr. Osgood, of Springfield, from 1 Cor. xv. 57. See Christian Spectator, ii. 54.

LUDLOW. The settlement of that part of the original town of Springfield, now called Ludlow, commenced about 1750. The names of some of the earliest families, were Colton, Hitchcock, Miller and Sikes. A meeting house was built in 1784, and Congregational church was formed in 1780. Mr. Steward was born Jan. 9, 1734. He died in Belchertown. Mr. Wright's ordination sermon was preached by Mr. Hale of Westhampton, from 1 Tim. ii. 1.

NOTE. In closing this sketch of the ecclesiastical statistics of the Old County of Hampshire, we again express our grateful obligations to various gentlemen who have kindly aided our inquiries, among whom we may specify Jacob Porter, M. D., of Plainfield, (to whose repeated communications as well as to whose valuable history of Plainfield we are much indebted,) Rev. T. M. Cooley, D. D. of Granville, Rev. Alfred Ely, D. D. of Monson, Rev. Emerson Davis of Westfield, Rev. N. Perkins of Amherst, Rev. R. C. Hatch of Warwick, Rev. Job Cushman of Prescott, Rev. Hervey Smith of West Springfield, Rev. T. Packard, Jr., of Shelburne, etc.

QUARTERLY LIST

OF

. ORDINATIONS AND INSTALLATIONS.

GEORGE F. TEWKSBURY, Cong. ord. pastor, Albany,
Maine, Jan. 31, 1839.

DANIEL CUSHMAN, Cong. inst. pastor, Boothbay, Me.
Feb. 7.

ELKANAH WALKER, Cong. ord. For. Miss. Brewer, Me.
Feb. 14.

LEWIS COLBY, Bap. inst. pastor, South Berwick, Me.
Feb. 21.

SAMUEL C. PRATT, Bap. ord. pastor, Nashua, New Hamp-
shire, Jan. 23, 1838.

P. I. NICHOLS, Cong. inst. pastor, Bath, N. II. Feb. 14.
T. P. BEACH, Cong. inst. pastor, Campton, N. H. Feb. 21.
ZERAH R. HAWLEY, Cong. ord. Evang. Plymouth, N. H.

[blocks in formation]
[blocks in formation]
[merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][subsumed][subsumed][subsumed][ocr errors][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][subsumed][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small]

SAXTON S. KELLOGG, æt. 26, Cong. (Theo. stud.), in the Theo, Sem. Bangor, Maine, Jan. 1838.

GIDEON W. OLNEY, æt. 45, Epis. Portland, Me. Feb. HENRY A. WALKER, æt. 30, Cong. (Theo. stud.), Charlestown, Massachusetts (died at St. Croix), Feb. 20, 1838.

HENRY SUMNER, æt. 64, Meth. Epis. Hebron, Connecticut, Jan. 18, 1838.

ASA CORNWALL, æt. 56, Epis. Cheshire, Ct. Jan. 28.

GEORGE MILLS, æt. 45, Epis. New York, N. Y. Feb. 25,

1838.

JAMES BUCKLEY, Meth. Epis. Bloomfield, New Jersey, March 15, 1838.

REV. WILLIAM F. HOUSTON, M. D. Pres. Wrightsville, Pennsylvania, Feb. 2, 1838.

THOMAS J. KITTS, æt. 49, Bap. Philadelphia, Pa. Jan. 24.

WILLIAM MURRAY STONE, D. D. Epis. Somerset Co. Maryland, February 26, 1838.

THOMAS READ, æt. 90, Epis. Montgomery Co. Md. Feb. 5.

WILLIAM J. PRITCHETT, Bap. Green Co. Illinois, March 7, 1838.

Whole number in the above list, 12.

New Hampshire....... 22

Vermont......
Massachusetts....

Rhode Island...........

82406

14

91

1838. January.......

8

February.......... 13
March.....
April............... 1

6 Total.......

[blocks in formation]

340

17

[merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][ocr errors][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small]

JOURNAL

OF

THE AMERICAN EDUCATION SOCIETY.

MAY, 1838.

ENGLISH CLASSICAL AND THEOLOGICAL INSTITUTIONS. WE have recently received Reports from the Dissenting Institutions of England and Scotland, and shall occasionally insert extracts from them in the Journal.

HOMERTON COLLEGE. Report of the Committee of the Society for educating Pious Young Men for the Work of the Ministry, in their College at Homerton, (formerly called the King's Head Society,) instituted in the Year 1730, and holding the Doctrines of the Reformed Churches, as they are summarily expressed in the Catechisms of the Westminster Assembly. WITH unfeigned thankfulness to the Father of mercies, the Committee of the HOMERTON COLLEGE SOCIETY present this Annual Report of their proceedings to their constituents, trusting that they will be found to have discharged faithfully all the duties of the office to which they were appointed.

They feel great pleasure in declaring their entire satisfaction with the internal state of the college. The reports of the tutors given at the monthly visits of your committee respecting the talents, diligence, and improvement of the students, and the evidence furnished of their excellent demeanor and of the harmony of feeling subsisting between them and the tutors, as well as among themselves, greatly encourage the hope that this institution will be a continued blessing to the church in supplying a succession of men who shall prove to be "scribes instructed in the kingdom of heaven," so as to "bring out of their treasure things new and old."

During the past year nine students have been received into the college, of whom four are under the patronage of the London Missionary Society.

Five students have left the college. Mr. John Masson has received a call to preside over a congregation in one of the Orkney Islands, where it is understood his labors are acceptable and useful. Mr. George Newenham Watson (who, as was intimated in the last report of your committee, had, by reason of ill health, been advised to withdraw for a time from his studies) was, at the beginning of the session in September, pronounced by medical men quite unfit to bear the confinement and applicaVOL. X. 52

tion of a college life, and in January last, he accepted a call to the oversight of the Independent Church at Chigwell Row, where he appears to have been instrumental of much good. Mr. Henry Joseph Haas has accepted a call from the Independent Church in Mersey Island, where he has labored for the last six months with great success. Mr. Edward Porter and Mr. Samuel Wolfe, Missionary students, have been appointed by the directors of their own society to stations in the East; the former to Chicacole and the latter to Pinang, whither they have departed in company with Mr. Colin Campbell, appointed to Bellary, who was formerly a student of this college under the patronage of the same society.

Your committee lament to record the death of one of your students who had given the highest promise of future excellence and usefulness. Mr. John Lloyd Morgan, who was admitted in March 1834, was under the necessity of leaving the college last February for home, in a state of health such as to excite very discouraging apprehensions; and on May 4th, he resigned his spirit into the hands of his Redeemer. His memory will be ever cherished with affection by his tutors and former associates.

Another young man of most devoted character, Mr. John Vaughan, (who had previously to the time of the last report been admitted as a probationer, and compelled almost immediately on account of ill health to return to his friends,) gradually declined, and at length was removed from the church on earth to the church in heaven.

The number of students at present in the college is nineteen, of whom eight are under the patronage of the London Missionary Society.

Your committee bow with submission to the great Disposer of human affairs in adverting to the fact that, during the past year, the society has sustained several losses by death: and they deem it their duty to mention with more than ordinary

410

ENGLISH CLASSICAL AND THEOLOGICAL INSTITUTIONS.

respect and esteem the name of Ebenezer
Maitland, Esq. This gentleman had for-
merly filled, in a very efficient manner, the
office of treasurer to this society, and your
committee, upon receiving the intelligence
of his death, passed a resolution which is
recorded in their minutes, and which they
beg to extract as the best mode of expressing
their sentiments on this loss to the society.
"The committee of the Homerton Col-
lege Society, having been informed of the
decease of Ebenezer Maitland, Esq., can-
not but feel itself bound, with respect to
that distinguished friend of this institution,
to record its affectionate and grateful sense
of the wisdom and kindness with which he
never failed to regard this college, the
lively interest which he always took in its
affairs, the zeal with which he sustained
and advanced its efficiency, and his valuable
services by attending its committee and
other meetings so long as the possession of
health permitted such exertion. All the
members and friends of the college partake
with the committee in feeling the loss
which the cause of learning and religion
has sustained; a loss under which their
minds are consoled by reflecting upon the
Christian character of Mr. Maitland, his
exemplary faith and devotedness to God,
his meek submissiveness, and holy serenity
under severe and protracted illness, and the
abundant evidence that his release from this
state of trial and sorrow is an absence from
the body to be present with the Lord, and
to enjoy an abundant entrance into the ever-
lasting kingdom of our Lord Jesus Christ."
Other causes, besides death, having ope-
rated to lessen the number of subscribers,
it is earnestly hoped that all the friends of
this ancient institution, and the friends of
sound learning as well as devoted piety in
the Christian ministry, will zealously exert
themselves to supply new names in the
place of those which no longer appear, and
even to increase the former number, so as
to render this place the means of diffusing
still more copiously and effectually the bles-
sings of the gospel of our Lord Jesus Christ.

[blocks in formation]

[MAY,

To the above statement it is thought proper to append the following remarks, explanatory of the important purposes of the college, and of the mode of admission into it.

The object of this institution is to support twenty young men of decided and approved piety, who possess respectable talents, and are desirous of devoting themselves to the glory of God and the immortal welfare of mankind, by engaging in the work of the Christian ministry, in pursuing a course of study adapted to the attainment of such branches of literature as may best qualify them for the intelligent and honorable discharge of the sacred office to which they aspire. The period of time allotted to the entire course is six years; the first two of which are occupied solely in classical pursuits, and the remaining four in classical, theological, and philosophical studies. In cases where a classical education has been previously enjoyed, the two-years' term may be contracted proportionably to the attainments which have been made, if the tutors judge proper.

The present tutors are,

Rev. JOHN PYE SMITH, D. D. Rev. DANIEL GODFREY BISHOP. Applicants for admission into the college may address their letters of application either to one of the tutors, or to any member of the committee. These letters must contain a concise statement, drawn up by the applicant himself; first, of what in his judgment are the principal truths of the Christian religion; secondly, of the means by which he hopes that he himself has become a real Christian; and thirdly, of the motives by which he is induced to wish to engage in the work of the ministry. A recommendation signed by the pastor of the church of which the applicant is a member, must accompany his application; which will be strengthened by the additional signatures of the deacons of that church, or any respectable minister who may be acquainted with the case. As the recommendation thus required is a document to which great importance is attached, it is earnestly hoped that the ministers who may sign such recommendations will not be induced so to do upon slight grounds, nor without the most satisfactory assurance of the religious character and estimable qualities, both moral and intellectual, of the young men whom they thus recommend; since it is scarcely possible to conceive of the infliction of a greater injury upon the Christian church, than the introduction of persons into the ministry who are not thus distinguished. In case of the approval by the committee of the preliminary documents now specified, the applicant will receive an appointment to attend a meeting of the committee, for the purpose of such conversation with him as shall appear expedient;

upon the favorable termination of which, helating critically with the lxx. Also, the will be admitted to a probation for three third chapter of Daniel in the Chaldee, and months, preparatory to his full admission, the third chapter of the Gospel of John in which will then depend upon the report the Syriac. respecting him made by the tutors. Receipts of the society during the year were £1,776 15s. 6d.

HACKNEY THEOLOGICAL SEMINARY. Extracts from the Report of the Village Itinerancy, or Evangelical Association, for spreading the the Gospel in England, &c. Read at the Annual Meeting of this Society, holden at Well-Street Chapel, Hackney.

FOR Some time past your committee have felt it important to make some arrangements for the better accommodation of the students in the Academy House. The lease of the adjoining houses being to be sold under the same title as your own, your committee, after careful inspection, purchased the same for a term of thirty years. The premises have since been commodiously fitted up for the purposes of the institution; some important alterations and necessary repairs have been accomplished in the Academy House. The expense of purchase, the alterations and necessary repairs, (as per contract,) and the additional furniture, will, altogether, amount to more than £500.

The Academy House having been originally presented to the society by the late Rev. John Eyre, this is the first extensive outlay (except for repairs) which has taken place since the commencement of the theological institution in the year 1803.

On the 23d and 24th of June last, the examiners of the students attended at the

Academy House. The following is the report of the chairman, addressed to your committee:

66

"Mr. Brainsford and Mr. Firnie read each a very meritorious Essay on the influence of Judaism on Christianity; and Mr. Heath read an Essay of superior character on the different comparative results of the Colonization of North America and South America, in respect to religion.

"I have the satisfaction of attesting the evident marks of diligence and accuracy with which the students must have pursued their labors. One entire day, and the greater part of another, having been devoted to the examination, it may be inferred that the readings were not brief and hasty, and I record with lively pleasure, my conviction, that the students under the valuable instruction and superintendence of their tutors, are laying a good foundation for the learned and critical study of the Holy Scriptures, during the course of their future ministry, in an age which will require the most enlarged and efficient apparatus for the promulgation, and the defence of the gospel. I must add, that the exertions of commendation, as their progress, considthe third (Junior) class deserves particular ering the time, is beyond expectation, even allowing for their previous advantages.

"I greatly rejoice in the state and prospects of the institution, and feel a strong persuasion, that it has not yet attained to the eminence and usefulness to which it is destined by the great Head of the church. To the Chairman of the Committee of the JOSEPH TURNBULL, A. B. Hackney Theological Seminary."

Messrs. Heath and Brainsford, two of your students, who were introduced to your seminary under peculiar recommendations of their respective pastors, and other re

Report of the Examination of the Students of the Hackney Theological Sem-spectable ministers, have recently offered inary. themselves to the Directors of the London Missionary Society, and have been accepted for the service of that important institution.

"JUNIOR CLASS. Messrs. Hughes, Bullen, and Richards. Latin-The Eclogues of Virgil-Fourth Oration of Cicero against Catiline In Greek, Lucian's Dialogues.

"SECOND CLASS.-Messrs. Heal, Morgan, Harrison, Brainsford, and Firnie. Fourth Book of the Eneid of Virgil-clades caudina in Livy · Herodotus-Gospel of John from the Greek, critically.

"FIRST CLASS. -Messrs. Forward, Causby, Chater, and Heath. (Mr. Mial had left the seminary before the examination took place.) Second Book of the Odes of Horace-Life of Agricola, by TacitusFirst Book of the Iliad of Homer-Crito, from the Dialogues of Plato-The Epistle of Paul to the Romans in Greek, with critical Analysis First Chapter of Isaiah in Hebrew. In addition to the above, Mr. Heath, of this class, read Portions of the Prophecy of Habakkuk in Hebrew, col

Mr. Heath is about to accompany Messrs. Murray and Hardy, from Homerton College, with others, on a mission to the Navigators Islands in the South Seas. It is fully hoped, that the acquisitions which Mr. Heath has already made, (some of which have been specifically noticed in the report of the examination,) will qualify him, as an associate with his esteemed brethren, for the important work of translating the Holy Scriptures in the South Sea Islands.

And that Mr. Brainsford's talents, as a regular practitioner of Surgery and Medicine, aided by his diligent and successful attention to languages, since he came to your institution, will peculiarly qualify him for a mission to the Negro colonies, or any other station to which the directors may appoint him.

« PreviousContinue »