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  1. www.armedconflicts.com › Upton-LaRoy-Sunderland-t199902Upton, LaRoy Sunderland : U

    LaRoy Sunderland Upton LaRoy Sunderland Upton * 08.10.1869 Decatur, Michigan † 01.03.1927 ? brigádní generál

  2. Beginnings LaRoy Sunderland. The idea for a School of Theology begins in to the mid-1830s when the Junior Preachers’ Society of the New England Conference asked LaRoy Sunderland to write an “Essay on Theological Education,” published by the Methodist Episcopal Church office in New York during the second half of 1834. The introduction reports the essay was originally presented to the ...

  3. 5 de dic. de 2014 · Download File Sunderland, LaRoy. “Mormonism.” Zion’s Watchman (New York) 3, no. 9 (3 March 1838): 34. MORMONISM. origin of the book of mormon. Since the preceding articles on Mormonism were written, a book has been handed us, which not only unveils the imposition of this whole scheme, but satisfactorily accounts for the origin of…

  4. 20 de nov. de 2023 · Laroy Sunderland Starrett, que inventó la escuadra combinada en 1878, convirtió su experiencia en herramientas de medición de precisión en un negocio. Starrett, una de las mejores marcas de calibradores, fue fundada en Athol, Massachusetts, en 1880 por el inventor Laroy Sunderland Starrett.

  5. 5 de dic. de 2014 · Download File Sunderland, LaRoy. “Mormonism.” Zion’s Watchman (New York) 3, no. 2 (13 January 1838): 6. MORMONISM. The efforts which are now is in operation, in many places, to spread the peculiar views of a sect, generally known by the name of Mormons, or the “Latter Day Saints,” induces us to believe, that it may…

  6. 15 de nov. de 2023 · A long Sibley genealogy found on line says Horace W. Sibley (perhaps Laroy Starrett’s brother-in-law) was born in Augusta in 1845, son of William H. Sibley (Oct. 29, 1818 – Dec. 8, 1901) and his first wife, Judith W. Lowell (Sept. 5, 1809 – Sept. 1, 1878). It says nothing about Horace’s wife.

  7. 29 de jul. de 2013 · The Wesleyan Methodist Connection. On November 8, 1842, three prominent Methodist abolitionists—Orange Scott, LaRoy Sunderland, and Jotham Horton—announced that they were withdrawing from the denomination. Within weeks they were joined by two others, Luther Lee and Lucius Matlack. They had come to believe, Scott said, that it would be a sin ...