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  1. La Roy Sunderland (May 18, 1804 – May 15, 1885) was an American minister and abolitionist. He left the Methodist Episcopal Church in 1842 after a dispute over slavery and helped organize the Wesleyan Methodist Church the next year.

  2. Methodist minister, abolitionist, and magnetist. Sunderland was born May 18, 1804, in Exeter, Rhode Island. He was apprenticed to a shoemaker. He became converted to Methodism and became a revivalist preacher at the age of 18.

  3. In November 1842, La Roy Sunderland, Orange Scott and Jotham Horton, leading abolitionists and ministers, withdrew from the Methodist Episcopal Church. The first issue of the True Wesleyan, Scott's anti-slavery newspaper, published an announcement of their withdrawal and their reasons for deciding to do so.

  4. The L. S. Starrett Company ( NYSE : SCX) is an American manufacturer of tools and instruments used by machinists, tool and die makers, and the construction industry. The company was founded by businessman and inventor Laroy Sunderland Starrett in 1880.

  5. 10 de ago. de 2006 · Sunderland's text first appeared in articles published by his NYC Zion's Watchman in 1837-38, written partly in response to P. P. Pratt's 1837 A Voice of Warning. Pratt responded with his own Mormonism Unveiled in 1838 and Sunderland issued a totally new edition of Mormonism Exposed in 1842.

  6. 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.

  7. 27 de feb. de 2013 · Two vocal abolitionists, Laroy Sunderland and Orange Scott, faced great opposition, left the Methodist Episcopal Church and helped organize the Wesleyan Methodist Church in 1843.