Henry Dana Ward

Henry Dana Ward (Shrewsbury, Massachusetts 1797-1884) was an American abolitionist, anti-Masonic campaigner, and Millerite Adventist. He was grandson of the Revolutionary general Artemas Ward.[1] He graduated from Harvard.[2][3]

Works

  • Free Masonry: Its Pretensions Exposed in Faithful Extracts of Its Standard Authors. 1828
  • Glad tidings : for the kingdom of heaven is at hand. 1838
  • The gospel of the Kingdom; a Kingdom not of this world; not in this world; but to come in the heavenly country, of the resurrection from the dead and of the restitution of all things 1870
  • History of the cross: the pagan origin, and idolatrous adoption and worship, of the image. 1871
gollark: Well, everything about English makes no sense.
gollark: Most of my greek typing is just one character in the middle of other stuff, so it would not be very useful to me to learn other layouts and set them up.
gollark: If only people (including me...) actually knew IPA so we could avoid messing with "thee-tah" and other ambiguous ways to say how to pronounce things.
gollark: It's not that hard, I just hold LWIN and type gqx.
gollark: I still struggle with ΞΎ (yes I do have Greek character macros set up for these extremely rare situations).

References

  1. The nation comes of age: a people's history of the ante-bellum years Page Smith - 1990 "Henry Dana Ward was the grandson of the Revolutionary general Artemas Ward. Born in Shrewsbury, Massachusetts, and a resident of Pennsylvania, Ward, at the time of the convention, was thirty-five, distinguished for his piety and ...
  2. Samuel Jones Tilden: a study in political sagacity Alexander Clarence Flick, Gustav Stubbs Lobrano - 1973 "Henry Dana Ward was a Harvard graduate, ...
  3. Adventist heritage: Volumes 15-17 1992 "Millerite convention leader Henry Dana Ward was not only an ardent New York city abolitionist but also a temperance organizer who had cut his reform teeth in the anti-Masonic movement of the 'twenties."
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.