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  2. Lutheran Theological Seminary at Philadelphia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lutheran_Theological...

    The Schaeffer-Ashmead Chapel, renovated in 2004, is the campus worship center, and is adjacent to the William Allen Plaza, completed in 2009 as a public space that is used by both the seminary and Mt. Airy communities. A peace pole was donated by the class of 2010 and erected on the plaza.

  3. Mount Airy, Philadelphia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mount_Airy,_Philadelphia

    Sedgwick Theater in Mount Airy, a 1920s Art Deco movie theatre. In 2011, The New York Times described the influx of new businesses to Mount Airy as a "cultural revival" buoyed by "the neighborhood's reasonable housing costs and relatively safe streets." [17] In 2013, CNNMoney named Mount Airy one of America's top ten best big-city neighborhoods ...

  4. United Lutheran Seminary - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_Lutheran_Seminary

    Founded by the Ministerium of Pennsylvania in 1864 to preserve both Lutheran identity and the study of and instruction in the German language, the Lutheran Theological Seminary at Philadelphia was first located in the Center City District. It relocated to Mount Airy in 1889, a historic site where the first shots of the American Revolution's ...

  5. Germantown Jewish Centre - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Germantown_Jewish_Centre

    The minyan grew and attracted new residents to Mount Airy, and within a few years there were 90 adult members and about 25 children. [17] [18] Germantown Minyan members were part of a network of East Coast havurot that met several times a year from the early 1970s until 1981 at Weiss’ Farm in New Jersey and later at Fellowship Farm near ...

  6. Pennsylvania School for the Deaf - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pennsylvania_School_for...

    The current campus occupies buildings in the Old Germantown Academy. The Pennsylvania School for the Deaf is the third-oldest school of its kind in the United States.Its founder, David G. Seixas (1788–1864), was a Philadelphia crockery maker-dealer who became concerned with the plight of impoverished deaf children who he observed on the city's streets. [1]

  7. Henry Eyster Jacobs - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Henry_Eyster_Jacobs

    He graduated from Pennsylvania College in 1862 and from the Lutheran Theological Seminary at Gettysburg in 1865. Between 1870 and 1883, he was professor at Pennsylvania College. He was then appointed professor of systematic theology in The Lutheran Theological Seminary in Mount Airy, where he also assumed the office of dean in 1894.