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John Angell James's brother, Thomas (1789-1873), also became a pastor, based in London. His brother James was a deacon at Carrs Lane Chapel. His sister Harriet married Rev. Richard Keynes who became pastor of the Congregational church in Salisbury Street, Blandford Forum, where John Angell James had attended as a child.
Vine was born in the second quarter of 1873, in Blandford Forum, Dorset. [1] His father ran the Mount Radford School, which moved to Exeter in 1875, and it was in this location that Vine was raised. He became a Christian at an early age and was baptised in the Plymouth Brethren assembly in Fore Street, Exeter. [2]
Born on 6 May 1875, Fynes-Clinton was the son of Charles Henry Fynes-Clinton, Rector of Blandford Forum, Dorset, following an initial career as a civil engineer, [2] and of his wife Thomasina Gordon Shaw of Ballyoran, County Down. [3] He was the grandson of Charles John Fynes Clinton, Rector of Cromwell, Nottinghamshire. [4]
The main road running through the town is the B3082, connecting Blandford Forum to Wimborne Minster. Blandford Forum is around 33 miles (53 kilometres) southwest of junction 1 of the M27 motorway at Cadnam. Buses run from the town to locations including Poole, Bournemouth, Salisbury and Shaftesbury with the primary operator being Wilts & Dorset.
Left over doctrinal drift; now Newquay Evangelical Church Penhill URC, Swindon Swindon, Wiltshire: 1950s ... Blandford Forum URC Blandford Forum, Dorset: 1661
The Town Hall, Blandford Forum Blandford Forum, Church of St. Peter and St. Paul. John (ca 1688–1770) and William Bastard (ca 1689–1766) were British surveyor-architects, and civic dignitaries [1] of the town of Blandford Forum in Dorset. [2] John and William generally worked together and are known as the "Bastard brothers".
Top GOP candidates converge in Iowa for evangelical Christian forum that Trump skipped. Alayna Treene, Veronica Stracqualursi and Kit Maher, CNN. November 17, 2023 at 7:30 PM. Getty Images.
The Pump House, Blandford Forum, Dorset, England, is an 18th-century water source erected in 1760 in commemoration of a fire which almost destroyed the town in 1731. It was designed and paid for by John Bastard who, with his brother William, worked as builders and architects and were largely responsible for the town's reconstruction.