Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
John Mitchell Mason (March 19, 1770 – December 26, 1829) was an American preacher and theologian who was Provost of Columbia College in the early 1810s, and briefly President of Dickinson College in Carlisle, Pennsylvania in the early 1820s.
John Gresham Machen (/ ˈ ɡ r ɛ s əm ˈ m eɪ tʃ ən /; [b] 1881–1937) was an American Presbyterian New Testament scholar and educator in the early 20th century. He was the Professor of New Testament at Princeton Seminary between 1906 and 1929, and led a revolt against modernist theology at Princeton and formed Westminster Theological Seminary as a more orthodox alternative.
He was born at Pusey House in the village of Pusey in Berkshire (now administratively a part of Oxfordshire).His father, Philip Bouverie-Pusey, who was born Philip Bouverie and died in 1828, was a younger son of Jacob des Bouverie, 1st Viscount Folkestone; he adopted the name of Pusey on succeeding to the manorial estates there.
George Matheson FRSE (27 March 1842 – 28 August 1906) was a Scottish minister and hymn writer and prolific author. He was blind from the age of 17. He was blind from the age of 17. [ 1 ]
George Mason was born in Pershore, England, on 5 June 1629. [1] [3] He was the third of seven children of yeoman farmer Thomas Mason and his wife Ann French. [1] [2] George Mason was christened at Pershore Abbey, Holy Cross Church, Pershore, Worcestershire, on 10 June 1629. [1] [2]
Arthur James Mason (4 May 1851 – 24 April 1928) was an English clergyman, theologian and classical scholar. He was Lady Margaret's Professor of Divinity , Master of Pembroke College, Cambridge , and Vice-Chancellor of the University of Cambridge .
Mason was a member of the Episcopal Church and served as a vestryman of St. John's Church in King George, Virginia. [3] He moved to Fredericksburg around 1905 and remodeled a home owned by the Marye family. [3] [4] Mason died at his home in Fredericksburg on December 5, 1910. [4] He was buried at St. John's Church in King George. [9]
[2] [3] Mason was a Cavalier member of the Parliament of England during the reign of Charles I of England. George Mason I's great-grandson was George Mason IV (1725–1792), an American patriot, statesman, and delegate from Virginia to the U.S. Constitutional Convention.