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Auburn Theological Seminary was established in Auburn, New York, by action of the Presbyterian Synod of Geneva on 16 August 1818. [1] It obtained a charter from the New York State legislature on 14 April 1820 [4] as a post-baccalaureate theological seminary, and it matriculated its first students in 1821. [5]
The Willard Memorial Chapel and the adjoining Welch Memorial Hall are historic conjoined buildings located at 17 Nelson Street in Auburn, Cayuga County, New York.Built 1892–1894 for the Auburn Theological Seminary, the buildings contain an ecclesiastical installation of stained glass and interior decoration by Louis Comfort Tiffany that is still in its original setting.
The Ezra A. Huntington House, at 11 Seminary St. in Auburn, New York, was built in 1861.It served as the house of first president of the Auburn Theological Seminary.It is somewhat Italianate in style.
St. John's Atonement Minor Seminary (Montour Falls) - Founded in 1923 in Garrison, New York for high school and junior college age candidates to the Society, relocated in 1948 and changed to a four-year institution in 1956, closed in 1967; operated by the Franciscan Friars of the Atonement.
C.C.C., as it is known locally, is located on Franklin Street. The city had been the home of Auburn Theological Seminary, a Presbyterian institution established in 1818, which relocated to New York City in 1939. [19]
Auburn Theological Seminary Melancthon Woolsey Stryker (January 7, 1851 – December 6, 1929), an American clergyman, was pastor of the Fourth Presbyterian Church in Chicago and president of Hamilton College in upstate New York from 1892 to 1917.
He was born at Walton, New York to Isaac Headley, a Presbyterian clergyman, and Irene Benedict Headley. [1] Headley first planned to study law, but after graduating from Union College in 1839, he took a course in theology at the Auburn Theological Seminary in Auburn, New York.
After attending Avery College and graduating from Lincoln University as valedictorian in 1874, in 1877 he was the first black graduate of Auburn Theological Seminary in New York. [ 2 ] [ 4 ] His graduating address "The Problem of Race Reconciliation in the South" was made all the more remarkable by the fact that ten years previously he could ...