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Lindsey, 326

Lingard, 280, 282, 285
Litchfield, 41
Little, 318
Livingston, 230

Lloyd, 74

Loftus, 2

Lombard, 76, 279

Longley, 230
Longman, 281
Loomis, 313, 319-20
Lord, 101-2, 316, 363
Loring, 230
Love, 101

Ludlow, 143, 268, 318
Lum, 101

Luther, 24, 76, 110, 271
Lyman, 40, 45-6, 49, 50
Lynde, 411
M'Arthur, 419
McCabe, 203

McCallum, 318

McClure, 145. 203

McCollom, 318

McDonald, 102

McEwen, 51
McGinley, 319
McKeen, 313

McLaughlin, 230, 419

McLean, 419

McLeod, 230, 419
Macauley, 142

Mackey, 388
Macock, 74

Magoon, Magoun, 319, 373, 417
Malcolm, 199

Maltby, 51, 157, 230, 319, 388

Mandeville, 389

Mann, 51, see obituaries, 226, 231,

397, 405

Manning, 1, 319

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Meyer, 67

Middlebury College, graduates of, Ousamequin, 133

noticed, 418

Miller, 231

Mills, 46, 113, 392, 412

Milner, 278, 294

Milton, 195, 216-17, 278, 410
Miner, Minor, 230, 267
Ministers. Am. Cong. in 1858, num-
ber of. 88; marriages of, 103, 231,
319, 419; dismissals of, 100, 230,
318, 419; ordinations and instal-
lations of, 100, 230, 318, 419;
deaths of, 103, 231, 320, 419
Ministers, the old way of support-
ing, 158; their civil and eccle-
siastical relation to churches and
societies, 165 et seq.
Missions, A. B. C. F., origin of,
46, 339

Missionary statistics, 385
Monroe, 223

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Otis, 231, 318

Packard, 50, 102, 419

Packenham, 199

Page, 100

Paine, 51, 319, 351, 399
Paley, 409
Palfrey, 131

Palmer, 90-1, 94, 223, 318-19, 322
Paris, 280
Parish, 62

Park, 30, 36, 60, 70, 89, 102, 309,
311, 319

Parker, 101, 228, 280, 318, 394
Parsons, 43, 231
Partridge, 162
Pascal, 122

Pastor and People, their civil and
ecclesiastical relation, 165-178
Pastoral relation, defined, 166; how
formed, 166; tenure of, 168; how
dissolved, 170; Pastors, dismis-
sals of. 100, 230, 318, 419
Patton, 326

Pavely, 281

Moore, More, 45, 199, 285-6, 319, Payson, 334

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Marsh. 230, 319-20, see obituaries, Nelson, 50-1, 199, 355

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Peters, 51, 363

Philip, 131

Phillips, 114-15, 159, 261; William,

sketch of, 333-340; 410

Pickard, 389

Pickering, 107, 169, 175

Pierpont, suit of, 174, 176–7
Pike, 231

dians, 129

Martyr, 76

Mason, 89, 310, 337, 353
Massachusetts General Association,
sketch of, 38-53
Massachusetts, statistics of Congre-
gationalists in, 320
Massasoit, 132
Masson, 217, 410
Mather, 7, 13, 14, 49, 69, 70, 103,
137, 143, 160, 172; Cotton, bio-
graphical sketch of, 233-264;
theology of, 239; usefulness, 244;
literary character, 246, 276, 334,
393

Matheson, Mathewson, 180, 357
Matthew of Westminster, 250
Maxy, 309

Mead, Meade, 47, 50, 102-3, 186,
314
Meadows, 10
Means, 51, 145, 319
Meech, 353, 355
Meeting-houses, historically and
suggestively, 186-214; early, 186;
plans of, 191, 213-14, 301-3; views
of, 187, 189, 192-3, 198, 205, 207,
212, 369; kind suitable for Con-
gregationalists, 206-14; ventila-
tion of, 211, 300, 369

Mellidge, 332

Newell, 46, 231, see obituaries, 314 Pilgrims, did they wrong the In-

15
Newman, 101

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Obituaries; see Table of Contents. Pratt, 100-1, 319, 398
Ogden, 389
Oldham, 144
Oldmixon, 247
Olds, 101
Oliphant, 51

Mendicant orders, corruption of, Oliver. 129, 157

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Presbyterian, Theol. Seminaries in
the U. S., 185
Presbyterians; in Western New
York, 151; co-operation in A. H.
M. Society, 359-368; union with
Congregationalists, 363; statis-
tics of, 127, 388; missionary ef
forts of, 389
Preston, 352

Prince, Thomas, sketch of, 1-16;
70, 107, 148, 231, 234-6, 240, 25,

396

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Puritan Sabbath, 271
Putnam, 41, 101, 229, 319, 351
Pynchon, 74
Quarterly, Congregational, plan of,
212; arrangements with Congre-
gational Library Association, 328;
with Am Cong. Union, 322
Quincy, 3, 251, 255-7, 263, 311, 335
-7
Quint, title, 51-2, 77, 124, 135, 165,
180, 228, 231, 233, 296, 322, 332,

385

Randall, 149

Rankin, 101

Ransom, 391

Ray, 101, 418

Skelton, 159

Skeele, 103
Slocum, 419

Smalley, 51, 309, 315, 388
Smith, 3, 50, 100, 102, 104, 181,
229, 230, 267, 311, 318-19, 326,
392, 419

Snell, 47-52, 103, 224
Snow, 266
Socinus, 121
Somerby, 142
Soule. 230
Southgate, 11

Southworth, 133, 230
Spalding, 44, 50

Sparks, 237, 241, 253, 260-1, 263
Spear, 318

Read, Reed, 101, 181, 267, 319, 326 Spencer, 101, 199, 230, 398

Religions in the world, 372

Reynolds, 41, 51

Rice, 50, 101, 319, 389, 419

Richard II., 284, 313, 318

Richards, 221, 231, 268, see obitua-
ries, 316

Richardson, 100-1, 107, 355
Richmond, see obituaries, 315;
sketch of the life of Giibert, 397-

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Spilman, 389

Sprague, 39, 44, 47, 115

Spring, 44-8, 66, 114-16, 118, 227,

384
Spurgeon, 382
Squeb, 144
Stacy, 398
Stallburg, 113
Standish, 133
Stanton, 2, 11
Stapfer, 118

Statistics, American Congregation-
al, 77-89; Baptists, 126, 385;
Baptist, Free Will, 127; Congre-
gationalists in Massachusetts,
320; Congregationalists in vari
ous States, 411; Dutch Reform-
ed, 125, 385; Episcopal, Protes-
tant, 127; General, 296; Metho-
dist, 125, 299, 387; Missionary,
389; Presbyterian, 127, 388; Re-
ligions of the world, 372; Roman
Catholic, 298; Swedenborgian,
299; Unitarian, 297; Universa-
list, 297
Statistics, Mortuary, of graduates
of Andover Theological Semina-
ry, 357

Statistics, defects in our, 139-141;
suggestions regarding, 320; what
desirable, and how to be collect-
ed, 135-141

Stearns, 45, 60, 101, 103; suit of,
175-6; see obituaries, 221-3, 311,
364

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Seeley, 51, 100

Sulpicius, 23

Severs, 11

Sumner, 42, 143

Sewall, 11-13, 50, 64, 102-3,

256, Swain, 228, 319

Swan, 102

260, 312, 318-19, 396

Seymour, 318, 352

Shaw, 194

Shay, 338

Shedd, 310

Swedenborgian Statistics, 299
Sweetser, 51, 102, 228, 319

Swift, 101, 104.

Sykes, 318

Tallman, 193

Sheldon, 51, 95, suit of, 169, 173, Taggart, 50

175

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Ticknor, 13

Tillotson, 350, 352

Tilton, 89. 217, 311
Tindal, 21
Todd, 51, 101, 319, 327
Todhunter, 391
Tompkins, 326
Torrey, 230, 318
Towle, 370
Towns, 51, 60
Townsend, 391
Tracy, 69, 217
Trask, 412
Treadwell, 46
Treat, 150

Tripp, see obituaries, 226
Trumbull, 39, 143, 148-9, 267
Tucker, 51
Tuckney, 241, 394
Tufts, see obituaries, 418
Tupper, 319

Turner, 46, 50, 319, 322
Twining, 192
Twitchell, 190, 319
Tyler, 103, 188, 218, 319
Tyng, 94
Tyte, 39

Uhden's N. E. Theocracy, 95, 132
Underwood, 103

Unitarian statistics, 297

Unitarianism, its rise in New Eng-
land, 254

Universalist statistics, 297

University of Vermont, graduates
of, noticed, 415
Upham, 103, 318
Upson, 315

Urban V., 281

Usher, 286

Vail, 50-1

Vattel, 132

Vaughan, 278-80, 283-6, 289-91

Ventilation, 211, 300-8, 369-372
Vermilye, 101

Vicars, 217

Vitringa, 118

Vose, 353

Wadsworth, 353

Waddington, 324, 327

Waite, 101, 103

Waldo, 311

Wales, 39

Walker 50, 101-2, 188, 228, 231,

318, 319, 326

Wallace, 180, 230, 318

Walley, 46, 337

Walworth, 354

Wannapoke, 132

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Wise, 30, 255, 360

Wisner, 7, 11, 12, 14, 16, 50, 74,
339, 363

Withington, 51, 230, 311
Wodeford, 282

Wolcott, Henry and his children,
141-150; 232, 311, 326, see obit
uaries. 413-14

Wood, 100-1, 103, 268, 270, 318,
326

Woodbridge, 41, 44, 46, 50, 51, 249
Woodbury, 51

Woodruff, 100, 103, 230

Woods, 45 49, 50, 69, Leonard,
sketch of his life, 105-124; 320,

863

Woolsey, 324, 326, 419

Willard, 40, 42, 74, 102, 104, 261, Worcester, 45-51, 224, see obitua

395-6

Willet, 101

Willey, Willie, 319, 412

Wells, 43-4, 47, 103, 145, see obitu William I., 122

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William and Mary, 254

Williams, 50, 103, 143, 216, 231,
268, 318, 390

Williams College, graduates of, no-
ticed, 46, 47, 52, 225, 268
Willis, 219, 314
Williston, 50

Wilson, 42, 134, 159, 187, 334, 350-
2, 364, 388, 419
Windsor, 101, 230
Winkle, 186
Winslow, 100, 217

Winthrop, 13, 129, 134, 143, 159–60,
186, 334, 360

aries, 415, 419
Woodsworth, 202
Wren, 194, 207
Wright, 40, 104, 419
Wrutherner, 133
Wylie, 388, 389

Xavier, 98
Xenophon, 113

Yale College, graduates of, noticed,
41-4, 47, 266--8, 314-15, 412
Yockney, 392

Young, 144, 228, 411

Young Men's Christian Associa
tions, formed by Cotton Mather,
245

THE

CONGREGATIONAL QUARTERLY:

A Denominational Journal of Facts, Principles and Arguments :

CONDUCTED, UNDER THE SANCTION OF THE

CONGREGATIONAL LIBRARY ASSOCIATION,

AND THE

AMERICAN CONGREGATIONAL UNION,

REV. JOSEPH S. CLARK, D.D.,
REV. HENRY M. DEXTER,

BY

REV. ALONZO H. QUINT, AND
REV. ISAAC P. LANGWORTHY.

THIS new candidate for public favor was started in January last, without a single pledged subscriber, in the conviction that a felt need existed for just such a Journal as it was designed to be, and that the Public, and the Congregational denomination, especially, would sustain it. It was thought by its projectors, that a Quarterly which should confine itself strictly, though not bigotedly, to the literature, principles, history, statistics, necessities, aims and hopes of the denomination now representing our Pilgrim Fathers all over this continent, and which should so concentrate within its pages that which every intelligent Congregationalist desires and needs to know, might not merely find support, but might hope to do much good-in disseminating needed information; in reviving the memory of the virtues of the fathers, and advocating again the principles to which they gave the vigor of their love and life; in commending the simple Polity of the New Testament, and of the first and second centuries of the Christian Church, afresh to the minds of the thinking world; in binding together Congregationalists-East and West, North and South-by a warmer mutual interest, and a more cordial mutual confidence; and in indirectly advancing "whatsoever things are honest, whatsoever things are just, whatsoever things are pure, whatsoever things are lovely, whatsoever things are of good report." It was, moreover, felt that a Journal which should, in some measure, take the place biographically and statistically left vacant by the suspension of the American Quarterly Register, (files of which now command the highest price in the book-market,) if suited to the popular taste, would meet with large acceptance.

The Editors and Proprietors are now happy to assure the Christian public that although no 'agency' has been employed, the response to their efforts has been such—in the practical form of cash subscriptions-as not only to save them from loss in the large expenditure incident to the first year of any such enterprise, but to make the continuance and improvement of the Quarterly, at the same low price, a thing of course. It is made clear that the Congregational churches and ministry desire and will sustain such a Journal.

The CONGREGATIONAL QUARTERLY will, therefore, continue to be issued, as heretofore, at ONE DOLLAR A YEAR, IN ADVANCE,

and will be enlarged so as to make an annual volume of at least 450 pages, with four elegant steel portraits, wood-cuts of church elevations and plans, &c., &c., and other features as heretofore. The January number (1860) will contain the statistics formerly published in the YEAR BOOK, in addition to its usual variety of other matter.

Please remember that no name is entered on the subscription list unless accompanied with One Dollar in current funds, and that no former subscription will be continued (and no numbers be sent) for 1860, unless the dollar is first remitted. At this price, positively no credit can be given.

Be careful to give your exact Post-Office address; with your State and County, if West or South.

Direct all communications to:

(See over.)

"THE CONGREGATIONAL QUARTERLY, CHAUNCY ST., BOSTON, MASS."

The CONGREGATIONAL QUARTERLY, (so far as its Proprietors are informed,) has been invariably received with favor by the Press, and by private critics. From the very large number of commendatory notices which have been forwarded to the office of publication, the following are selected to enable its readers to judge of the impression it has made upon the public.

A work which should interest and receive the support of every lover of Congregationalism.-Me. Evangelist.

This new-comer into the Periodical Family appears with a fair record, and well known sponsors.-Christian Mirror.

We

The object of the work is a good one. think it will have a wide circulation, and do a good work.- Vermont Chronicle.

It is very handsomely printed, and contains matter of much interest to New England Ministers.-Boston Recorder.

Just the thing that has long been needed. It is the only national and broad Church Journal of the denomination, and ignores all schools and parties, and means courageously and honestly to attain perfect impartiality in its records and reasonings.

All will, at least, confess that it is a model of cheapness. One hundred and four pages with a steel engraving, four times repeated, for one dollar per annum, is a phenomenon unknown before. We hope it will always be known hereafter.-Congregationalist.

Abounding in just the argument, statistics and information that go to form the right ideal of such a denominational issue.-(Baptist) Watchman and Reflector.

Its design is to promote the interests of Congregationalism, and judging from this number, we regard it as admirably adapted to this end. We wish that our own denomination might be stimulated to a similar enterprise.-(Baptist) Christian Era.

It is conducted by Revs. J. S. Clark, D.D., H. M. Dexter, and A. H. Quint; an admirable trio for the purpose--Dr. Clark being thoroughly versed in the history and literature of Congregationalism, Mr. Dexter an able expounder of its principles and working, and Mr. Quint being the most thorough and philosophical statistician that the denomination boasts. In historical and statistical matters this Quarterly will make good the place of The American Quarterly Register, while as a popular exponent of the great principles of the Congregational faith and order, it will preserve alive much which, through long neglect, was beg nning to perish.-Independent.

Certainly without a parallel for cheapness among the quarterlies of America.-R. I. Schoolmaster.

We have long needed just such a publication for our enlargement, and indeed, self-defence, as a denomination, and this number most worthily gives promise of what is to come.-Kev. W. T. Dwight, D.D., Portland, Me.

I like the plan and the work, thus far, very much. -Rev J. W. Chickering, D.D., Portland, Me.

Please find enclosed, one dollar, my subscription to your valuable, excellent, most desirable (and is it not too cheap?) publication.-Rev. N. Adams, D.D., Boston.

I have examined the Congregational Quarterly, and think it a work of very great importance to the Congregational connection and to the community.Rev. W. A. Stearns, D.D., President of Amhers! College.

It is my settled rule not to meddle at all with publications of any sort, in the way of inducing my people to subscribe for them, preferring to let them act wholly for themselves. I have, however, been so desirous to have this Quarterly taken, and hope so much from it, that I have made an exception in its favor. I send, herewith, a list of thirteen names.Rev. Ray Palmer, D.D., Albany, N. Y.

The objects proposed, denominationally considered, are appropriate and important to Congregationalists and to Congregationalism, as an ecclesiastical system, and in their promotion you will doubtless have the countenance of the entire denomination.-Rer. Edward W. Hooker, D.D., Fairhaven, Vt.

I am highly pleased with your Quarterly, and wish you the largest success.-Rev. W. I. Budington, D.D., Brooklyn, N. Y.

In enclosing my subscription for the Congrega tional Quarterly, I wish to express to you my grati fication that such a work is to be added to our periodical literature. I have always lamented the demise of the old Quarterly Register. I think that several religious periodicals, of heavier pretensions, could have been more easily spared. I am accustomed still to refer to the volumes of that Quarterly for information which, so far as I know, is accessible in no other form. I very cordially welcome the appearance of its successor. The historical and statistical accumulations in such a work must soon become invaluable to scholarly men, and especially to those who appreciate our Congregational polity-a polity which essentially grows out of the actual history of the churches, and has more than once been modified by that history. Such a work, continued through a quarter of a century, may become a more truthful exponent of Congregationalism as it is, than any more ancient and venerable "Platform."-Rev. Aus tin Phelps, D.D., Andover, Ms.

I have read with much interest the first number of the Congregational Quarterly Journal, and I earnest ly desire that the periodical, so well begun, may be liberally patronized. The American Quarterly Regis ter, which was conducted by the late Prof. B. B. Edwards, is a work to which I often refer; and I trust that the "Congregational Quarterly "will long continue to supply the place of that excellent "Register."-Edwards A. Park, D.D., Andover.

I have no hesitation in saying that I am much pleased with the numbers of the Congregational Quarterly thus far. The industry and thoroughness manifested in it, in the collection of statistics, the ability of its articles, and its general spirit, would lead me to wish for it, as they can hardly fail to se cure, a very wide circulation.-Mark Hopkins, D.D., President of Williams College.

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