Table of Contents
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- Jenkins, William (1779-1843)
- 1 Reverend William Jenkins, Presbyterian minister at Richmond Hill
- 2 and his reputation as a radical made Jenkins a popular clergyman among the isolated families
- 3 of Jenkins' heavy wedding schedule has been preserved in a
- 4 from Jenkins' marriage register: Index to medicines. Richmond
- 5 Jenkins proved himself a radical in both politics and
- 6 outside interests diverted Jenkins' attention from his own congregations. An 1835
- 7 the last three years of his life, Jenkins suffered from an illness that gradually
- 8 settler, took the lead in inviting the Reverend William Jenkins, a popular Presbyterian preacher, to
- 9 William Jenkins was born in Kirriemuir, Scotland, in 1779,
- 10 in 1817, Jenkins accepted invitations to form permanent
- 11 Jenkins' first communion service at Miles' Hill was
- 12 Mary-Lou Griffin Four years later, in 1821, Reverend Jenkins and his congregation finally completed their
- 13 hands of Reverend William Jenkins. After twelve years, Jenkins turned his
- 14 like Abner and James Miles, William Jenkins, and Benjamin Barnard - whose lives and
- 15 one time during the fateful year of 1837, Jenkins used a rather inflammatory text from the Book of
- 16 In religion, Lutherans and members of Reverend William Jenkins' Presbyterian congregations predominated. Only
- 17 with no Lutherans and no one from Reverend William Jenkins' Presbyterian congregations.
- 18 what of Reverend Jenkins, the religious patriarch of Richmond Hill
- 19 Jenkins had long been a critic of the Upper Canadian
- 20 Reverend William Jenkins: Jenkins continued as Richmond Hill's
- 21 the fiery tenure of Reverend William Jenkins to the conservative regime of Reverend James
- 22 Reverend William Jenkins was the first Presbyterian minister in Richmond
- 23 first service was held in 1817, by William Jenkins, but it was not until 1821 that the Presbyterians
- 24 Reverend William Jenkins and the
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Copyright © Richmond Hill Public Library Board, 1991
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