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Your search for Jenkins, William (1779-1843) returned 24 entries.

Table of Contents

Title Page
Author's Preface
1 The Road through Richmond Hill
2 First Peoples on the Land
3 The European Settlers Arrive
4 From Miles' Hill to Richmond Hill: The Birth of a Community
5 Tories and Reformers
6 Stagecoach Lines and Railway Tracks
7 The Neighbours at Mid-Century
8 Fire Brigades and Fence Viewers
9 Picture Post Card Village of the 1880s and 1890s
10 Rails through Richmond Hill
11 The Flowering of Richmond Hill
12 The Village Transformed
Epilogue
Appendices
Table of Illustrations
Index
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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