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  1. Lyman Beecher Biography. Reverend Dr. Lyman Beecher was born October 12, 1775 in New Haven, Connecticut. Graduating from Yale University in 1797, he was ordained as a Presbyterian minister in 1799 where he served the East Hampton, Long Island church until 1810. He then accepted a ministerial position in Litchfield Connecticut.

  2. Lyman Beecher: Conservative Abolitionist, Theologian and Father. By: Jeremy Land Appalachian State University. In 1834, as the conflicts over slavery in the United States were beginning to engulf the. country, a group of perhaps the best and brightest students of the antebellum period of American. history began debates on the issue of abolition.

  3. 20 de jul. de 2010 · Lyman Beecher is remembered today primarily through the accomplishments of his children, among whom was abolitionist preacher Henry Ward Beecher, and author of Uncle Tom's Cabin Harriet Beecher Stowe. But in his day, Lyman Beecher, a prominent pastor and latter president of Lane Seminary, was a powerful proponent of moral reform and chief ...

  4. Lyman Beecher (ur. 12 października 1775 w New Haven, zm. 10 stycznia 1863 w Nowym Jorku) – amerykański duchowny prezbiteriański, działacz na rzecz abstynencji. Życie. Ukończył uniwersytet Yale w 1797. Jako pastor zwalczał katolicyzm i handel alkoholem. Od 1832 był rektorem Lane Theological Seminary w Cincinnati.

  5. 17 de jul. de 2021 · In 1830 Lyman Beecher had his eyes on the enormous opportunity waiting for him in the Queen City and the burgeoning American west. Dr. Nicholas Andreadis is a volunteer at the Harriet Beecher Stowe House. He was a professor and dean at Western Michigan University prior to moving to Cincinnati. Wikipedia: Lyman Beecher.

  6. 8 de jan. de 2020 · Lyman Beecher (1775-1863), father of Edward Beecher and Henry Ward Beecher, moved from New England (where he had struggled to uphold the traditional Calvinism of the Congregational Church against the encroachments of Unitarianism) to Cincinnati, Ohio in 1832 to assume the presidency of Lane Theological Seminary.

  7. In 1826, Reverend Lyman Beecher wrote his Six Sermons on Intemperance. This document popularized the temperance movement, inspired the Women’s Christian Temperance Movement, which inspired Wayne Wheeler’s Anti-Saloon League: the organization that eventually got the 18th Amendment passed. In these six sermons, Beecher often cited the Bible.