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  1. Province of Maryland, British America. Died. September 26, 1832. (1832-09-26) (aged 64) Wooster, Ohio, United States. Edward Dominic Fenwick, O.P. (August 19, 1768 – September 26, 1832) was an American prelate of the Catholic Church, a Dominican friar and the first Bishop of Cincinnati .

  2. 17 de fev. de 2017 · Edward Dominic Fenwick. First Bishop of Cincinnati. Life. Edward Fenwick was born in Maryland on August 19, 1768, studied at the Dominican Holy Cross College in Belgium, and in 1793 was ordained a Dominican priest. In 1805 Fenwick opened near Springfield, Kentucky, St. Rose Priory, the first Dominican house in the United States.

    • Anne Ryckbost
    • 2017
  3. Edward Fenwick - frwiki.wiki. Para artigos homônimos, consulte Fenwick . Edward Dominic Fenwick , nascido em 19 de agosto de 1768 em Leonardtown, Maryland ( Estados Unidos ) e morreu em 26 de setembro de 1832 em Wooster (Ohio) ( Estados Unidos ), é um clérigo dominicano e bispo de Cincinnati .

  4. Edward Dominic Fenwick, né le 19 août 1768 à Leonardtown au Maryland (États-Unis) et mort le 26 septembre 1832 à Wooster (Ohio) , est un religieux dominicain et évêque de Cincinnati. Il introduisit l'ordre des Prêcheurs dans le territoire - de l'époque - des États-Unis d'Amérique.

  5. Edward Fenwick Boyd (30 August 1810 – 31 August 1889) was an English industrialist who became the fourth President of the North of England Institute of Mining and Mechanical Engineers (NEIMME). He held a leading role in the Mining Institute from its inauguration in 1852 as Treasurer and a member of the council before becoming the ...

  6. Edward Fenwick Boyd (30 August 1810 – 31 August 1889) was an English industrialist who became the fourth President of the North of England Institute of Mining and Mechanical Engineers (NEIMME). He held a leading role in the Mining Institute from its inauguration in 1852 as Treasurer and a member of the council before becoming the fourth ...

  7. 17 de fev. de 2017 · Among the first settlers of colonial Maryland, the Fenwick family owned slaves for several generations. Edward Fenwick's father, Colonel Ignatius Fenwick (1736-1784), held in bondage George, Hester, Ben, Jane, and Rachel, all members of St. Ignatius Church in 1768 (the year Edward Fenwick was born).