Elected. | Died. | Age. | |
William Brown | Sept. 2, 1844 | June 24, 1861 | 75 |
Josiah Coolidge | Sept. 2, 1844 | Sept. 13, 1874 | 87 |
John B. Dana | Sept. 2, 1844 | ||
Wm. T. Richardson | March 30, 1862 |
This text is part of:
[332]
and was succeeded by Rev. Cortland W. Anable, who was installed June 21, 1863, and resigned Oct. 27, 1871, having received the degree of D. D. from Madison University during his ministry here.
The present pastor is Rev. Franklin Johnson, D. D., who was installed Dec. 31, 1873.
Lee Street.—The Lee Street Society was organized in 1846.
Most of its original members, together with its first pastor, had been connected with the Cambridgeport Parish.
Their first meeting-house, on the westerly side of Lee Street, near Harvard Street, was dedicated March 25, 1847, and was consumed by fire May 20, 1855.
A new edifice was immediately erected on the same lot, which was dedicated Jan. 23, 1856.
The church was organized April 9, 1847.
Its first pastor was Rev. Artemas B. Muzzey, who had for twelve years previously been pastor of the Cambridgeport Parish.
His pastorate here commenced Sept. 7, 1846, and continued until Feb. 20, 1854, when his resignation was accepted.
He was installed at Concord, N. H., March 29, 1854; but after a pastorate of several years returned to Cambridge, where he now resides, preaching statedly at Chestnut Hill.
His successor was Rev. Henry R. Harrington, H. C., 1834, who was ordained 1842, installed here Feb. 11, 1855, and resigned April 1, 1865.
He has since been a successful superintendent of public schools in New Bedford.
He was succeeded by Rev. Abram W. Stevens, a graduate of the Meadville Divinity School, who was ordained 1862, preached three years in Manchester, N. H., was installed Nov. 26, 1865, and closed his ministry here Nov. 1, 1870.
The present pastor, Rev. John P. Bland, a graduate of the Cambridge Divinity School, 1871, was ordained Sept. 6, 1871.
This work is licensed under a
Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 United States License.
An XML version of this text is available for download, with the additional restriction that you offer Perseus any modifications you make. Perseus provides credit for all accepted changes, storing new additions in a versioning system.