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finney

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Journal Article
South Atlantic Quarterly (1955) 54 (3): 410–412.
Published: 01 July 1955
... misunderstanding, it is necessary to observe at the out­ set that Dr. Cole uses the term evangelist to include not only a pro­ fessional revivalist such as Charles G. Finney but also such well-known parish ministers as Horace Bushnell and Henry Ward Beecher. In other words, evangelist denotes all those...
Journal Article
South Atlantic Quarterly (1955) 54 (3): 408–410.
Published: 01 July 1955
.... $4.25. In order to avoid misunderstanding, it is necessary to observe at the out­ set that Dr. Cole uses the term evangelist to include not only a pro­ fessional revivalist such as Charles G. Finney but also such well-known parish ministers as Horace Bushnell and Henry Ward Beecher. In other words...
Journal Article
South Atlantic Quarterly (1952) 51 (1): 157–158.
Published: 01 January 1952
... slowly been appearing in the text­ books. The principal anti-slavery impulse originated in a religious revival led by Charles P. Finney in upper New York State in the mid1820 s. Weld, a brilliant and eloquent student at Hamilton College, was mightily influenced by Finney and became an energetic worker...
Journal Article
South Atlantic Quarterly (1952) 51 (1): 156–157.
Published: 01 January 1952
... originated in a religious revival led by Charles P. Finney in upper New York State in the mid1820 s. Weld, a brilliant and eloquent student at Hamilton College, was mightily influenced by Finney and became an energetic worker in various reform movements. He opposed slavery but did not become an abolitionist...
Journal Article
South Atlantic Quarterly (1987) 86 (3): 312–326.
Published: 01 July 1987
... but the outward tokens of this culture s search for national identity. Beneath the pronouncements of religious leaders such as Charles Finney or Lyman Beecher, Miller discerned a groping for a language which could adequately describe the American ex­ perience its vast wilderness and its free energetic citizens...
Journal Article
South Atlantic Quarterly (1967) 66 (3): 326–340.
Published: 01 July 1967
... Grandison Finney, the greatest of American evangelists. Finney taught Bradley to believe that if one lived his life as Christ had lived His, he could achieve sanctification in this life. Finney s humanistic ideas gave a tremen­ dous impetus to social reform in the first half of the nineteenth century...
Journal Article
South Atlantic Quarterly (1968) 67 (1): 78–93.
Published: 01 January 1968
... posthumous book on the national period upgraded the revivalist world of Charles Finney and Peter Cartright and even identified them with progressivism. Out of the much-maligned camp meeting, he thought, came a greater concern for the national 88 The South Atlantic Quarterly welfare, mass education, industry...
Journal Article
South Atlantic Quarterly (1948) 47 (2): 265–267.
Published: 01 April 1948
... learn of James Fennimore, better known as Finney but best known as Old Virginia, who peremptorily gave his name to the principal city in the territory; of Pancake Comstock, who bought a skittish wife for sixty dollars in cash plus one horse and a secondhand revolver; of the gastronomic accomplish­...
Journal Article
South Atlantic Quarterly (1973) 72 (2): 226–242.
Published: 01 April 1973
... account of his sale to Georgian Sterling Finney and his emotional separation from gan, Hancock, DeKalb, and Henry Counties, Georgia Archives and population schedules of U.S. censuses 1820-40 for these counties, University of Georgia. One document from the DeKalb Court of Ordinary, dated 1842, managed...