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298 matches on "Religion"
Mormonism article
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Mormonism article  Save
Description: Newspaper article on a commandment of Mormonism, written by Symonds Ryder in the Ohio Star, January 5, 1832. The Ohio Star was published in Ravenna, Ohio. Ryder was a Vermont native who settled in Hiram, Ohio, in 1815, and took up the Mormon faith around 1830. He eventually left the religion. View on Ohio Memory.
Image ID: AL06772
Subjects: Newspapers; Multicultural Ohio--Religion in Ohio; Religion in Ohio
Places: Ravenna (Ohio); Portage County (Ohio)
 
First United Methodist Church
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First United Methodist Church  Save
Description: The First United Methodist Church in Mansfield. The history of the Methodist Church goes as far back as the first half of the 18th Century. The driving force behind its founding and philosophy was a man named John Wesley, who was a student at Oxford at the time when the ideas of the Methodist Church were being formed by students interested in religious study. The church became relatively popular in the early days of the United States among those living in the rugged lands being settled. It would come to be widespread throughout the state of Ohio, drawing people in with its idea that all people may go to heaven. Controversy within the Church occurred over divisions about the teachings of John Wesley and the increasingly divisive issue of whether or not it was immoral to keep slaves. This caused multiple divisions within the church and it splintered into numerous separate Methodist denominations. After over 100 years of a divided church, the various Methodist churches joined together and eventually the United Methodist Church was formed. View on Ohio Memory.
Image ID: AL06732
Subjects: Multicultural Ohio--Religion in Ohio; Ohio--Religion; Churches--Ohio
Places: Mansfield (Ohio); Richland County (Ohio)
 
Pioneer Sunday School illustration
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Pioneer Sunday School illustration  Save
Description: Pioneer Sunday school illustration, from "Conquering the Wilderness; or, New Pictorial History of the Life and Times of the Pioneer Heroes and Heroines of America," by Colonel Frank Triplett, 1883. Sunday school is described by Triplett as "Another pioneer instrument in the field of education.... where morality and religion made a part of the curriculum, and where the Bible and the hymnal supplemented the text books of the district schools." (348) View on Ohio Memory.
Image ID: AL04028
Subjects: Ohio--Religion; Ohio History--Settlement and Early Statehood; Religious education; Children
Places: Ohio
 
First Presbyterian Church
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First Presbyterian Church  Save
Description: A plaque for The First Presbyterian Church in Chillicothe, Ohio. The plaque reads: "On this corner stood the log cabin which was the First Presbyterian Church in the Scioto Valley built in 1792. Just to the north was the first burying ground. This tablet erected by the First Presbyterian Church 'The Old Rock'. " View on Ohio Memory.
Image ID: AL06771
Subjects: Multicultural Ohio--Religion in Ohio; Ohio--Religion; Churches--Ohio
Places: Chillicothe (Ohio); Ross County (Ohio)
 
Shaker Sister photograph
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Shaker Sister photograph  Save
Description: Portrait of an unidentified Shaker woman, ca. 1880-1899. She is wearing the typical dress of women who were members of the religious sect. The Shakers were a religious group spread throughout Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, New York, Pennsylvania, Ohio, Indiana, Kentucky, Georgia, and Florida. They believed in celibacy, community, equality of the sexes, simplicity, and humility. The men were referred to as "brothers" and the women "sisters." View on Ohio Memory.
Image ID: AL02699
Subjects: Shakers--History; Multicultural Ohio--Religion in Ohio; Women and religion--United States; Shakers--Clothing
Places: Springfield (Massachusetts)
 
Billy Sunday and his party photograph
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Billy Sunday and his party photograph  Save
Description: Photograph captioned "Rev. Billy Sunday and His Party. Upper row from left to right--Dr. L.K. Peacock, Mrs. William Asher, Miss Grace Saxe, Rev. William Asher, B.D. Ackley. Lower row--Fred Seibert, Miss Frances Miller, Billy Sunday, Miss Annie McLaren, Homer A. Rodeheaver, W.H. Collison." William "Billy" Sunday was born in Iowa in 1862. He was a major-league baseball player in the 1880s before becoming an itinerant evangelical preacher. He visited large cities, giving talks for young men on Christian living and Prohibition under the employment of the Young Men's Christian Association (YMCA). He was an avid supporter of Prohibition and strongly in opposition to scientific advancement which he saw as disproving the Bible. View on Ohio Memory.
Image ID: SC4316_001
Subjects: Ohio--Religion; Multicultural Ohio--Religion in Ohio; Baseball players; YMCA of the USA--History; Prohibition;
Places: Columbus (Ohio); Franklin County (Ohio)
 
Sisters of St. Francis, Portiuncula Chapel, Sylvania
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Sisters of St. Francis, Portiuncula Chapel, Sylvania  Save
Description: The Portiuncula Chapel on the grounds of the Order of the Sisters of St. Francis in Sylvania, Ohio. The organization dates back to around 1930, and formed for the betterment of the community as a whole. The organization has played an active role in providing education among other forms of community building. View on Ohio Memory.
Image ID: AL06783
Subjects: Multicultural Ohio--Religion in Ohio; Ohio--Religion; Churches--Ohio
Places: Sylvania (Ohio); Lucas County (Ohio)
 
Sister Marie Virgine photograph
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Sister Marie Virgine photograph  Save
Description: Photograph of Sister Marie Virgine, Congregation of the Sisters of the Holy Cross, ca. 1950. View on Ohio Memory.
Image ID: AL03646
Subjects: Baker Art Gallery; Photographers--Ohio; Religion in Ohio; Congregation of the Sisters of the Holy Cross; Ohio--Religion
Places: Columbus (Ohio); Franklin County (Ohio)
 
Sisters of St. Francis, Crucifix, Sylvania
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Sisters of St. Francis, Crucifix, Sylvania  Save
Description: A crucifix on the grounds of the Order of the Sisters of St. Francis in Sylvania, Ohio. The organization dates back to around 1930, and formed for the betterment of the community as a whole. The organization has played an active role in providing education among other forms of community building. View on Ohio Memory.
Image ID: AL06784
Subjects: Multicultural Ohio--Religion in Ohio; Ohio--Religion; Churches--Ohio
Places: Sylvania (Ohio); Lucas County (Ohio)
 
Sisters of St. Francis, Chapel, Sylvania
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Sisters of St. Francis, Chapel, Sylvania  Save
Description: The main chapel on the grounds of the Order of the Sisters of St. Francis in Sylvania, Ohio. The organization dates back to around 1930, and formed for the betterment of the community as a whole. The organization has played an active role in providing education among other forms of community building. View on Ohio Memory.
Image ID: AL06785
Subjects: Multicultural Ohio--Religion in Ohio; Ohio--Religion; Churches--Ohio
Places: Sylvania (Ohio); Lucas County (Ohio)
 
Sisters of St. Francis, Nuns, Sylvania
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Sisters of St. Francis, Nuns, Sylvania  Save
Description: Nuns on the grounds of the Order of the Sisters of St. Francis in Sylvania, Ohio. The organization dates back to around 1930, and formed for the betterment of the community as a whole. The organization has played an active role in providing education among other forms of community building. View on Ohio Memory.
Image ID: AL06786
Subjects: Multicultural Ohio--Religion in Ohio; Ohio--Religion; Churches--Ohio
Places: Sylvania (Ohio); Lucas County (Ohio)
 
St. Paul's Methodist Episcopal Church photograph
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St. Paul's Methodist Episcopal Church photograph  Save
Description: St. Paul's Methodist Episcopal Church in Tiffin. This church was home to early electrical illumination with an electric, brass chandelier. The history of the Methodist Church goes as far back as the first half of the 18th Century. The driving force behind its founding and philosophy was a man named John Wesley, who was a student at Oxford at the time when the ideas of the Methodist Church were being formed by students interested in religious study. The church became relatively popular in the early days of the United States among those living in the rugged lands being settled. It would come to be widespread throughout the state of Ohio, drawing people in with its idea that all people may go to heaven. Controversy within the Church occurred over divisions about the teachings of John Wesley and the increasingly divisive issue of whether or not it was immoral to keep slaves. This caused multiple divisions within the church and it splintered into numerous separate Methodist denominations. After over 100 years of a divided church, the various Methodist churches joined together and eventually the United Methodist Church was formed. View on Ohio Memory.
Image ID: AL06787
Subjects: Multicultural Ohio--Religion in Ohio; Ohio--Religion; Churches--Ohio
Places: Tiffin (Ohio); Seneca County (Ohio)
 
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