William Adams (educator)

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William Adams
William Adams 1813-1897.jpg
BornJuly 3, 1813 Edit this on Wikidata
County Monaghan Edit this on Wikidata
DiedJanuary 2, 1897 Edit this on Wikidata (aged 83)
Nashotah Edit this on Wikidata

William Adams (July 3, 1813 – January 2, 1897) was an American theologian and educator, co-founder of Nashotah House.

William Adams was born on July 3, 1813 Monaghan, Ireland. He entered Trinity, and became a scholar of the house in 1833. He read law and medicine each for a year, and was for a time with his uncle at Ballyhaise as an accountant. In 1888 he entered the General Theological Seminary in New York, graduating in 1841. He was one of the founders of Nashotah mission, afterward Nashotah theological seminary, in Wisconsin, where he went in September 1841. During the following winter he contributed to an English publication an article on the church's duties to her emigrants, which attracted much attention. From the foundation of the seminary he was the professor of systematic divinity. Dr. Adams published Mercy to Babes (New York, 1847), Christian Science (Philadelphia, 1850), and A New Treatise on Baptismal Regeneration (New York, 1871), and contributed largely to periodical literature, writing principally on theological topics. William Adams died on 2 January 1897 in Nashotah.

public domain This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainWilson, J. G.; Fiske, J., eds. (1891). "Adams, William". Appletons' Cyclopædia of American Biography. New York: D. Appleton.


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