New Englanders on the Ohio Frontier

New Englanders on the Ohio Frontier

Author: Virginia E. McCormick

Publisher: Kent State University Press

Published: 1998-06

Total Pages: 384

ISBN-13: 9780873386524

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This work examines the founding and development of Worthington, Ohio to show how it reflects New England culture transplanted and reshaped by the Western frontier. It provides a perspective from which historians can better understand the process of westward migration and frontier settlement.


The Oxford Movement

The Oxford Movement

Author: Stewart J. Brown

Publisher: Cambridge University Press

Published: 2012-06-28

Total Pages: 287

ISBN-13: 1139510673

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The Oxford Movement transformed the nineteenth-century Church of England with a renewed conception of itself as a spiritual body. Initiated in the early 1830s by members of the University of Oxford, it was a response to threats to the established Church posed by British Dissenters, Irish Catholics, Whig and Radical politicians, and the predominant evangelical ethos - what Newman called 'the religion of the day'. The Tractarians believed they were not simply addressing difficulties within their national Church, but recovering universal principles of the Christian faith. To what extent were their beliefs and ideals communicated globally? Was missionary activity the product of the movement's distinctive principles? Did their understanding of the Church promote, or inhibit, closer relations among the churches of the global Anglican Communion? This volume addresses these questions and more with a series of case studies involving Europe and the English-speaking world during the first century of the Movement.