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  1. When Joseph Ruggles Wilson Jr. was born on 20 July 1867, in Augusta, Richmond, Georgia, United States, his father, Rev. Joseph Ruggles Wilson, was 45 and his mother, Janet E. Woodrow, was 36. He married Katherine Francis Wilson on 15 June 1892, in Montgomery, Tennessee, United States. They were the parents of at least 4 daughters.

  2. Manuscript sermon of Joseph Ruggles Wilson, originally delivered at First Presbyterian Church (Wilmington, N.C.), January 1, 1882. In this sermon Wilson takes the opportunity of the new year to discourse on the need for constant change. Wilson describes both the hard headed who never change and the irresolute who constantly change on a whim as ...

  3. Joseph Ruggles Wilson Sr. (February 28, 1822 – January 21, 1903) was a known Presbyterian theologian (person who studies religon) and father of ...

  4. 27 de dic. de 2021 · Husband of Janet Jessie (Woodrow) Wilson — married 7 Jun 1849 (to 15 Apr 1888) in Chillicothe, Ross, Ohio. Descendants. Father of Marion Morton (Wilson) Kennedy , Annie Josephine (Wilson) Howe , Thomas Woodrow Wilson and Joseph Ruggles Wilson Jr. Died 21 Jan 1903at age 80 in Princeton, Mercer County, New Jersey, USA.

  5. 25 de mar. de 2023 · Joseph Ruggles Wilson. Rev. Joseph Ruggles WIlson, D.D., LL.D., who died in Princeton, N. J., and whose funeral was conducted from the First Presbyterian church yesterday, was a man whose "passing" deserves more than casual mention.

  6. Thomas Woodrow Wilson ( Staunton, Virginia, 1856. december 28. – Washington, 1924. február 3.) az Amerikai Egyesült Államok 28. elnöke volt. Skót-ír származású családban született. Tanárként kezdett dolgozni, majd a politika felé fordult. 1913 – 1921 között töltötte be az Egyesült Államok elnöki posztját.

  7. 29 de jul. de 2017 · Few remember that Joseph Ruggles Wilson, the father of President Woodrow Wilson, was a Presbyterian pastor in 19th century America. In an article in The Southern Presbyterian Review entitled "In What Sense Are Preachers To Preach Themselves," he discusses the power and importance of the individual in the act and ethos of preaching. A snippet: