Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Robert J. Breckinridge may refer to: Robert Jefferson Breckinridge (1800–1871), American politician and Presbyterian minister Robert Jefferson Breckinridge, Jr. (1833–1915), Confederate Congressman and colonel in the Confederate Army

  2. Robert Jefferson Breckinridge No preview available - 2016 Century, in the United States: Being, Select ... Robert J (Robert Jeffe Breckinridge No preview available - 2021

  3. Robert Jefferson Breckinridge senior (1800–1871), US-amerikanischer Politiker Robert Jefferson Breckinridge junior (1833–1915), US-amerikanischer Jurist, Offizier und Politiker Dies ist eine Begriffsklärungsseite zur Unterscheidung mehrerer mit demselben Wort bezeichneter Begriffe.

  4. ROBERT JEFFERSON BRECKINRIDGE 209 parent interest in Harvard College, John, and perhaps Cabell, opposed. Either because of their advice or for some other reason, he enrolled at Yale; there he remained about three months before transferring to Union College in Schenectady, New York, where he was graduated in 1819.

  5. 12 de jul. de 2017 · Three works by Robert Jefferson Breckinridge ( The Christian Pastor ; Presbyterian Government, Not a Hierarcy, but a Commonwealth ; and Presbyterian Ordination, Not a Charm, but an Act of Government ) have been forgotten by modern Presbyterians. And yet, thanks to the reviewing work of Ja

  6. Robert Jefferson Breckinridge, Jr. (September 14, 1833 - March 13, 1915) was a prominent Kentucky politician and a member of the Breckenridge political family. He was the son of Robert Jefferson Breckinridge and brother of William Campbell Preston Breckinridge. He was born in Baltimore, Maryland. He served as a colonel in the Confederate Army in the Civil War. He later represented Kentucky in ...

  7. 27 de dic. de 2014 · Robert Jefferson Breckinridge, a leading figure among Old School Presbyterians in the effort to expunge New School elements from the denomination in 1837, died on this day, December 27, in 1871. The Civil War has been described as the war of brother against brother and father against son and this was especially true in the case of Robert J. Breckinridge and his family.