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  1. Lane Seminary, sometimes called Cincinnati Lane Seminary, and later renamed Lane Theological Seminary, was a Presbyterian theological college that operated from 1829 to 1932 in Walnut Hills, Ohio, today a neighborhood in Cincinnati.

    • 1829–1932
    • Private seminary
    • Lane Theological Seminary
    • Lyman Beecher (1832–1852)
  2. hmn.wiki › es › Lane_Theological_SeminarySeminario Teológico Lane

    "La fundación de Lane Seminary se logró después de años de esfuerzos a veces dispares por parte de un gran número de personas". [4] : 25-26 La tradición presbiteriana debía tener un clero educado, y no había ningún seminario al servicio de las vastas y cada vez más pobladas tierras al oeste de las montañas Allegheny .

  3. Lane Theological Seminary. Cincinnati, Ohio. 1829 - 1932. Lane Theological Seminary was founded by the Presbyterian church during the wave of evangelical revivals known as the Second Great Awakening with the express purpose of educating pastors to serve the growing population of the old Northwest Territory. Print.

  4. Shipherd persuaded thirty-two of the Lane students, known as the Lane Rebels, to come to Oberlin in 1835. The students demanded the appointment of revivalist preacher Charles Grandison Finney as the head of the Theological Seminary at Oberlin.

    • Lane Seminary1
    • Lane Seminary2
    • Lane Seminary3
    • Lane Seminary4
    • Lane Seminary5
  5. hmn.wiki › es › Lane_SeminarySeminario de carril

    Lane Seminary, a veces llamado Cincinnati Lane Seminary, y luego rebautizado como Lane Theological Seminary, fue una universidad teológica presbiteriana que funcionó desde 1829 hasta 1932 en Walnut Hills, Ohio, hoy un barrio de Cincinnati. Su campus estaba delimitado por las calles Gilbert, Yale, Park y Chapel de hoy.

  6. In 1828, Ebenezer and William Lane, brothers from New Orleans along with the Kemper family of Cincinnati donated money and land for a new seminary to be founded in Walnut Hills, a neighborhood of Cincinnati, Ohio. This area, including the Ohio River had become an important gateway to the west.

  7. Lane Theological Seminary in Cincinnati, Ohio, c. 1847. The Oberlin Sanctuary Project Main Menu About the Project The Lane Rebels and Early Anti-Slavery at Oberlin The Underground Railroad and the Oberlin-Wellington Rescue Nisei at Oberlin in the World War II Years Carpenters for Christmas: Civil Rights in Mississippi Anti-War Protest and the Kent State Shootings South Africa and Oberlin ...