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  1. Galusha Anderson (March 7, 1832 – July 20, 1918) was an American theologian and university president. Biography. Anderson was born at Bergen, Genesee County, New York. His father was of Scotch descent and a strict Presbyterian. [1] . At a young age he converted to the Baptist faith and was determined to become a minister. [1] .

    • Pastor, theologian, university president
    • July 20, 1918 (aged 86), Wenham, Massachusetts
  2. ANDERSON, Galusha, educator, was born at Bergen, Genesee county, N. Y., March 7, 1832. His father was of Scotch descent, and a strict Presbyterian. The boy, becoming converted to the Baptist faith, determined to become a minister. He was graduated with high honors from the Rochester university in 1854, and from the theological seminary ...

  3. Galusha Anderson 1878–1885 George C. Lorimer, interim 1885–1886 The land upon which the Old University of Chicago was established was originally part of a lakefront tract owned by Senator Stephen A. Douglas. Douglas had offered the 10-acre (4.0 ha) plot ...

    • 1856–1886
    • Baptist
  4. administrator clergyman. Galusha Anderson was an American Baptist clergyman. He served as college president of the Old University of Chicago and Denison University. Background. Galusha Anderson was born on March 7, 1832 at Clarendon, New York, United States, the seventh child of Seneca and Lucy (Webb) Anderson.

  5. History, Spirituality. edit data. American theologian, Baptist pastor, preacher, professor of theology, president of Dennison College and the Old University of Chicago. Educated at University of Rochester and the Rochester Theological Seminary. Born in New York State in 1832; died in Massachusetts in 1918. Combine Editions.

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  6. "Galusha Anderson was a pro-Union Baptist minister in St. Louis from 1858-1866. Anderson's book covers the entire course of the war in Missouri, focusing heavily on St. Louis itself. Among the...

  7. 2021年2月19日 · Galusha Anderson was a pastor in St. Louis during the Civil War, one of the few American cities where Union and Confederate supporters lived side by side, shopped in the same stores and worshiped in the same congregations. This is a story of the first pastor in that city to take a stand against sla