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| You are in: Museum of History >> Hall of North and South Americans >> Charles Stearns | |
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STEARNS, Charles, clergyman, born in Leominster, Massachusetts, 19 July, 1753; died in Lincoln, Massachusetts, 26 July, 1826. He was graduated at Harvard in 1773, afterward taught school, and studied theology, and in 1780-'1 was a tutor at Cambridge. In 1781 he was ordained pastor of the Unitarian church at Lincoln, where he remained till his death. He received the degree of D. D. from Harvard in 1810. He published "The Ladies' Philosophy of Love, a Poem in Four Cantos" (1797); "Principles of Morality and Religion" (1798): and sermons and other works.
Born in a Tavern and ending in a
Tavern The United States Founding governments
occupied 11 different capitol buildings experienced 15 years of challenges that
included war,
hyper-inflation, a failed constitution, judicial corruption, armed citizen and
U.S. Army rebellion.

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Which U.S. President adopted
the Philadelphia Constitutional Convention
resolution, enacted the Northwest Ordinance, and backed George Washington,
James Madison and Nathaniel Gorham's resolution to submit the new U.S.
Constitution to the States for ratification without Congressional
alterations?
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The Coachman House Circa 1870 at Cedar Key
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