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WELCH, Moses Cook, clergyman, born in Mansfield, Connecticut, 22 February, 1754; died there, 21 April, 1824. He was graduated at Yale in 1772. After teaching and then studying law for a year, he gave some attention to medicine, but abandoned it and again engaged in teaching. At the opening of the Revolution he was associated with Samuel Nott in making salt-petre for the powder-supply of the army. Afterward he studied theology, and was ordained, 2 June, 1784, serving as his father's successor in the pastorate of his native place till his death. He published various discourses and pamphlets, including "Eulogy on Benjamin Chaplin" (1795), and " The Addresser Addressed," a reply to Hen. Zephaniah Swift (1796).
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