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| Â | P7105 |
 | | Benjamin Skinner AM was the son of William Skinner of Didmarton in Gloucestershire. |  | | In 1767 Benjamin Skinner reported to the bishop that he could find no-one who was either a professed or a reputed Papist. |  | | The value of the living had be assured by an arrangement he had made with John Sherwood of Purley who agreed to pay Benjamin £130 pa for three years from 1766 for the tithes and the right to farm the Glebe land excepting only the parsonage and its immediate surrounds. |
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http://www.purley.demon.co.uk/7-church/G7106JE2.htm
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| Â | Britannia Biographies: Benjamin Hoadley, Bishop of Winchester and Bishop of Bangor |
 | | Britannia Biographies: Benjamin Hoadley, Bishop of Winchester and Bishop of Bangor |  | | The sentence of the laity, in the temper that was then gaining ground as to ecclesiastical subjects, was soon pronounced in their favour and the High Church party discredited themselves by an opposition to what might now pass for the incontrovertible truisms of religions liberty. |  | | He early distinguished himself as a zealous partizan of what is called 'religious liberty.' His father kept a school at Westerham and educated his son, who went thence to Catherine Hall, Cambridge. |
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http://www.britannia.com/bios/bhoadley.html
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| Â | [Daniel Defoe?] A Turkish Merchant at Amsterdam, The Conduct of Christians Made the Sport of Infidels in a letter from ... |
 | | Hoadleys sermon, delivered on March, 31 1717, with George I. among the audience, had dealt with the "visible Church of Christ" - and offered clerical support to the present Whig-policy. |  | | The sermon helped the Dissenters as it questioned the Anglican claim to authenticity in the following of Christ's church which alone could justify the actions taken against the Dissenters. |  | | The text uses the Arabian voice to keep contents out of the conroversy, and to concentrate on the actions of the High-Church as giving further proof of the imperfections of the Christian doctrine - the Islamic perfection manifesting at the same time in the inner peace it achieves. |
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http://www.pierre-marteau.com/library/e-1717-0011.html
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| Â | Benjamin Artworks and Fine Art at arthistorynet.com |
 | | Benjamin Hoadley, lord Bishop of Bangor, 17th - 18th century |  | | Benjamin West, The Angel of the Resurrection, 1801 |  | | Benjamin Smith, Infant Shakespeare attended by nature and passion, 1709 |
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http://www.absolutearts.com/masters/b/benjamin-works.html
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| Â | New Haven Green |
 | | The second of the churches, United or Old North Church (1813-15), is also an elegant if less exuberant expression of the Federal style. |  | | Center Church (1812-14) whose tall, graceful spire still dominates the green was the first of the three to be completed. |  | | It is possible that the design of Center Church played some part, too, in the final plan of United Church. |
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http://www.nhpt.org/Historic_District_Pages/nhgreen.html
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| Â | William Law |
 | | The Bangorian controversy began in 1717 when Benjamin Hoadley, the Bishop of Bangor (in Wales) preached a sermon on the Johannine text "My Kingdom is not of this world." In it Hoadley argued that Christ had left behind him no authorities or deputies and that Christ was the only authority for the Christian. |  | | This upset the Tory High churchmen - and Law's response is a detailed argument for ecclesiastical authorities, including the apostolic authority of bishops. |  | | You all seem right to me to say they "aid in formulating the correct intentions" and that Law "emphasizes the role of Baptism." (See earlier comments) To elaborate my earlier remarks - we know that Law emphasized the church and sacraments primarily because of his work, Three Letters to the Bishop of Bangor. |
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http://www.st-petersweb.org/lesson5.html
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| Â | Lisa's Genealogy - aqwc26 - Generated by Ancestry Family Tree |
 | | Ezra Stone & Elizabeth Osborn married 18 Mar 1740 by Rev. Philemon Robbins -- handwritten: both of Litchfield |  | | Dick [not given] & Kate [not given] married 15 Nov 1767 by Rev. Philemon Robbins -- servants of John Linsley |
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http://freepages.family.rootsweb.com/~lisadow/aqwc26.htm
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| Â | 1810 Branford Federal Census, Heads of Household |
 | | Hoadley, Silas (1767-1835) son of Nathaniel and Anna (Scarit) Hoadley |  | | Hoadley, John (1758-1833) son of John and Lydia (Rogers) Hoadley |  | | Hoadley, Abel (1764-1845) son of Isaac and Elizabeth (Blackstone) Hoadley |
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http://members.aol.com/dtrofatter/cens1810.htm
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| Â | A history of the book in Devon. 43. Controversies in print |
 | | The Bishop reacted with his The Lord Bishop of Exeter's answer to Mr. |  | | The first spark had been struck by a dissenting minister, John Withers in 1707 when he produced A true and impartial account of what occurred at the late conference in Exeter. |  | | A Student of the Temple joined issue with such titles as The best answer ever was made, (London, J.Morphew, 1709), A better answer than the best answer ever was made, A modest reply to the unanswerable answer and so on, to a total of at least seventeen items. |
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http://www.devon.gov.uk/library/locstudy/bookhist/west43.html
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| Â | On-line Library - presented by the maker of Print Screen Capture software , Rapid Application Development, Session ... |
 | | Benjamin Hoadley, the Whig divine, had been engaged in controversy with Sacheverell, Blackall, and Atterbury. |  | | Benjamin Pratt, Provost of Trinity College, Dublin, was appointed Dean of Down in 1717. |  | | Benjamin Tooke, Swift's bookseller or publisher, lived at the Middle Temple Gate. |
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http://library.floresca.net/1259-11.html
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| Â | Hoadley Family |
 | | As Col. Andrew Hillyer was with him on these occasions it is doubtless true that during these times the acquaintance between them was formed which later resulted in Col. Hillyer marrying the daughter of his old army friend. |  | | William H. Hoadley resided in Hartford all his life; his wife died Feb. 15, 1805, in the old home at No. 78 Ann street, where she had lived since 1833. |  | | (II) Samuel Hoadley, son of William, died in 1714, in Branford, Conn. He was killed under a haymow. |
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http://www.rootsweb.com/~ctharbio/Hoadley.html
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| Â | Benjamin Moore - new and used books |
 | | Note; this is an extracted article from the annual volume, not an offprint or a reprint. |  | | ISBN > Benjamin Moore - new and used books |  | | Moore, Benjamin - The origin and nature of life |
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http://www.isbn.pl/A-Benjamin-Moore/
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| Â | Political Sermons of the American Founding Era: 1730-1805: The Online Library of Liberty |
 | | The revolution in the spiritual life of America began within a decade of the preaching of the first sermon reprinted here, that of the celebrated Benjamin Colman in Boston in 1730. |  | | Since the earthquake of 1727 that Benjamin Colman alludes to in his sermon, however, there had been a quickening of religious impulses. |  | | Publication of Bishop Benjamin Hoadley’s The Origin and Institute of Civil Government helps popularize John Locke’s thinking and helps make ministers in America a major conduit for Locke’s ideas. |
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http://oll.libertyfund.org/Texts/LFBooks/Sandoz0385/0018_Bk.html
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| Â | Silas Merriman / Silas Hoadley Tall Clock - Grandfather's Clock |
 | | Samuel (1776-1858) and Luther (1781-1813) centered their efforts in Waterbury and later Winchester, CT. They apparently had little to do with their younger brother, Silas. |  | | Considering that, if the Hoadley works date to about 1815, then (1815-1783 = 32 years) the original Merriman wooden clock works would be aging. |  | | - This is a question, however, because the woodworks of the Silas Hoadley movement were probably not built until 1805-1818. |
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http://www.ntw.net/~w0ui/family_webpage/linkpages/hoadley_tall_clock1.htm
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| Â | Crandalls |
 | | Notes: Laban Benjamin listed in JCC as #405. |  | | Notes: William Pitt ABIGAIL GIFFORD (Benjamin (5), Benjamin Gifford m Abigail (4) Wing, Jedediah (3), Elisha (2), Stephen (1)) m. |  | | He married Abigail GIFFORD, daughter of Benjamin Gifford and Esther Crandall. |
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http://www.usgennet.org/usa/pa/county/lycoming/family_histories/crandall/crandalls6.html
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| Â | Ahnentafel (narrative) (v3.0 sample) |
 | | She married Asa HOADLEY, son of Nathaniel HOADLEY and |  | | Sarah ?COLTON/?TREMAINE married Benjamin COOLEY circa 1643 at Springfield, Massachusetts. |  | | She died on 30 Jan 1760 at age 65. |
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http://ourworld.compuserve.com/homepages/J_Beauvais/aawhiten.htm
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| Â | Biographical sources for Anglican clergy |
 | | Winchester - ie ordained deacon 20 May 1744 by Nicholas Claget, bishop of Exeter, and priest 11 June by Benjamin Hoadley, bishop of Winchester). |  | | From the early 18th century, records of appointments to benefices and dispensations to hold benefices in plurality entered in the act books of the archbishops often conclude with details of the applicant’s orders (eg. |  | | On ordination, all candidates were required to subscribe to the thirty-nine articles, and subscriptions for all of those clergy ordained by the archbishop are entered in the archbishops' subscription books. |
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http://www.lambethpalacelibrary.org/holdings/Guides/clergyman.html
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| Â | Family Tree Maker's Genealogy Site: Genealogy Report: Ancestors of Merrell Edward Clark |
 | | James Hoadley, born February 25, 1737/38 in Branford, Conn. |  | | ; married (1) Benjamin Hoadley; born June 22, 1739 in Branford, Conn. |  | | Jacob Hoadley, born March 08, 1730/31 in Branford, Conn.; died November 1816 in Turin, NY; married Jemima Buell July 01, 1752 in Branford, Conn.. |
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http://familytreemaker.genealogy.com/users/j/o/h/Vernon-C-Johnson/GENE7-0009.html
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| Â | Chelsea Landownership 2 |
 | | Hoadley is said to have built a mansion, later called Ashburnham House, at the southern end of the land leased from the manor, fronting Lots Lane. |  | | In 1758 Hoadleys widow Anna sold the residue of the three leaseholds and the freehold ground to Sir Richard Glyn, Bt, alderman of London, who in 1767 sold them all to John Ashburnham, 2 |  | | was also sold in 1750 and passed to Benjamin Hoadley. |
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http://www.middlesexpast.net/cland2.html
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| Â | Surveying Decrepit Welsh Cathedrals |
 | | Benjamin Hoadley, the fomenter of the so-called ‘Bangorian Controversy’ never set foot in his diocese during the five years in which he was Bishop. |  | | Even a scholarly, conscientious and essentially decent man such as Thomas Tanner, Bishop of St Asaph between 1732-1735, appears only to have spent the three summer months of each year in Wales. |  | | The remoteness from London and general lack of polite local society was not much of an obstacle for such men. |
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http://users.aber.ac.uk/das/texts/surveying.htm
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| Â | Chelsea Settlement 2 |
 | | To the south of the nursery gardens the land belonged to the heirs of Benjamin Tate, apart from c.2½ a. |  | | West of Chelsea Farm a mansion later known as Ashburnham House, also reached via Lots Lane, was traditionally said to have been built c.1750 by Dr Benjamin Hoadley on former garden ground leased to him in 1747. |  | | It remained a suburban country house until the 1820s, acquiring the name Cremorne House from Thomas Dawson, Lord Dartrey and Viscount Cremorne, its owner from 1778 to 1812. |
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http://www.middlesexpast.net/csett2.html
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| Â | Butler, "Awash in a Sea of Faith: Christianizing the American People" |
 | | Like other itinerants, Abbott experienced and sought physical evidence of Christian conversion. |  | | The basic Whig texts -- Locke's Second Treatise of Government, Benjamin Hoadley's Origin and Institution of Civil Government Discussed, and John Trenchard and Thomas Gordon's Cato's Letters -- were disseminated throught the colonies, and reached more than evangelicals." (198-99) |  | | After 1785, despite John Wesley's Toryism, American Methodists appropriated even the Revolution to their own sacred uses." (239-40) |
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http://carbon.cudenver.edu/~rpekarek/gbutlerawash.html
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| Â | The Adelphi Theatre 1806-1900: The 1885-1886 Season |
 | | First produced at Covent Garden in 1747 with Garrick and Mrs. |  | | On 23 June 1886, the Adelphi hosted a special matinee performance of The Suspicious Husband by Benjamin Hoadley in order to "aid the Funds of the Thimble League" ( Times, 22 June 1886). |
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http://www.emich.edu/public/english/adelphi_calendar/hst1885.htm
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| Â | NAYO - The people page |
 | | Benjamin Wallfisch was born in August 1979 in London and began playing the piano at 5 and composing at 6. |  | | Alvise has devoted the last two years to composition and has written educational works for piano, wind and brass instruments, chamber music and orchestra works for all levels. |  | | Born in Jersey in 1980, Christopher George has recently completed his Masters at the Guildhall School of Music and Drama. |
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http://www.nayo.org.uk/people.htm
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| Â | HOADLEY Genealogy |
 | | To see these HOADLEY family members sign up now for our 7-day FREE Trial. |  | | Meet and collaborate with family members around the world |  | | Search for up to 3 last names you are interested in. |
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http://search.onegreatfamily.com/ancestry/HOADLEY.html
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| Â | Henry Stebbing (1687-1763), Divine |
 | | A controversial champion of Church of England orthodoxy, he opposed Benjamin Hoadley, George Whitefield and William Warburton. |  | | National Portrait Gallery, St Martin's Place, London WC2H OHE. |  | | The online database contains information on 56,755 works, 34,442 of which are illustrated; the National Portrait Gallery's collection includes over 320,000 works. |
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http://www.npg.org.uk/live/search/person.asp?LinkID=mp04269
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| Â | KIRKBRIDE - pafg24 - Generated by Personal Ancestral File |
 | | She married Benjamin Franklin KIRKBRIDE-485 on 31 Dec 1852 in, Mahoning, Ohio. |  | | She married Benjamin Franklin KIRKBRIDE-485 on 06 Jun 1878 in of,Mahoning,Ohio. |  | | William H. was born on 17 Feb 1857 in Youngstown,Mahoning,Ohio. |
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http://www.favorites.com/~hadley/pafg24.htm
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| Â | Benjamin Bates [b. Bates-adptd] HOADLEY/Sarah E. DAILEY |
 | | Name: Alice HOADLEY Born: 7 APR 1892 at: Married: at: Died: at: Spouses: |  | | Name: Mary HOADLEY Born: 22 JUN 1889 at: Married: at: Died: at: Spouses: |  | | Contribute your surname to the database, you can do so by clicking here. |
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http://moneymaker.rootsweb.com/surnames/chatfield/fam/fam06981.htm
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| Â | Salisbury Cathedral - Aula Le Stage |
 | | The house was the subject of a major dispute in Chapter in the early 18th century when it was occupied without permission by Archdeacon John Hoadley, brother of Bishop Benjamin Hoadley. |  | | Thomas Bennet may have been responsible for the fine interior plaster work which included the rose of the Tudors and the pomegranate of Aragon. |  | | The case was referred to the Court of Arches but was settled out of court. |
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http://www.salisburycathedral.org.uk/cathedral.php?close_map&page=39
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| Â | AERA 95 Hoadley, Hsi & Berman |
 | | Our research to date indicates that people using the MFK system can use the system for effective learning discussions where they might not otherwise be able to hold discussions, that these discussions can form a useful part of a curriculum, and that the structure of the interface helps contribute to users' learning. |  | | Hoadley, C. and Hsi, S. "A multimedia interface for knowledge building and collaborative learning." Paper presented at InterCHI '93, (International Computer-Human Interaction Conference), Amsterdam, The Netherlands (adjunct proceedings): Association for Computing Machinery. |
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http://www.kie.berkeley.edu/kiosk/hoadley-hsi95.html
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| Â | Marilyn Pink Fine Arts |
 | | The Right Rev. Benjamin Hoadley, Prelate of the Most Noble Order of the Garter, 1743, etching and engraving, 17 x 12 inches. |
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http://www.marilynpink.com/TriArtFile/TriArtExhibitions/BritishArtists0902/BritishCatalogue0902.html
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| Â | Plant |
 | | She was born May 08, 1733, and died April 04, 1755. |  | | ABRAHAM3 PLANT (JOHN2, JOHN1)1,2 was born September 23, 1727 in Branford, New Haven, CT. He married (1) HANNAH HOADLEY March 09, 1750/51, daughter of JOHN HOADLEY and LYDIA ROGERS. |  | | LORENA4 PLANT (BENJAMIN3, JOHN2, JOHN1) was born 1767, and died in Trenton Falls, NJ. |
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http://www.geocities.com/myroots2002/Plant.html
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| Â | Flown From the Nest - Crystal Palace |
 | | Hoadley began his playing career at Selhurst Park |  | | Benjamin had loan spells with the Eagles and the Canaries during 2001/02 |  | | Former Palace youngster believed to have had trial with Norwich's Under-19s in the spring of 2002 |
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http://www.ex-canaries.co.uk/clubs/crystalpalace.htm
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| Â | Marrage Index |
 | | Hoadley, Nancy Lerchen and John Hoadley (/ /) |  | | Hoadley, John and Nancy Lerchen Hoadley (/ /) |  | | McDonald, Christena Bondy and Benjamin Bondy (02/ /) |
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http://www.tmaag.com/alexa00i.htm
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| Â | webGED: Noyes Family File Data Page |
 | | Cook, Benjamin Ladd (1840 - 1906) - male |  | | Cobb, Sanford Hoadley (1838 - >1907) - male |  | | ----------child: Chesebrough, Benjamin Franklin Jr (~1842 - >1902) |
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http://www.chesebro.net/lana2/wgd13.html
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| Â | SurfWax -- News, Reviews, and Articles On Bassoon |
 | | Benjamin Britten's "Ceremony of Carols" for treble voices will be performed by Academy Faculty and friends, Lori Turner, Marianne Cooper, Adena Williams and Bridgid Kinney (Mansfield News Journal, OH) |  | | Accompaniment will be provided by academy faculty Amy Begin, percussion; Larry Spoon, bassoon; Nancy Williams, flute; and Carol Bernhardt, oboe. |
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http://music.surfwax.com/files/Bassoon.html
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| Â | Playlists for May 23, 2003 |
 | | Benjamin Hoadley, bassoon; Luiz Mantovani, guitar (WGBH Studio One Live Performance, 4/6/2001) |  | | Benjamin Hoadley, bassoon; Hsin-Bei Lee, piano (WGBH Studio One Live Performance, 4/6/2001) |  | | Manuel de Santo Elias: Sonata in Eb Henry Lebedinsky, harpsichord (WGBH LIVE PERFORMANCE) |
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http://www.wgbh.org/playlists/date?day=23&month=05&year=2003
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| Â | [No title] |
 | | Beecher, Benjamin & Parmele, Wealthy - Nov. 13, 1794 |  | | English, Benjamin & White, Mary - June 18, 1795 |  | | Fenn, Benjamin & Russell, Mary - Apr. 5, 1727 |
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http://members.tripod.com/searchn
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| Â | Index of Persons |
 | | Benjamin LIGHTBURN (01 MAY 1795 - 24 APR 1878) |  | | Anthony FELL (Eighth month 8th, 1691 - 1746) |  | | Timothy HOADLEY (13 APR 1784 - 06 MAY 1814) |
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http://linsley.best.vwh.net/cgi/ged2html.cgi?X1.p
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