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Samuel Hopkins (September 17, 1721 – December 20, 1803) was an American Congregationalist theologian of the late colonial era of the United States.
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Samuel Hopkins (December 9, 1743 – 1818) was an American inventor from Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, [1] [2] On July 31, 1790, he was granted the first US patent.
Сэмюэл Хопкинс (Samuel Hopkins)

Сэмюэл Хопкинс (Samuel Hopkins)

Американский богослов
Сэмюэл Хопкинс был американским богословом-конгрегационалистом поздней колониальной эпохи Соединенных Штатов. Хопкинсовское богословие было названо в его честь. Хопкинс был одним из первых аболиционистов, говоря, что в интересах и долге США... Википедия (Английский язык)
Дата и место рождения: 17 сентября 1721 г., Уотербери, Коннектикут
Дата и место смерти: 20 декабря 1803 г., Ньюпорт, Род-Айленд
Прабабушки и прадедушки: Доркас Хопкинс, Джон Стронг-мл., Мэри Кларк и ещё
Книги

Samuel Hopkins was an American theologian and writer who was one of the first Congregationalists to oppose slavery. After studying divinity in Northampton, ...
Patriot and theologian Samuel Hopkins (1721-1803) vigorously opposed slavery throughout his life. Paradoxically, his antislavery theology was inspired by ...
Hopkins graduated from Yale College in 1741, then studied divinity in Northampton, Massachusetts with his brother-in-law Jonathan Edwards. He was licensed to ...
Samuel Hopkins was an uncompromising abolitionist. He published the anti-slavery pamphlet, A Dialogue Concerning the Slavery of the Africans.
Samuel Hopkins was named after his uncle, Samuel Hopkins (1693-1755), who was a minister in West Springfield, MA. Hopkins the younger grew up on a farm in ...
Adams was widely known for his writings on public health and patent medicines; he is often given much of the credit for the passage of the 1906 Pure Food and ...
The Rev. Dr. Samuel Hopkins served as minister of the First Congregational Church from 1770 to 1803 and wrote “The Principles of the New Divinity.”
Historical Marker #717 in Henderson County commemorates General Samuel Hopkins, a Revolutionary War veteran who helped establish Henderson County.