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197 51

Ladies of both Societies, by Pomfret, cont. in 1st Eccl. Soc., by G. B. Mathewson, through D. C. Robinson, Tr. &c.

do.

25 00

53 80

18 61

Hartford, Legacy of Miss Martha Rogers, dec'd,

by Seth Terry, Esq. Executor Do. of Mary Y. Hempstead, dec'd, by Rev. J. A. Hempstead, adm'r Hebron, coll. in 1st Soc. (in part) by Rev. A. Nash 6 54 Do. do. (balance) by Mr. Selden 6 75-13 29 Hamden Plains, coll. by A. Townsend, Jr., Tr. &c. Lyme, coll. in 1st Cong. Soc. by Rev. J. Emerson, ag't by Lebanon, do.

do. do.

do. (Goshen Soc.) by Manchester, do. 108 70, and from Horace Pitkin, Esq. 100, to const. himself an H. M. by Rev. Mr. Nash Milford, 1st Cong. Soc., by A. Townsend, Jr., Tr. &c. Middletown, coll. in 1st Cong. Soc., by Rev. J. Emerson, Ag't

Norwich, Ladies' Assoc. in 1st Soc., by C. Coit, Tr. &c.
Norwich City, Ladies' Aux. Ed. Soc., by Mrs. Abby W.
Hubbard, Tr.
New London, coll. in 1st Cong. Soc. 93 20, 21 Cong.
Soc. 104 31, ($40 of which, from Hon. Thomas W.
Williams, to const. the Rev. John McDonald an H.
M., and $30 of which is from Rev. J. Hurlbut, to
const. himself a L. M. of Ct. Br.) by Rev. J. Emer-
son, Ag't

Samuel Pitts

Charles Rogers, in part

Carmine St. Ch., G. Manning Tracy, Esq. Central Presbyterian Ch., Dr. J. W. Weed Fourth Free Ch., Subscriptions, collected in part by Wm. B. Humbert

Mercer St. Church,

Rev. Prof. Cyrus Mason
William W. Chester

Mrs. J. L. Mason

Anson G. Phelps

Joseph F. Joy

10 00

25 00

5 00-45 00

18 00

25 00

150 00

3 75

30 00

10 00

14 02

250 00

15 53

John L. Mason, Esq.

50 00

5 00

208 70

50 00

22 50

Najah Taylor

20 00-385 00

Murray St. Ch., Lester West

60 00

33 50

Second Avenue Ch., Wm. E. Dodge Spring St. Ch., Matilda Sammins

5 00 100 00

Thomas Page

48 00

Alfred A. Starr

Tenth Presbyterian Church,

Coll. in part by Rev. Mr. Spees

Wallingford, Ct., Legacy from Miss Eliza M. Hull, by John M. Hull

1 00 2.00 100-400

5 50-817 50

50 00

$1,852 70

UTICA AGENCY.

Do.

41 77

Rocky Hill, cont. by Rev. J. Emerson, Ag't
Southington, coll. in Cong. Soc. (in pt.) by do. 78 17
(balance) by R. Lowry 33 77-111 94
Suffield, coll. in Cong. Soc. by Harvey Bissel, Esq.
Stonington Point, cont. in part, by Rev. J. Emerson, ag't 66 09
Saybrook, coll. (with $20 paid last year) towards const.
the Rev. F. W. Hotchkiss an H. M. by A. Sheffield
Simsbury, cont. in Rev. Mr. McLean's Soc. by Rev. Mr
McLean

14.00

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27 40

Vernon, coll. in 1st Soc. through the agency of Rev. A. Nash

Holland Patent 7, Mrs. G. of H. P. 2

9.00

200 06

Homer, (balance) 10, Lebanon 10

20 00

Wethersfield, coll. by Dea. Stillman, through the agency of Rev. J. Emerson

Lenor, balance of Life Membership

35 00

Manlius 32 57, Marshall 6, Madison 16

54 57

127 87

Worthington, cont. by Rev. Mr. Riddel

Marcellus 15 63, New Hartford 30 94

46 57

31 65

Waterbury, do. in Cong. Soc. by A. Townsend, Jr.

Oneida Association 22 21, Ŏtego 5

27 21

Tr. &c.

20 17

Oriskany Falls 5 19, Otisco 50

55 19

Preble 10 25, Pompey 16

26 25

$1,958 99

Rome, Mrs. Dr. Miller 1, Sauquoit 14 64

15 64

Smithfield 20, Utica, Ist Pres. Cong. 77 16

97 16

Vernon 17 02, Vernon Centre 1

18 02

Vermont, a lady .25, Wampsville 12 40

12 65

CENTRAL AMERICAN EDUCATION SOCIETY.

[Charles Starr, Esq. N. Y. Tr.]

Barbadoes, W. Indies, Wm. R. Hayes, by Amos Townsend, New Haven,

Brooklyn, L. I., 1st Church,

J. C. Meecker

F. A. Burrell

Winfield 5 54, Windsor 10

15 54

Walton, Columbia Society

12.00

(Collected by Rev. D. Clark, Jr. Sec.)

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10 00

(Collected by J. W. Doolittle, Esq. Tr.)

10 00

$628 92

J. P. Dayton

Second Church,

Am't of collection

10 00-30 00

Greenville, N. Y., Pres. Ch. coll. in part

Cash

Champlain Benev. Soc., by R. D. Silliman
Danbury, Ct., "A friend,"

Darien, Ct., Gilbert G. Waterbury, in addition to $16

formerly contributed, to const. Rev. Ulric Maynard of Upsonville, Susquehannah co. Pa. an H. M.

Madison, N. J., Pres. Ch. coll.

Marlborough, N. Y., Pres. Ch. coll. in part
Morristown, N. J., coll. in Ch.

Mrs. Charlotte B. Arden

Mrs. Cobb

Dr. Condit

Silas Condit

Mr. Gensin

Mrs. C. Jones S. Johnson Jabez Mills Stephen Pierson

Mrs. E Russell

R. M. Stiles

J. C. Whitehead

N. J. Wood

100 75-130 75 20 00 1 00

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24 00

Bigflats 26, Bristol 12 26

38 26

28 78

Canandaigua 99 27, Clyde 15 75

115 02

42.00

Elmira 110, East Bloomfield 34 28

144 28

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113 60

16 90

Hammondsport 65, Hopewell 14 50

79 50

50 00

Livonia 64, Leroy 37 57

101 57

1 00

Junius 16, Moscow 6 65

22 65

5 00

Palmyra 69 56, Prattsburgh 100

169 56

5 00

Poultney 8, Penn Yan 178

186 00

9 00

Richmond 37, Rushville 68

105 00

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REV. JOHN H. LIVINGSTON, D. D.

President of Rutgers College.

Engraved for the American Quarterly Register.

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AMERICAN

QUARTERLY REGISTER.

VOL. XII.

FEBRUARY, 1840.

No. 3.

MEMOIR OF THE REV. JOHN H. LIVINGSTON, D. D.

THE family, from which Dr. Livingston was descended, is honorably noticed in Scottish history. One of his ancestors was Lord Livingston, afterwards the Earl of Linlithgow, who, with Lord Erskine, had the care of Mary Queen of Scots, in the castle of Dumbarton, in 1547. His daughter, Mary Livingston, was one of the four Maries that accompanied the queen to France as her companions.

The great-great-grandfather of the subject of this memoir, was the eminently pious minister of the gospel, and the common ancestor of the Livingston family in this country, the Rev. John Livingston. He was born in Monyabroch, Stirlingshire, Scotland, June 21, 1603. He preached his first sermon, January 2, 1625. He delivered a discourse at the kirk of Shotts, June 20, 1630, which was followed by a remarkable display of divine influence. About five hundred persons, as it was thought, there experienced a saving moral change. He was soon after settled over a church in Killinchie, Ireland. Here an extraordinary manifestation of divine power attended his preaching. By the instrumentality of two sermons, as it was supposed, not less than fifteen hundred persons were either renewed in holiness, or were greatly quickened in the Christian life. Mr. Livingston now became an object of bitter persecution; was proceeded against for non-conformity, and actually deposed. He now determined to emigrate to New England. The vessel, however, in which he had set sail, was driven back by adverse winds, and the design was abandoned. In 1638, he was settled in Stranrawer, in Scotland. While here, he was sent several times by the General Assembly, on a missionary tour to some vacant parishes in Ireland. These labors were very arduous, and were greatly useful. In 1648, he removed to Ancrum, in Tiviotdale. From this place, through the intolerant spirit of the times, he was compelled to flee. He went first to England. In 1663, he fled to Holland, and settled in Rotterdam. His wife and two children followed him, while five children remained in Scotland. He died August 9, 1672, aged 69.

Robert Livingston, the son of John, and the great-grandfather of the subject of this memoir, came over to America, it is believed, soon after his father's death. The patent for the manor of Livingston was granted in 1689. Smith, in his History of New York, states, that he was a principal agent for the convention, which met in Albany in 1689, and that he became peculiarly obnoxious to his adversaries, because he was a “man of sense and resolution." He was connected in marriage with the Schuyler

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