Yahoo Québec Recherche sur tout le Web

Résultats de recherche

  1. A practical visionary, Samuel Atkins Eliot gave his powers to the work of human betterment. Men and women found inspiration in his hopeful spirit, challenge in his gift for forging opportunities, wisdom in his clear-eyed appraisal of the open-endedness of all results.

  2. Samuel Atkins Eliot (March 5, 1798 – January 29, 1862) was a member of the notable Eliot family of Boston, Massachusetts, who served in political positions at the local, state and national levels.

  3. Samuel Atkins Eliot II (August 24, 1862 – October 15, 1950) was an American Unitarian minister. In 1898 the American Unitarian Association elected him secretary (a position effectively the chief executive officer) but in 1900 the position was redesignated as president and Eliot served in that office from inception to 1927 ...

  4. Samuel Atkins Eliot Henry Wilder Foote Samuel Atkins Eliot was born in Cambridge, Massachusetts, on August 24, 1862, and died in Boston on October 15, 1950. He was the younger son of Charles William and Ellen Derby (Pea body) Eliot, and was named for his paternal grandfather. In Harvard College, from which he was graduated cum laude with the ...

  5. Samuel Atkins Eliot may refer to: Samuel A. Eliot (minister) (1862–1950), American Unitarian minister. Samuel Atkins Eliot (politician) (1798–1862), U.S. Representative from Massachusetts.

  6. Samuel Atkins Eliot (1862-1950) was born in Cambridge, Massachusetts, and graduated from Harvard College in 1884 and Harvard Divinity School in 1889. He served Unitarian parishes in Denver, Colorado, the Church of the Saviour in Brooklyn, New York, and the Arlington Street Church in Boston, Massachusetts.

  7. Dr. Samuel Atkins Eliot was the president of the American Unitarian Association from 1900 to 1927. During this long term as president, Eliot corresponded with Unitarian ministers from many parts of the country, as well as with many other people.