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・ Leonard Arthur Christian
・ Leonard Arthur Hawes
・ Leonard Arthur Kitz
・ Leonard Ashton
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・ Leonard Auala
・ Leonard B. Chandler
・ Leonard B. Jordan
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Leonard Bacon
・ Leonard Bacon (poet)
・ Leonard Bahan
・ Leonard Bahr
・ Leonard Bailey
・ Leonard Bailey (inventor)
・ Leonard Bairstow
・ Leonard Baker
・ Leonard Baldy
・ Leonard Banning
・ Leonard Barden
・ Leonard Barkan
・ Leonard Barkman
・ Leonard Barnes
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Leonard Bacon : ウィキペディア英語版
Leonard Bacon

Leonard Bacon (February 19, 1802 – December 24, 1881) was an American Congregational preacher and writer. He held the pulpit of the First Church New Haven and was later professor of church history and polity at Yale College.
==Biography==

Leonard Bacon was born in Detroit, Michigan. He was the son of David Bacon (1771–1817), a missionary among the Indians in Michigan and founder of the town of Tallmadge, Ohio.
Leonard Bacon prepared for college at grammar school in Hartford, Connecticut; he graduated from Yale College in 1820 and from the Andover Theological Seminary in 1823. From 1825 until his death he was pastor of the First Church (Congregational) in New Haven, Connecticut, occupying a pulpit which was one of the most conspicuous in New England, and which had been rendered famous by his predecessors, Moses Stuart and Nathaniel W. Taylor. In 1866, however, though never dismissed by a council from his connection with that church, he gave up the active pastorate; still, in 1868 he was president of the American Congregational Union.
From 1826 to 1838, he was an editor of the ''Christian Spectator'' (New Haven). In 1843 he was one of the founders of the ''New Englander'' (later the ''Yale Review''), and in 1848, with Richard Salter Storrs, Joshua Leavitt, Joseph Parrish Thompson, and Henry C. Bowen, he founded '' The Independent'', a magazine designed primarily to combat slavery extension; he was an editor of the ''Independent'' until 1863. From 1866 until his death he taught at Yale: first, until 1871, as acting professor of didactic theology in the Theological Department; and from 1871 as lecturer on church polity and American church history. He has traveled to the Middle East (then "Greater Syria") in the middle 1800s to visit holy sites, and gave lectures on his experiences, at least one of which was published in the New York Times.〔http://query.nytimes.com/mem/archive-free/pdf?res=940CEEDF1531E13BBC4851DFB5668389649FDE〕
Bacon was buried at Grove Street Cemetery, as was his sister Delia Bacon. Four of his six sons became Congregational pastors: Edward Woolsey Bacon (in New London, Connecticut), Leonard Woolsey Bacon, George B. Bacon (in Orange, New Jersey), and Thomas Rutherford Bacon (in New Haven, Connecticut).

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