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・ Moses E. Clapp
・ Moses E. Kiley
・ Moses E. Lewis
・ Moses Eaton, Jr., House
・ Moses Ebuk
・ Moses Effiong
・ Moses Ehambe
・ Moses Ehrich
・ Moses Elias Levy
・ Moses Elijah McGarry
・ Moses Ellis House
・ Moses Emmanuel
・ Moses Ephraim
・ Moses F. Odell
・ Moses F. Rittenhouse
Moses F. Shinn
・ Moses Farnum House
・ Moses Farrow
・ Moses Fasanya
・ Moses Fellows
・ Moses Finley
・ Moses Fleetwood Walker
・ Moses Fletcher
・ Moses for Mere Mortals
・ Moses Fork
・ Moses Formwalt
・ Moses Fowler House
・ Moses French Colby
・ Moses G. Farmer
・ Moses G. Leonard


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Moses F. Shinn : ウィキペディア英語版
Moses F. Shinn
Moses Franklin Shinn (January 3, 1809 – 1885) was a pioneer Methodist Episcopal Church minister in Omaha, Nebraska. Aside from founding Omaha's first cemetery, called Prospect Hill, he was also renowned for renouncing his Methodist affiliation in Keokuk, Iowa in order to remain a member of the Freemasons. The incident was probably the only of its kind ever to occur in the history of the Masons.〔(1993) ("The Preacher who Refused to Renounce Masonry" ) ''Scottish Rite Journal'' article reproduced on an MIT website. Retrieved 8/11/07.〕 Late in his life, Shinn was reportedly "one of the wealthiest citizens of Omaha".〔("Colfax County," ) ''Andreas' history of Nebraska.'' Retrieved 8/11/07.〕
==Biography==
Shinn was born in Hillsboro, Ohio in 1809. In 1842 he was a Methodist circuit rider around Birmingham, Iowa. His circuit included Birmingham, Colony, Philadelphia (Kilbourne), Keosauqua, Bentonsport, Bonaparte, Utica, Washington, Winchester, and several private homes throughout Van Buren and Washington counties.〔("Birmingham, Iowa history," ) Retrieved 8/11/07.〕 Historical records place Shinn in Council Bluffs, Iowa after 1851, when it was noted he was a "fiery Methodist preacher" who some claimed was "as learned in full deck poker as in theology".〔(1907) (Council Bluffs Incorporated, ) ''History of Pottawatomie County.'' Retrieved 8/11/07.〕 Around 1851 Shinn was a minister at a settlement in Iowa called Blue Point in Jefferson County.〔(Blue Point, Iowa ). Retrieved 8/11/07.〕 In 1852 he was sent to Council Bluffs.〔(1907) (History of Churches ). '' History of Pottawattamie County Iowa Volume I.'' p. 129. Retrieved 8/11/07.〕 He was the presiding elder of the Council Bluffs District of the Methodist Church, which included work that developed in the new neighboring Nebraska Territory.〔Morton, J.S. and Watkins, A. ("Methodism in Nebraska." ) ''History of Nebraska; From the Earliest Explorations of the Trans-Mississippi Region''. Lincoln, NE: Western Publishing and Engraving Company. p. 795.〕

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