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See also: American philanthropist and See also: Protestant Episcopal clergyman, See also: great-See also: grandson of H
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M
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See also: Muhlenberg and grandson of F
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A
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C
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Muhlenberg, was See also: born in See also: Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, on the 16th of See also: September 1796
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He graduated at the university of Pennsylvania in 1815
.
In 1817 he was ordained a deacon in the Protestant Episcopal See also: Church, and became assistant to
See also: Bishop See also: William
See also: White (1748-1836) in the rectorship of Christ Church, St
See also: Peter's and St See also: James's, Philadelphia
.
In 1820 he was ordained
See also: priest and until 1826 was rector of St James's Church, See also: Lancaster, Pennsylvania
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Largely owing to his efforts, Lancaster was the second public school See also: district created in the See also: state
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His See also: interest in church See also: music and hymnody prompted his pamphlet of 1821, A Plea for Christian See also: Hymns; he See also: drew up for the use of his own parish a collection of Church See also: Poetry (1823); and in 1823 he was appointed by the General See also: Convention a member of the committee on psalms and hymns, whose collection, approved in 1826, contained several of Muhlenberg's own compositions, including " I would not live alway," " Shout the glad tidings," and " Saviour, who thy See also: flock See also: art feeding." From 1826 to 1845 he was rector of St See also: George's, See also: Flushing, Long See also: Island, where in 1827 he became See also: head of the Flushing Institute, probably the first Protestant Episcopal " church school " in the See also: United States
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He founded a St See also: Paul's See also: College, to include the institute, but the panic of 1837 and the refusal of a charter by the state legislature brought it to an end; and the See also: property was sold a few years after Muhlenberg See also: left Flushing
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The methods of this institute were however copied widely; church See also: schools sprang up everywhere; and St Paul's School, Concord, New Hampshire, and the Groton School in Massachusetts were established in accordance with his ideas
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In 1845 he removed to New See also: York City, where in 1.846 he became rector of the Church of the See also: Holy Communion, a " See also: free " church built by his See also: sister, Mrs Mary A
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See also: Rogers
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Here Muhlenberg founded the first American See also: order of Protestant Episcopal deaconesses, the Sisterhood of the Church of the Holy Communion, begun in 1845 and formally organized in 1852
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The See also: work of the sisterhood led to Muhlenberg's establishment of St See also: Luke's Hospital (opened in 1858), for which his See also: congregation made offerings each St Luke's See also: Day after 1846. in 1866 he founded on Long Island the Church See also: Industrial Community of St Johnland
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He bought 535 acres (mostly wooded), with a See also: shore front of 12 m. on Long Island See also: Sound, near See also: King's
See also: Park, 4.5 m. from New York City, to be a home for the aged and for See also: young See also: children, especially cripples.1 The See also: plan was not reformatory nor purely
1 The Society of St Johnland, incorporated in 1870, has a See also: chapel, the Church of the Testimony of Jesus (1869), St See also: John's
See also: Inn, the home for old men (also built in 1869), Sunset Cottage, a home for twelve aged couples, Muhlenberg See also: House for old See also: women, the Fabbri Home, the Sunbeam Cottage (given by Mr and Mrs Cornelius See also: Vanderbilt in 1881) See also: Lawrence House, for babies, a library and See also: village See also: hall, a
See also: kindergarten, a school house, and the " mansion," Dr Muhlenberg's home at St Johnland and later the home of Sister See also: Anne Ayres, his biographer, during her superintendence of the society.charitable, and a moderate See also: rent was charged for the cottages
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In the St Johnland cemetery is the See also: grave of Dr Muhlenberg, who died on the 8th of See also: April 1877 in St Luke's Hospital, New York City
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His ideal of the church was that it was missionary and evangelical as well as catholic with formal See also: government and ritual; hence he called himself an " evangelical Catholic " and wrote the Evangelical Catholic Papers, which were collected and published by Anne Ayres in 1875-1877
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See Anne Ayres, See also: Life and Work of William See also: Augustus Muhlenberg (New York, i88o), and W
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W
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See also: Newton, Dr Muhlenberg (See also: Boston, 1890), in the " American Religious Leaders " series
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