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  1. Peter Williams Jr. (1786–1840) was an African-American Episcopal priest, the second ordained in the United States and the first to serve in New York City. He was an abolitionist who also supported free black emigration to Haiti, the black republic that had achieved independence in 1804 in the Caribbean. In the 1820s and 1830s, he strongly ...

  2. Jan 24, 2024 · But when design hypotheses are applied to biology, cosmology, or physics, some claim it’s no longer a scientific pursuit. On this ID The Future, host Andrew McDiarmid talks to philosopher and author Peter S. Williams about his recent book An Informed Cosmos: Essays on Intelligent Design Theory.

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  3. Williams was ordained as an Episcopal priest on July 10, 1826, the second in the United States and the first in New York. The following year, he helped found the Freedom's Journal, the first Black newspaper in America.

  4. — Rev. Peter Williams, Jr., the minister at the largest predominately black Episcopal Church in New York City, who gave an impassioned speech on July 4, 1830, calling for African American allegiance to the U.S. but also demanding that the nation treat its black citizens as the full equal of others.

  5. Jan 2, 2020 · Peter Williams Jr., clergyman, abolitionist, and opponent of colonization was born in New Brunswick, New Jersey around 1780. His family moved to New York City, where he first attended the New York African Free School operated by the Manumission Society.

  6. Peter Williams Jr. (1786–1840) was an African-American Episcopal priest, the second ordained in the United States and the first to serve in New York City. He was an abolitionist who also supported free black emigration to Haiti, the black republic that had achieved independence in 1804 in the Caribbean.

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  8. Peter Williams, Jr. religious leader. Born: 1780. Birthplace: New Brunswick, New Jersey. Williams grew up to become active in the Methodist Church. In 1818, with the blessings of prominent white Methodist minister Thomas Lyell, Williams organized a Black congregation in Harlem, St. Philip's African Church.

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