Search for: Joseph
14281 Footprints of the Pioneers, p. 38.1 (Arthur Whitefield Spalding)
… faith, Joseph Bates and John N. Andrews. Hope of Israel (periodical), Feb. 28, 1845; Advent Herald (periodical), July 3, 1852; Joseph Bates, The Seventh Day Sabbath a Perpetual …
14282 Footprints of the Pioneers, p. 39.2 (Arthur Whitefield Spalding)
… testifies, Joseph Bates made haste to leave that same noon, or, as Eugene Farnsworth says, remained several days and talked with William. Farnsworth (“the first …
14283 Footprints of the Pioneers
Joseph Bates
14284 Footprints of the Pioneers, p. 40.1 (Arthur Whitefield Spalding)
… , of Joseph Bates, the oldest of the three founders of the Seventh-day Adventist denomination. Fairhaven of old was simply called East New Bedford, but in the …
14285 Footprints of the Pioneers, p. 41.1 (Arthur Whitefield Spalding)
… boy Joseph Bates. His father, also named Joseph, made his residence on the “Meadow Farm,” the house still standing. The salt marsh meadow, a part of his holdings …
14286 Footprints of the Pioneers, p. 41.2 (Arthur Whitefield Spalding)
… Joseph Bates was one of sixteen men who, in 1798, banded together to build the Fairhaven Academy, which opened in 1800 and continued into the 1840’s. Joseph Bates …
14287 Footprints of the Pioneers, p. 42.1 (Arthur Whitefield Spalding)
… 1812.Joseph Bates, and James White, Life of Joseph Bates, p. 13.
14288 Footprints of the Pioneers, p. 42.3 (Arthur Whitefield Spalding)
… elder Joseph Bates in 1793, who in that year came from Rochester, Massachusetts, where his son Joseph was born in 1792. In the rear of this residence is a massive …
14289 Footprints of the Pioneers, p. 43.1 (Arthur Whitefield Spalding)
Joseph Bates had a faithful and devoted wife, who as a girl was Prudence Nye. Of all the Nyes that Joseph Bates knew! Mother, and uncles, and neighbors, and sea mates …
14290 Footprints of the Pioneers, p. 44.1 (Arthur Whitefield Spalding)
… of Joseph Bates, p. 240; letter from Charles A. Harris, Dec. 17, 1946.
14291 Footprints of the Pioneers, p. 44.3 (Arthur Whitefield Spalding)
… , is Joseph Bates’ study, their present dining room. We stood there, ruminating upon the past. We imagined Joseph Bates sitting at his desk that summer day of 1846 …
14292 Footprints of the Pioneers, p. 46.1 (Arthur Whitefield Spalding)
… doubt Joseph Bates wrote in that room. But, alas for treasured tradition, it was not, probably, where he wrote his Sabbath book. For I have since learned, through …
14293 Footprints of the Pioneers, p. 46.2 (Arthur Whitefield Spalding)
“Joseph,” said his wife, coming in from the kitchen, “I haven’t enough flour to finish my baking.”
14294 Footprints of the Pioneers, p. 46.6 (Arthur Whitefield Spalding)
“Joseph, where did this flour come from?”
14295 Footprints of the Pioneers, p. 46.8 (Arthur Whitefield Spalding)
“Yes; but have you, Captain Joseph Bates, a man who has sailed with cargoes worth thousands of dollars, gone out and bought just four pounds of flour?”
14296 Footprints of the Pioneers, p. 47.4 (Arthur Whitefield Spalding)
Joseph Bates rose to his full height. “I am going to write a book on the Sabbath, and distribute it everywhere, to carry the truth to the people,” he said.
14297 Footprints of the Pioneers, p. 47.8 (Arthur Whitefield Spalding)
Well, Joseph Bates couldn’t do anything about it, that he knew. So he turned from his husbandly duties to his apostleship duties, and began to write. Within half …
14298 Footprints of the Pioneers, p. 48.5 (Arthur Whitefield Spalding)
… spot, Joseph Bates paid his lone York shilling as an act of faith that he was the servant of Jehovah-jirah, the Lord who would provide. And he believed not in vain …
14299 Footprints of the Pioneers, p. 72.1 (Arthur Whitefield Spalding)
J. O. Corliss relates a similar story concerning Joseph Bates and his potatoes. I suppose there were other potato patches that preached in 1844, but these are all I have heard of.J. O. Corliss in The Review and Herald, August 16, 1923, p. 7.
14300 Footprints of the Pioneers, p. 76.4 (Arthur Whitefield Spalding)
… , and Joseph Bates and James and Ellen White were holding their first meetings in New York. They had just concluded a meeting in Hiram Edson’s barn at Port Gibson …