Knowledge (XXG)

Stephen Gano

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and turned to the ministry, and in 1786 he was ordained in the Gold Street Church by his uncle, Dr. Manning, and other clergy. He served as a Pastor of the Baptist Church at Hillsdale, NY and then Hudson, NY. In Hudson, his wife died leaving Gano with several young children, and in 1789 he married
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prevented him from enrolling. So at the age of thirteen Gano went to study medicine with his uncle, Dr. Stites. At age 17 in 1779 Gano served briefly as a surgeon's mate in the American army, then resigned to become a surgeon's mate on a privateer. Shipwrecked, marooned, and then taken prisoner by
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from Brown University in 1800 and was an Overseer of Brown University from 1794 until his death. He also served on the Providence School Committee for many years. Gano published several of his sermons and other writings. Gano Street in Providence takes its name from Gano's surname.
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His father had previously joined the military as a chaplain, and a Gano family legend holds that John Gano baptized George Washington. No historian or biographer of Washington accepts this tale.
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In 1797 Polly died, and in 1799 he married Mary Brown, daughter of Professor Joseph Brown, of Brown University, but Mary died in December 1800. Next Gano married Mrs. Joanna Latting, of
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in Providence, Rhode Island where he remained until his death. Many revivals took place throughout his tenure at the church with expanding church membership and baptisms.
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to the Old Northwest Territory and is credited with establishing a church at Columbia, Ohio, near present-day Cincinnati, the first Baptist church in the territory.
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and in 1782 married Cornelia Vavasour, daughter of a British officer in New York City. In 1783 he had a
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the British, he was confined in leg irons on a prison ship for some time.
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while his father was pastoring Gold Street Baptist Church (
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FIRST: The History of the First Baptist Church in America
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After the Revolution, Stephen Gano practiced medicine in
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He was admitted as an honorary member of the New York
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18th-century Baptist ministers from the United States
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19th-century Baptist ministers from the United States
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Index


First Baptist Church in America
Providence, Rhode Island
John Gano
New York City
First Baptist Church in the City of New York
Brown University
James Manning
Revolutionary War
Society of the Cincinnati
Orangetown, New York
conversion
Stamford, Connecticut
missionary
First Baptist Church in America
Hillsdale, New York
Freemason
M.A.
New York (state) portal
Medicine portal
First Baptist Church in America





Annals of the American Pulpit: Baptist. 1860
229
Categories
People from colonial New York

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