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Leonidas Lent Hamline

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Name
  
Leonidas Hamline

Role
  
Lawyer

Died
  
1865


Books
  
Works of Rev Leonidas L Hamline Ed by Rev F G Hibbard

Similar People
  
Thomas Coke, Martin Boehm, Christian Newcomer, John Wesley, William Clyde Martin

Leonidas Lent Hamline (pronounced as if it were Hamlin) (born 1797 in Burlington, Connecticut, died 1865) was an American Methodist Episcopal bishop and a lawyer. He is the eponym of Hamline University in St. Paul, Minnesota, and of Hamline Avenue and Hamline United Methodist Church, also in St. Paul.

Hamline studied for the ministry, but afterward studied law, and practiced for a while in Ohio. He became a preacher in the Methodist church in 1830. In 1844, when the Methodist church divided over slavery, he was a member of the General Conference, the church's legislative body, and drew up the plan of separation.

He provided US$25,000 of his own money to launch a school, which became Hamline University. A statue of the bishop, sculpted by Michael Price, Professor of Art, stands on campus.

Hamline was the first editor of the long-running 19th century Cincinnati-based periodical, The Ladies' Repository, and Gatherings of the West.

A number of his sermons are given in the Works of L. L. Hamline, D. D., edited by Rev. F. G. Hibbard, D. D., (two volumes, 1869).

Publications

  • W. C. Palmer, Life and Letters of Leonidas L. Hamline, D. D., (New York, 1866)
  • References

    Leonidas Lent Hamline Wikipedia