The kirk on Rutgers farm . Hemstreet. Historic New York: Half-Moon Papers. The Leaven in a Great City: Lillian The Better New York: Tolman and Hem-street. The New York Public School: A. Emer-son Palmer. Helping the Helpless in Lower New York:Lucy S. Bainbridge. The Fire on the Hearth: Edward The Kirk on Rutgers Farm One Wife Too Many: Edward Hopper. Old Horse Gray: Edward Hopper. Echoes from the Song of Songs: Mar-garetta Hopper. An Oriental Land of the Free: John One Hundred Poems: Jane A. Van Allen, American Notes: Charles Dickens. Valentines Manual of the Comm


The kirk on Rutgers farm . Hemstreet. Historic New York: Half-Moon Papers. The Leaven in a Great City: Lillian The Better New York: Tolman and Hem-street. The New York Public School: A. Emer-son Palmer. Helping the Helpless in Lower New York:Lucy S. Bainbridge. The Fire on the Hearth: Edward The Kirk on Rutgers Farm One Wife Too Many: Edward Hopper. Old Horse Gray: Edward Hopper. Echoes from the Song of Songs: Mar-garetta Hopper. An Oriental Land of the Free: John One Hundred Poems: Jane A. Van Allen, American Notes: Charles Dickens. Valentines Manual of the Common Coun-cil. New York Genealogical and BiographicalRecord. Records of the Market Street Dutch Re-formed Church. Records of the Presbyterian Church of theSea and Land. The Sea and Land Monthly. Handbooks of the Presbytery of NewYork. Printed in the United States of America. 133. Churcti of the Sea a,nd Land THE KIRK ON Rutgers Farm By/Irederick Brucktauer ItttLstratcd hyPauline JS t one ^l? 5 1995 Printed byPeter F. Mallon, Inc. / To the Men and Women who gave that the old church might refitain at Market and Henry Streets INTRODUCTION IT is evident that the preparation of thisvolume has been a labor of love. Of the sanctuary which, for one hun-dred years, has stood on the comer ofMarket and Henry Streets, the author, likemany others who have put their lives intoit, might well say: Thy saints take pleasure in her stones, ^Her very dust to them is dear. The story of The Kirk on RutgersFarm is one of pathetic interest. In itsfirst half-century it sheltered a worshippingcongregation of staid Knickerbocker type,which, tho blest with a ministry of extraor-dinary ability and spiritual power, suc-cumbed to its unfriendly environment andperished. In its second half-century it became thehome of a flock of God, poor in this worldsgoods, but rich in faith, to whom the enkirkonrutgersfar00br


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