. A history of old Pine street; being the record of an hundred and forty years in the life of a colonial church. The Churchyard and Its Dead. 325 and William F. Vanbeck (1838-48) followed DaddyAllen. The latter is buried in the old churchyardwhich he had cared for with loving hands. The serviceof the succeeding sexton, William Hutton, extendedover a generation, covering the latter half of Dr. Brain-erds pastorate and all of Dr. Allens pastorate. was known and loved by two generations, andan excellent portrait of him hangs in the Infant preceding sextons he died at his post


. A history of old Pine street; being the record of an hundred and forty years in the life of a colonial church. The Churchyard and Its Dead. 325 and William F. Vanbeck (1838-48) followed DaddyAllen. The latter is buried in the old churchyardwhich he had cared for with loving hands. The serviceof the succeeding sexton, William Hutton, extendedover a generation, covering the latter half of Dr. Brain-erds pastorate and all of Dr. Allens pastorate. was known and loved by two generations, andan excellent portrait of him hangs in the Infant preceding sextons he died at his post of old age. In the year before Dr. Gibbons came to Old PineStreet, William M. Maull was elected sexton. was a man of exceptional intelligence, the fruitnot of college training, but of extensive reading and ob-servation in travel. He had a large acquaintanceamong the ministry of our church, and fully enjoyedtheir appreciation. He had his own peculiar way forministerial relief. It consisted of a sum of moneywhich he had accumulated, and which he was accus-tomed in an unobtrusive way to lend without i


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