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121 - 132 of 775 for "1个亿 stl"

  • ELLIS, MORGAN ALBERT (1832 - 1901), Welsh-American preacher and editor ., Cincinatti, Ohio, etc.; he then went westwards and ministered in San Francisco and in Coal Creek, Colorado. When the General Assembly of the Calvinistic Methodists was formed in Columbus, Ohio, in 1869, Ellis became its first secretary. He edited or co-edited Y Cyfaill, Baner America, and Blodau yr Oes a'r Ysgol; he was part-owner of Blodau yr Oes. He died 1 June 1901 at Pueblo, Colorado.
  • ELLIS, ROWLAND (1650 - 1731), Welsh-American Quaker Born at Bryn Mawr in the parish of Dolgelley, Meironnydd, 1650, son of Ellis ap Rees. He married twice: (1) c. 1692, Margaret, daughter of Ellis Morris, (2) Margaret, daughter of Robert ab Owen. He joined the Society of Friends c. 1672 and because he was steadfast in his new faith he suffered persecution and imprisonment. After the founding of Pennsylvania on Indigenous land, he sent Thomas Owen
  • ELLIS, THOMAS (1711/12 - 1792), cleric support of the movement. Ellis was particularly anxious to prevent the schools from being associated in the popular mind with Methodism, and still more with Dissent (see 'John Wesley in North Wales,' Bathafarn, ii, 50-1); he published, 1746 (revised edition, 1747 - see Morris Letters, i, 120, et alibi), Byr Grynhoad o'r Grefydd Gristionogol, a warning against schism, and when John Wesley was at Holyhead
  • EMERY, FRANK VIVIAN (1930 - 1987), historical geographer Terrier, 1559', Journal of the Gower Soc. 7: 53-4 1956 'West Glamorgan farming, circa 1580-1620', Pt. I, National Library of Wales Journal Vol.9 pt.4 : 392-400 1957 'Contact between North Devon and South Wales in the 1840s', Devon and Cornwall Notes and Queries 27: 198-206 1957-58 'West Glamorgan farming, circa 1580-1620', Pt. II, National Library of Wales Journal Vol.10 pt.1: 17-32 1958a 'Edward Lhuyd
  • EVAN(S), EDWARD (1716 - 1798), Presbyterian minister and poet -y-glo, and when a separate church was incorporated near Aberdare (now the ' Old Meeting') he became one of its leading members and a preacher. His theological views moved leftward to Arminianism, and later to Arianism. On 1 July 1772 he was ordained pastor of the ' Old Meeting,' and held office till 1796. He died 1 June 1798 and was buried in S. John's churchyard, Aberdare. He was twice married
  • EVANS, ELMIRA (Myra) (1883 - 1972), teacher, author and folklorist Myra Evans was born just before midnight on 1 November 1883 at 4 George St, New Quay, Ceredigion, the daughter of Thomas Rees (1843-1926), a fisherman and ship's captain, and his wife Mary (née Williams, b. 1856). However, her birth date was mistakenly entered as 2 November by the doctor who arrived the following day. Her birth on Calan Gaeaf, when according to traditional belief the veil between
  • EVANS, CARADOC (1878 - 1945), author best of his time. In 1934-35 he returned to Wales and helped run a theatre at Aberystwyth. In 1939 he settled at Aberystwyth and then at New Cross. He was twice married, (1), to Rose Ware, 1907 (divorced 8 March 1933), and (2), to Marguerite Helene ('Oliver Sandys'), daughter of Col. H.P. Jervis, in May 1933. He had no children. He died 11 January 1945 in Aberystwyth hospital.
  • EVANS, DAVID (1830 - 1910), archdeacon of St Asaph century. He died 1 March 1910.
  • EVANS, DAVID JOHN (1884 - 1965), minister (Presb.) and author Born 1 July, 1884 at Bronfelen, Capel Seion, Cardiganshire, son of John and Ellen Evans. He was educated at Capel Seion elementary school, Pen-llwyn board school, Newcastle Emlyn grammar school, University College, Aberystwyth (where he graduated B.A.) and the Theological College, Aberystwyth (where he graduated B.D.). He was ordained in 1916, and served as minister of his mother-church at Capel
  • EVANS, EVAN (1671 - 1721), cleric and missioner in Pennsylvania 1721. An account of his work (including also accounts of his Welsh fellow-workers), based upon S.P.G. records, will be found in two articles by J. A. Thomas in the Journal of the Church in Wales Historical Society, 1954 and 1955. David Williams (Wales and America, Cardiff, 1946, 80-1) points out that Evan Evans's grandson, Oliver Evans, an inventor, was the first to build a steam-engine in the U.S.A.
  • EVANS, EVAN (Ieuan Fardd, Ieuan Brydydd Hir; 1731 - 1788), scholar, poet, and cleric Llanvihangel Crucorney near Abergavenny, where he remained until the early part of 1769. He then returned to North Wales, becoming curate successively of Llanystumdwy (1769-70), Llandecwyn and Llanfihangel-y-traethau (1770-1), Llanberis (1771-2), and Towyn, Meironnydd, from the end of 1772 until the early part of 1777. From 1771 to 1778 he was helped by Sir Watkin Williams Wynn II, who gave him a pension and
  • EVANS, EVAN WILLIAM (1860 - 1925), editor and publisher company to edit and publish that journal, this arrangement continuing from the issue for 5 July 1884 until that for 26 June 1914. On 1 July 1914 he started his own weekly newspaper, Y Cymro, of which he was editor, publisher, and printer, and which continued to be published at Dolgelley until 1931. Other newspapers and journals were issued throughout the years from the Dolgelley offices, among them