The Connecticut church record abstracts from 1630-1920 contain information such as baptisms, marriages, deaths, and other important events recorded by churches in Connecticut during that time period.
Connecticut Farms Presbyterian Church was created in 1782.
no he did not go back to school.
Year-end 2008 records of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (commonly called the "Mormon" Church) list 14,579 baptized members of the Church in Connecticut. You can view and interactive map of Church membership at the "Related Links" below.
No. He was not a member of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (the "Mormon" church).
Bill Storey has written: 'Genealogical abstracts from Greenville County, SC' -- subject(s): Church records and registers, Genealogy
Connecticut's first church was the Congregationalists (Puritans).
Thomas Hooker expanded voting rights in Connecticut to people other than church members.
The colony of Connecticut was founded by Puritans, which also made the Congregational Church, and was thus, the legal religion until 1708.
Today it isn't , but as a colony it was.
L. Thomas Snyderwine has written: 'Researching the development of lay leadership in the Catholic Church since Vatican II' -- subject(s): Abstracts, Bibliography, Catholic Church, Doctrines, Government, History, Laity
Lucy Cushing Jarvis has written: 'Sketches of church life in colonial Connecticut' -- subject(s): Church of England, Church history
The head of the Catholic Church in Connecticut is Our Blessed Lord, Jesus Christ; His Vicar on earth is the Pope in Rome. There is no "Catholic Church in Connecticut, there are several: Archdiocese of Hartford: led by Archbishop Henry J. Mansell Diocese of Bridgeport : currently vacant Diocese of Norwich : Bishop Michael R. Cote Ukrainian Catholic Eparchy of Stamford: Bishop Paul P. Chomnycky OSBM