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  1. Lane Seminary, sometimes called Cincinnati Lane Seminary, and later renamed Lane Theological Seminary, was a Presbyterian theological college that operated from 1829 to 1932 in Walnut Hills, Ohio, today a neighborhood in Cincinnati. Its campus was bounded by today's Gilbert, Yale, Park, and Chapel Streets.

  2. The Pontifical College Josephinum is a Roman Catholic seminary and private university in Columbus, Ohio. It was founded by Joseph Jessing in 1888 and was granted the status of a Pontifical College in 1892 by Pope Leo XIII, making it the only pontifical seminary in North America.

  3. United States Conference of Catholic Bishops. The Pontifical College Josephinum is a Roman Catholic seminary whose mission is to prepare men for the ordained priesthood through human, spiritual, intellectual, and pastoral formation.

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    • Lane Seminary2
    • Lane Seminary3
    • Lane Seminary4
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  4. Early History of Lane Seminary. An Act to Incorporate the Lane Seminary. In 1828, Ebenezer and William Lane, brothers from New Orleans along with the Kemper family of Cincinnati donated money and land for a new seminary to be founded in Walnut Hills, a neighborhood of Cincinnati, Ohio. This area, including the Ohio River had become an important ...

  5. Lane Theological Seminary. Cincinnati, Ohio. 1829 - 1932. Lane Theological Seminary was founded by the Presbyterian church during the wave of evangelical revivals known as the Second Great Awakening with the express purpose of educating pastors to serve the growing population of the old Northwest Territory. Print.

  6. 24. Apr. 2021 · Inscription. The Lanes, Baptist merchants from New Orleans, and the Kempers, a Presbyterian family from Cincinnati, gave money and land respectively for Cincinnati's first manual labor theological seminary and high school, which opened in suburban Walnut Hills in 1829.

  7. About the Project. The Lane Theological Seminary debates which transpired in Cincinnati, Ohio in 1834, occurred because the students wanted to protest the idea of abolition versus colonization. These debates are often overlooked or disregarded in the history of abolition in the United States.