Baccalaureate addresses
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Baccalaureate addresses
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Baccalaureate addresses
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- Baccalaureate addresses -- 1787
- Baccalaureate addresses -- 1791
- Baccalaureate addresses -- 1797
- Baccalaureate addresses -- 1774
- Baccalaureate addresses -- 1789
- Baccalaureate addresses -- 1818
- Baccalaureate addresses -- 1796
- Baccalaureate addresses -- 1810
- Baccalaureate addresses -- 1817
- Baccalaureate addresses -- 1799
- Baccalaureate addresses -- 1769
- Baccalaureate addresses -- 1798
- Baccalaureate addresses -- 1805
- Baccalaureate addresses -- 1808
- Baccalaureate addresses -- 1804
- Baccalaureate addresses -- 1776
- Baccalaureate addresses -- 1800
- Baccalaureate addresses -- 1757
- Baccalaureate addresses -- 1770
- Baccalaureate addresses -- 1807
- Baccalaureate addresses -- 1772
- Baccalaureate addresses -- 1794
- Baccalaureate addresses -- 1781
- Baccalaureate addresses -- 1760
- Baccalaureate addresses -- 1765
- Baccalaureate addresses -- 1809
- Baccalaureate addresses -- 1806
- A discourse delivered in the chapel of Harvard College, June 17, 1794,, at the request of the senior class of students, on occasion of their approaching departure from the university, preparatory to their receiving its public honors., By David Tappan, A.M. Hollis Professor of Divinity in said college. ; Published by desire of the hearers.
- A dissertation on the history, eloquence, and poetry of the Bible., Delivered at the public commencement, at New-Haven.
- Useful knowledge and religion, recommended to the pursuit and improvement of the young;, in a discourse, addressed to the candidates for the baccalaureate, in Williams College. September 1, 1799., By the Rev. Ebenezer Fitch, president of Williams College.
- A charge containing hortatory observations on the value of time,, delivered at a publick commencement, July 26, 1810, to the senior class of the Philadelphia Academy, upon their having completed the course of study prescribed by that institution., By James Abercrombie, D.D. one of the Assistant Ministers of Christ-Churcg, St. Peter's, and St. James's; and director of the academy. ; [Four lines of quotations]
- Valedictory oration delivered at the late commencement in the Philadelphia Academy, July 27, 1809., By Mr. James P. Morris.
- Religion and public spirit., A valedictory address to the Senior Class, delivered in Nassau Hall, September 21, 1760. The Sunday before commencement:, by Samuel Davies, A.M. late president of the College, deceased.
- An oration, urging the necessity of religion, as the only permanent basis of civil government., Pronounced in the Baptist Meeting-House in Providence, at the commencement of Rhode-Island College, September 5, A.D. 1798., By Otis Thompson, A.B. ; Published at the request of the students. ; [Four lines of Latin quotatons]
- An address delivered to the graduates of Rhode-Island College,, at the anniversary commencement, in the Baptist Meeting-House in Providence, September 5, A.D. 1798., By Jonathan Maxcy, A.M. President of Rhode-Island College.
- A charge delivered, after a public examination, on Wednesday, July 31, 1805, to the senior class of the Philadelphia Academy,, upon their having completed the course of study prescribed by that institution., By James Abercrombie, D.D. director of the academy. ; [Two lines from Horace]
- A sermon, delivered to the candidates for the baccalaureate in Middlebury College, August 12, 1810., By Henry Davis, D.D. president. ; Published by request.
- The cause of man;, an oration: : together with valedictory addresses, pronounced at the commencement of Rhode Island College, September 7, A.D. 1796., By Tristam Burges. ; [One line from Pope]
- An oration, in defence of Divine revelation;, together with the valedictory addresses; delivered in the Baptist meeting-house, in Providence, at the commencement of Rhode-Island College, September 6, A.D. 1797., By Benjamin Allen, A.B. ; Published by request.
- A poem, spoken at the public commencement at Yale College, in New-Haven; September 12, 1781.
- An address to the senior class in Yale-College:, delivered in the chapel, as a response to the valedictory oration, which closed the public performances exhibited by the class after their examination, July 20, 1796., By Josiah Stebbins, Esquire, a tutor of the college. ; Printed at the desire of the students. ; [Two lines of verse]
- An oration upon genius,, pronounced at the anniversary commencement of Harvard University, in Cambridge, July 19, 1797., By Joseph Perkins, A.M.
- An address delivered at the commencement held in Queen's College in New-Jersey, September 25, 1810, by J.H. Livingston.
- A charge from the president to the graduates at the commencement at Providence, September 2, 1789., By James Manning, D.D. ; [One line of Scripture text]
- A charge, delivered at a publick commencement, July 27, 1809, to the senior class of the Philadelphia Academy,, upon their having completed the course of study prescribed by that institution., By James Abercrombie, D.D. one of the Assistant Ministers of Christ Church and St. Peter's, and director of the academy. ; [Four lines from Horace]
- Eulogy on the Hon. John Wheelock, LL.D., late president of Dartmouth University, who died April 4, 1817,, pronounced in the university chapel August 27, 1817, being the day of the anniversary commencement., By Samuel C. Allen. ; [Five lines of quotations in English and Latin]
- Christian magnanimity:, a sermon, preached at Princeton, September, 1775--the Sabbath preceeding the annual commencement; and again with additions, September 23, 1787. : To which is added, an address to the senior class, who were to receive the degree of Bachelor of Arts., By John Witherspoon, D.D. L.L.D. president of the College of New-Jersey.
- A discourse upon the institution of medical schools in America;, delivered at a public anniversary commencement, held in the College of Philadelphia May 30 and 31, 1765. : With a preface containing, amongst other things, the author's apology for attempting to introduce the regular mode of practising physic in Philadelphia:, by John Morgan M.D. Fellow of the Royal Society at London; correspondent of the Royal Academy of Surgery at Paris; member of the Arcadian Belles Lettres Society at Rome; licentiate of the Royal College of Physicians in London and Edinburgh; and professor of the theory and practice of medicine in the College of Philadelphia.
- An oration, on the study and profession of the law., Delivered at the commencement of Middlebury College, on the 20th of Aug. 1806., By Harry Chipman, candidate for the degree of master of arts. ; [Two lines in Latin from Virgil]
- A charge, delivered at a publick commencement, July 30, 1808, to the senior class of the Philadelphia Academy,, upon their having completed the course of study prescribed by that institution., By James Abercrombie, D.D. one of the Assistant Ministers of Christ Church and St. Peter's, and director of the academy. ; [Two lines in Latin]
- War, necessary, just and beneficial:, an oration, pronounced on commencement at Rhode-Island College, September 4th, A.D. 1799., By Tristram Burges, a candidate for the second degree.
- A charge, delivered May 17, 1757, at the first anniversary commencement in the College and Academy of Philadelphia,, to the young gentlemen who took their degrees on that occasion., By W. Smith, M.A. Provost of the said college and academy. ; To which is added, in Latin, a salutatory oration, delivered on the same occasion. By Paul Jackson, professor of languages in the said college and academy, on taking his degree of Master of Arts.
- An oration delivered on the late public commencement at Rhode-Island College in Providence; September 1774., Being a plea, for the right of private judgment in religious matters; or, for the liberty of choosing our own religion. Corroborated by the well-known consequences of priestly power. : To which, are annexed, the valedictions of the class then first graduated., By Barnabas Binney, A.B. ; [Twenty-nine lines of quotations]
- An address, delivered by the Reverend Jonathan Maxcy, A.M. President of Rhode-Island College, and professor of divinity, to the graduates at the commencement, September 3, 1794. ; [Three lines of quotations]
- Envy wishes, then believes., An oration, delivered at commencement, Harvard University, Cambridge, July 20th, 1796., By Leonard Woods.
- A charge delivered, after a public examination, on Friday, July 27, 1804, to the senior class of the Philadelphia Academy,, upon their having completed the course of study prescribed by that institution., By James Abercrombie, A.M. director of the Academy. ; [Two lines from Horace]
- A discourse, delivered in the chapel of Rhode-Island College,, to the senior class, on the Sunday preceding their commencement, 1799., By Asa Messer, A.M. Professor of the learned languages.
- Miscellaneous works., By Eliphalet Nott, D.D. president of Union College. ; With an appendix.
- A discourse delivered in the chapel of Harvard College, June 19. 1798., Occasioned by the approaching departure of the senior class from the university., By David Tappan, D.D. Hollis Professor of Divinity in said college.
- An Essay on education;, delivered at the public commencement, at Yale-College, in New-Haven, September 9th, 1772.
- An essay on the beauties and excellencies of painting, music and poetry., Pronounced at the anniversary commencement at Dartmouth College, A.D. 1774., by John Wheelock, A.M. Tutor of said college. ; Published at the desire of the audience.
- A valedictory address to the young gentlemen, who commenced Bachelors of Arts, at Yale-College, July 25th. 1776.
- An oration, on the necessity of political union at the present day:, delivered at the Baptist Meeting-House, in Providence, at the commencement of Rhode-Island College, A.D. 1797., By Paul Allen, Jun. A.B. candidate for the degree of Master in the Arts.
- A poem on the prospects of America., To which are subjoined, the valedictory addresses, delivered on the public commencement at Rhode-Island College, in Providence, September 5, A.D. 1787., By Jonathan Maxcy, A.M. President of Rhode-Island College.
- A charge delivered after a public examination on Thursday, July 31st, 1806, to the senior class of the Philadelphia Academy,, upon their having completed the course of study prescribed by that institution., By James Abercrombie, D.D. director of the academy. ; [One line from Juvenal]
- An oration, on the propriety of introducing the science of jurisprudence into a course of classical education., Pronounced in the Baptist Meeting-House in Providence, at the anniversary commencement of Rhode-Island College, September 6th, A.D. 1797., By Samuel W. Bridgham, a candidate for the degree of Master in the Arts. ; Published at the request of the students.
- Union considered as the only safety of the United States., An oration, together with the valedictory addresses, pronounced in the Baptist Meeting-House in Providence, at the commencement of Rhode-Island College, September 5, A.D. 1798., By Conrade Webb, A.B. ; Published by request.
- Copy of the address delivered to the students of Phillips' Academy, in Andover,, immediately after the examination and exhibition, on July 18, 1791.
- An essay on the use and advantages of the fine arts., Delivered at the public commencement, in New-Haven. September 12th. 1770.
- The nature, and danger, of infidel philosophy,, exhibited in two discourses, addressed to the candidates for the Baccalaureate, in Yale College,, by the Rev. Timothy Dwight, D.D. president of Yale College; September 9th, 1797.
- Religion and public spirit., A valedictory address to the Senior Class, delivered in Nassau-Hall, September 21, 1760. The Sunday before commencement:, by Samuel Davies, A.M. late president of the College, deceased.
- A contrast between the effects of religion, and the effects of atheism., An oration, delivered at commencement, Harvard University, Cambridge, July 17th, 1799., By Leonard Woods, A.M. Pastor of the Third Church in Newbury.
- An address, to the students at Phillips Academy, in Andover., Delivered July 9, 1799. Being the day of the anniversary exhibition., By Jedidiah Morse, D.D. ; Published at the request of the trustees.
- Copy of an address delivered to the students of Phillips Academy in Andover,, immediately after the yearly examination and exhibition, before the board of trustees, on the seventh of July, 1794., By David Tappan, S.T.D. Hollisian Professor of Divinity in the university at Cambridge.
- Valedictory address delivered at a public commencement in the Philadelphia Academy, July 26, 1810., By Henry Hobart Smith.
- An oration on the prospects of the young men of America., Delivered in the university chapel, to the senior class. July 14, 1818. : Published by request.
- The present state of literature;, a poem, delivered in New-Haven, at the public commencement of Yale-College, September 10, 1800., By Warren Dutton. ; [One line in Latin]