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Papers associated with this scholarly figure range from parish work to international interests: from his ministry (at St. John's Church, Auburn, N.Y., 1873, in New York City, 1874, and in Baltimore at the Church of St. Mary the Virgin and St. Paul's Church, 1875-1885), to his labors for the Russo-Greek Committee and the Mexican Commission of the House of Bishops, 1871-1876, and his European travels. Most of the letters are to Bishop William Rollinson Whittingham. Relations with the Greek and Russian Orthodox Churches are the principal subjects. There are references to negotiations and events in these Churches, and to dignitaries such as the Patriarchs of Antioch and Alexandria, the death of ...
Included with the essay are several letters discussing the inscriptions, and a copy of a 1790 drawing of the inscriptions.
A collection of 16 papers (1874-1891) by the Rev. Charles Hale and the order of service for the installation of Hale as Dean of the Davenport Cathedral (1886) and as Bishop of Cairo, Illinois (1892). Most of the papers were published although the collection includes three holograph manuscripts and the title page and contents are handwritten by Hale.
The Hale memorial lectures were established in 1900 under the provisions of the will of the Rt. Rev. Charles Reuben Hale, D.D., LL.D., Bishop of Cairo and Bishop Coadjutor of Springfield, Illinois. The same will provided for the Hale memorial sermons of Seabury-Western Theological Seminary.
What begins as a quest to unravel the mystery surrounding the death of an infant becomes a gripping odyssey. Immersing himself in faded photos, newspaper articles, dusty basements and fragments of his own memory, Charles Hale summons the voices from the past and seeks to discover how his ancestors lived. Traversing landscapes, beginning at the burial site of a baby, to a butcher's shop in Ireland, to a tapestry of tenements, bustling streets, and ballfields in the heart of New York City, Hale asks, Can we navigate the hidden recesses of history, untangling the shadows that shroud the past? Weaving together a tapestry of stories, a realization emerges-our narratives shape our very existence, ...