Yahoo Malaysia Web Search

Search results

  1. John Bethune ( Scottish Gaelic: an t-Urr. Iain Beutan) (1751 – September 23, 1815) was a Scottish Presbyterian minister, who served and helped found Reformed congregations among the Scottish diaspora in the Colony of North Carolina, Quebec, and in Upper Canada.

  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › John_BethuneJohn Bethune - Wikipedia

    John Bethune may refer to: John Bethune (Scottish minister) (1725–1774) Scottish minister and philosopher. John Bethune (Canadian minister) (1751–1815), founder of the first Presbyterian Church in Montreal. John Drinkwater Bethune (1762–1844), English army officer and military historian.

  3. John Bethune (Scottish Gaelic language: an t-Urr. Iain Beutan) (1751 – September 23, 1815) was a Scottish Presbyterian minister, who served and helped found Reformed congregations among the Scottish diaspora in the Colony of North Carolina, Quebec, and in Upper Canada. After fighting on the...

  4. John Bethune, brother of Alexander Neil Bethune, was the third son of Véronique Waddin and the Reverend John Bethune*, a minister of the Church of Scotland. During the American Revolution, the elder Bethune served as chaplain in the 84th Regiment (Royal Highland Emigrants).

  5. www.histories.ca › CanadianDictionary › Bethune-JohnHistories Bethune John

    Bethune John Born in Scotland, 1751. Emigrated in his early years to South Carolina, and was chaplain of the loyal militia. In 1786 resided in Montreal; minister of the Presbyterian church there; afterwards appointed to a mission in Glengarry. =Index=: (John Graves Simcoe era) Presbyterian minister,

  6. John Bethune (Scottish Gaelic: an t-Urr. Iain Beutan) (1751 – September 23, 1815) was a Scottish Presbyterian minister, who served and helped found Reformed congregations among the Scottish diaspora in the Colony of North Carolina, Quebec, and in Upper Canada.

  7. John Bethune (1751 – September 23, 1815) founded the first Presbyterian Church in Montreal and was the patriarch of a notable Canadian family prominently connected with the fur trade, politics, medicine, law and the church.