Ayer, Joseph Cullen, Jr.
AYER, JOSEPH CULLEN, JR.: Protestant
Episcopalian; b. at Newtonville, Mass., Jan. 7,
1866. He was educated at Harvard University and
the universities of Berlin, Halle, and Leipsic (Ph.D.,
1893), and at the Episcopal Theological School,
Cambridge, Mass., from which he was graduated
in 1887. He was honorary fellow at Johns
Hopkins in 1899-1900, and in the following year was
appointed lecturer on canon law in the Cambridge
Theological School. In 1905 he was chosen professor
of ecclesiastical history in the Divinity School
of the Protestant Episcopal Church in Philadelphia.
His theological position is that of a conservative
Broad-churchman or a liberal High-churchman.
In addition to numerous briefer studies on canon
law, music, and painting, in various reviews, and,
besides contributions to the second, third, and fourth
volumes of
The World’s Orators (New York, 1900),
he has written Die Ethik Joseph Butlers (Leipsic,
1893) and The Rise and Development of Christian
Architecture (Milwaukee, 1902).