Powell, Lyman Pierson
POWELL, LYMAN PIERSON: Protestant Episcopalian; b. at Farmington, Del.,
Sept. 21, 1866. He was educated at Dickinson College, Carlisle, Pa., Johns Hopkins
University (A.B., 1890), University of Pennsylvania (fellow in history, 1893–95),
and the Protestant Episcopal Divinity School, Philadelphia (1897). He was staff
lecturer in history in the extension department of the University of Wisconsin
(1892–93) and in the American University Extension Society (1893–95). Since ordination
he has been rector of Trinity, Ambler, Pa. (1897–98), St. John's, Lansdowne, Pa.
(1898–1903), and St. John's, Northampton, Mass. (since 1903). Theologically he
is a liberal conservative, and has written: History of Education in Delaware
(Washington, 1893) ; Six Sermons on Sin (Lansdowne, Pa., 1903); Family
Prayers (Philadelphia, 1905); The Anarchy of Christian Science (Northampton,
Mass., 1906) ; Christian Science: The Faith and its Founder (New York,
1907); and Heavenly Heretics (1909); besides editing the series American
Historic Towns (4 vols., New York, 1898–1901).