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The Reverend Jacob Duché (1737–1798) was a Rector of Christ Church in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, and the first chaplain to the Continental Congress.
From 1774 to 1776, Duché was the chaplain to the Continental Congress, delivering the prayer at the first opening of that body. During the British occupation of ...

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Jacob Duché was baptized at Christ Church in 1738 and it was the same church where he would one day serve as minister and preach his famous American Vine sermon ...
A biography of the life of Philadelphia's Jacob Duché, the Anglican minister who offered the most famous prayer and wrote one of the most infamous letters of ...
Jacob Duché. Colonel Jacob Duché Sr., Mayor of Philadelphia. 1708-1798 ; Mary (Spence) Duché. Mrs Mary (Spence) Duché. c.1710-1747 ...
Biography: MA; b. Philadelphia; rector of St Peter's and (in 1775) Christ Church in Philadelphia; Chaplain to the Continental Congress, 1774-77; ...
BOOK REVIEWS2016235The Johns Hopkins University Press has invested resources appropriate for a fi ne coffee table book on a fi rst-rate piece of scholarship ...
Jacob Duché Jr. (153). Election date: 1768 (Elected to the American Society.) Jacob Duché Jr. (31 January 1737–3 January 1798) was an Anglican clergyman and ...
06þ/08þ/2019 · Jacob Duché was appointed as chaplain, at least unofficially, for purposes of providing an opening prayer. As Duché strode to the lectern on ...
Colonel Jacob Duché (1708–1788) was a mayor of Philadelphia in the colonial province of Pennsylvania. Duché was born in Philadelphia, the son of Anthony ...