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Engraving by David C. Hinman after a portrait by Alexander Hamilton Emmons
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Engraving by Alfred Jones after a portrait by G.A. Baker
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Ezra Stiles, a prominent Rhode Island minister and later the seventh president of Yale College, is shown in what he described as “a teaching attitude” surrounded by objects reflecting his interest in history, religion, and science.
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Portrait of Judge Samuel Sewall, painted a few months before his death
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A Puritan clergyman, John Davenport left England for Holland in 1633, came to Boston in 1637, and established the New Haven Colony the following year. An eloquent preacher, he was pastor of the First Church for thirty years. After failing in an attempt to prevent New Haven’s annexation in 1664 by Connecticut, a disappointed Davenport returned in 1667 to Boston. His portrait was painted there just before or possibly after his death in 1670.
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Sketches and drawings by Templeton of the principal participants in the presentation phase of the trial in Connecticut Superior Court of Black Panther Party chairman Bobby Seale and Black Panther Party organizer Ericka Huggins.
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The Amistad captives, Africans who were enslaved despite the abolishment of slavery throughout the Spanish dominions in 1820, revolted from their Cuban masters on board ship and ended up off the northern shore of Long Island in 1839. The captives were jailed in New Haven pending their trial to determine whether they were property.
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The Amistad captives, Africans who were enslaved despite the abolishment of slavery throughout the Spanish dominions in 1820, revolted from their Cuban masters on board ship and ended up off the northern shore of Long Island in 1839. The captives were jailed in New Haven pending their trial to determine whether they were property.
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The Amistad captives, Africans who were enslaved despite the abolishment of slavery throughout the Spanish dominions in 1820, revolted from their Cuban masters on board ship and ended up off the northern shore of Long Island in 1839. The captives were jailed in New Haven pending their trial to determine whether they were property.
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The Amistad captives, Africans who were enslaved despite the abolishment of slavery throughout the Spanish dominions in 1820, revolted from their Cuban masters on board ship and ended up off the northern shore of Long Island in 1839. The captives were jailed in New Haven pending their trial to determine whether they were property.
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The Amistad captives, Africans who were enslaved despite the abolishment of slavery throughout the Spanish dominions in 1820, revolted from their Cuban masters on board ship and ended up off the northern shore of Long Island in 1839. The captives were jailed in New Haven pending their trial to determine whether they were property.
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Lamin Sanneh (1942-2019), D. Willis James Professor of Missions and World Christianity at Yale Divinity School and Professor of History at Yale University
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Charles Forman (1916-2014), Professor of Missions at Yale Divinity School, 1953-87
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Original photograph in sepia tones, digitally altered to black and white
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East and West Divinity Halls, corner of Elm Street and College Street
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