- The
Rogerenes (also
known as the
Rogerene Quakers or Rogerines) were a
religious sect
founded in 1674 by John
Rogers (1648–1721) in New London, Connecticut...
-
mentions the
Rogerenes coming to the area
prior to 1708.
Official records state that the name of the lake was
changed to Lake
Rogerene in 1925. By 1780...
- tax
resisters in
small sects like the
International Bible Students and
Rogerenes.
After World War II, a non-sectarian war tax
resistance movement began...
-
trails crossed at an area
called Black River. With the
arrival of the
Rogerenes in 1730, the area
developed as an
agricultural community,
producing applejack...
-
Mountain Pond may
refer to:
Mountain Pond (Old Forge, New York) Lake
Rogerene, in
Mount Arlington, New Jersey,
originally named Mountain Pond This disambiguation...
-
church to form a sect (called "
Rogerenes"
after their leader) that
borrowed from both
Baptist and
Quaker theology. The
Rogerenes refused to
accept colonial...
-
captured in the
Modoc War. Williams, Anna
Bolles (1904). "Quakertown". The
Rogerenes: Some
Hitherto Unpublished Annals Belonging to the
Colonial History of...
-
Retrieved 31
December 2016. Brinton,
Ellen Starr (March 1943). "The
Rogerenes". The New
England Quarterly. 16 (1): 3–19. doi:10.2307/361127. JSTOR 361127...
-
became known as
Quaker Hill by 1687 due to its ****ociation with the
Rogerenes or
Rogerene Quakers, a
religious sect
founded by a
local farmer, John Rogers...
-
spreading the
doctrine of Universalism. He was born in 1689, the son of
Rogerene Baptist immigrants from
Rhode Island.
Influenced by both
Quaker and Baptist...