वेस्ट्रीमैन Meaning in English
वेस्ट्रीमैन शब्द का अंग्रेजी अर्थ : vestryman
, vestiman
ऐसे ही कुछ और शब्द
वेष्टन कागजवेस्टार्ण
वेष्टन का
वेस्टरिंग
वस्त्रागार
वेस्टल्स
वयोवृद्ध व्यक्ति
पशुचिकित्सा
पशु चिकित्सा
वेत्लूगा
वेत्लूगा नदी
निषेधाधिकार
खिजाना
वेक्सेशन
खिझाऊ
वेस्ट्रीमैन इसके अंग्रेजी अर्थ का उदाहरण
He was elected as a vestryman of the Trinity Episcopal Church in Covington on November 24, 1842.
Shipwrecks of the Argentine coast A vestryman is a member of his local church's vestry, or leading body.
Usually the term vestryman (as used in the UK) would denote a member of the parish council at a certain period in history (and is synonymous with or equivalent to a parish councillor) but the term may, depending on context, also signify an official (or employee) of the Parish Council although strictly, this should be in the form Vestry man.
" He was vestryman for the Huguenot Church of New York City for thirty-four years and his translation of the "Book of Common Prayer" from English to French is still used today.
Her grandfather was Robert Crawley who was an early vestryman of the most noted surviving colonial church, Bruton Parish in Williamsburg.
He was a member of the Torch Club of Richmond, the Richmond Astronomical Society and St Mary's Episcopal Church, Goochland County, Virginia where he served as director of the Sunday School, senior warden and vestryman.
In regard to religion, he was an attendant of the Episcopal Church, of which his wife was a member and he, a vestryman.
Peters Church in Albany in 1773, and was listed as a vestryman in the Church's charter of incorporation, granted by King George III on April 25, 1769.
He also served as county magistrate, a Colonel in the Virginia Militia, and parish vestryman.
According to historian William Selden: “Moses Taylor Pyne was a director of four banks, four steel and metal manufacturing companies, one gas company, one insurance company, eight railroads and president of one railroad, two hospitals, two secondary schools, two YMCAs; and a vestryman of four Episcopal churches.
John Carter's son Robert, a wealthy vestryman and planter, decided that the parish deserved a more substantial place of worship and, in 1730, funded and supervised the construction of a brick building on the approximate foundations of the old wooden church.