Baillie, John, 1886-1960 (Scottish theologian and ecumenical leader)
Found in 306 Collections and/or Records:
Letters during last illness, 1960
Letters from friends and colleagues, received by John Baillie and his wife during his final illness.
Letters from Annie Baillie and Donald Macpherson Baillie, 1911-1935
Letters to John Baillie from his mother Annie Baillie and his brother Donald Macpherson Baillie, and primarily covering the period when John Baillie was based in Canada and the United States.
Letters from Florence Jewel Baillie, 1917-1959
Letters to John Baillie from his wife Florence Jewel Baillie covering the period from when they first met until the year before John Baillie died.
Letters from Florence Jewel Baillie, 1917-1959
Letters to John Baillie from his wife Florence Jewel Baillie
Letters from Florence Jewel Baillie (from general filing), 1919-1934
Letters to John Baillie from his wife Florence Jewel Baillie originally filed as discrete bundles with in early general filing & correspondence files (Auburn, Toronto and New York files).
Letters from John Baillie, 1917-1957
Letters from John Baillie to Florence Jewel Baillie, covering personal matters along with wider family, social, professional, political and religious ones. Some letters are also from Ian Fowler Baillie.
Letters from Mai Fowler, c1909-1960
Letters from Mai Fowler to Florence Jewel Baillie, covering personal matters along with wider family and social ones. Includes some letters from Mai to John Baillie.
Letters from people unable to attend wedding, 1919
Letters from people unable to attend the wedding of John and Jewel Baillie, including William Watson Peploe.
Letters kept from New York office, 1956-1957
Correspondence and related items, including letters from William Roxburgh Forrester and John Henderson Seaforth Burleigh. Includes material relating to The idea of revelation in recent thought ( 1956, and lectures given by John Baillie in New York.
Locke's Doctrine of Essence, 12 November 1906
An essay written by John Baillie as a student at the University of Edinburgh, examining the meaning of 'essence' as used by philosopher, John Locke.