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Michigan Jackson
When Dr. Grinnell-took charge of the parish the Sunday school was little other than such in name. Under his care it soon became one of the most interesting and instructive, and was attended largely by children not belonging to the parish, as well as by those belonging to it. When its real founder and painstaking teacher was taken away from it, the Sunday school of St. Paul's church was the
largest in the city. The charity of Dr. Grinnell was so broad and its ex-ereise so unlimited, that he was as much loved by those outside of his parish as in it.
Joseph Tunnecliff, Jr., is a native of the state of Michigan. He was educated as a physician and surgeon, and has practiced his profession in Jackson for over thirty-five years, with the exception of a short residence at Sacramento in California in 1852, and while serving as surgeon of the Fourth and First Michigan volunteer infantry during two years, and as • assistant state military agent until the close of the war. He was surgeon for the Michigan Central Railroad Company at Jackson from 1865 for ten years.
Jackson Section 3
Page 39
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