James Renwick Willson served as pastor of the united congregations of Coldenham and Newburgh, Orange County, New York, from 1817 to 1823, when the Newburgh branch was dropped, and he remained at Coldenham until his resignation in 1830. He returned to Coldenham, where he served as pastor again from 1833 to 1840.

James Renwick Willson is buried at the Coldenham-Newburgh Reformed Presbyterian Church Cemetery, Walden, New York (photo courtesy of Zach Dotson).

James Renwick Willson is buried at the Coldenham-Newburgh Reformed Presbyterian Church Cemetery, Walden, New York (photo courtesy of Zach Dotson).

Bedford Medicinal Springs (1811)

Classical Literature (1812)

A Historical Sketch of Opinions on the Atonement (1817)

Interesting Sketch of the Life and Death of Doctor Harry I. Todd, of Kentucky (1817, 1838)

The Subjection of Kings and Nations to Messiah (1820)

Dr. Watts an Anti-Trinitarian (1821)

The Evangelical Witness, Vol. 1 (1822-1823)

The Hired Man and His Employer (1822)

Honour to Whom Honour is Due: Funeral Eulogium delivered at the Interment of the Bones of those who fell in Battle of Minisink (1822)

Hopkinsianism (1822)

Dialogue on Messiah’s Headship Over the Nations (1823)

Essay on Tolerance (1823)

Review of McLeod’s Lectures Upon the Principal Prophecies of the Revelation (1823)

The Evangelical Witness, Vol. 2 (1823-1824)

Anniversary Address Delivered Before the Newburgh Lyceum (1823)

Review of Harris on Psalmody (1824)

The Evangelical Witness, Vol. 3 (1825)

Political Danger (1825)

Dissertation on the Musquitoe, Read in the Newburgh Lyceum (1825)

Travels of Titus in the United States (1825)

The American Jubilee: A Discourse Delivered at Walden, N.Y., on the Fourth of July (1825)

The Evangelical Witness, Vol. 4 (1826)

Alphabetical Writing and Printing (1826)

The Sabbath. A Discourse on the Duty of the Civil Government, in Relation to the Sanctification of the Lord's Day (1829)

Juries (1832)

Prince Messiah's Claims to Dominion Over All Governments; and the Disregard of His Authority by the United States, in the Federal Constitution (1832)

Prince Messiah's Claims to Dominion Over All Governments; and the Disregard of His Authority by the United States, in the Federal Constitution (1832, 1848)

History of the Reformed Presbyterian Church (1832-1833)

The Albany Quarterly, Vols. 1-5 (1832-1833)

Tokens of the Divine Displeasure (1836)

An Address, Delivered Before the Newburgh Library Association, on its First Anniversary (1837)

Address, on the Subject of African Slavery (1837)

An Address on West India Emancipation (1838)

The Written Law (1838)

Testimony Against the Moral Evils in the Civil Institutions of the United States (1839)

Causes of Fasting and Brotherly Covenant (1843, 1879)

Missionary Tour Through New England (1845-1847)

Consistory — Its Constitution (1847)

The Heathen Classics - Dangerous School Books (1847)

Levitical Functions (1847)

The Christian College (1848)

Covenant Renovation (1849)

The Monstrous Government of Slavery (1850)

Athaliah — 2 Chronicles XXIII (1850)

Seasons of Covenanting (1850)

Pagan Evils in the Church (1851)

The Fugitive Slave Law (1851)

Gog and Magog (1852)

The Flying Roll (1852)

Hebrew Antiquities (1853)

Turrettin on the Atonement of Christ (1859)

James Renwick Willson, D.D. (1869)

James Renwick Willson, D.D. (1888)


Contains pp. 1-240.

Contains pp. 1-240.

Source: Cornell University Library, Samuel J. May Anti-Slavery Collection

Source: Cornell University Library, Samuel J. May Anti-Slavery Collection

This is a 5-part article covering issues of The Covenanter from December 1845 to March 1847.

This is a 5-part article covering issues of The Covenanter from December 1845 to March 1847.

This is a 2-part article which appeared in the March-April 1850 issues of The Covenanter.

This is a 2-part article which appeared in the March-April 1850 issues of The Covenanter.