Biography (Wikipedia)
Biography (Rutgers University)
Biography (McClintock and Strong Biblical Cyclopedia)
William Linn is buried at Albany Rural Cemetery, Menands, New York.
Sermons Historical and Characteristical (1791)
The Blessings of America: A Sermon, Preached in the Middle Dutch Church, on the Fourth July, 1791, Being the Anniversary of the Independence of America (1791)
The Spiritual Death and Life of the Believer (1791)
The Character and Misery of the Wicked (1791)
Christian Warfare (1791)
The Character of Simon the Sorcerer: A Sermon, Designed to Prove that Baptism is Not Regeneration (1793)
Discourses on the Signs of the Times (1794)
A Discourse, Delivered on the 26th of November, 1795; Being the Day Recommended by the Governor of the State of New-York To Be Observed as a Day of Thanksgiving and Prayer, on Account of the Removal of an Epidemic Fever, and For Other National Blessings (1795)
April 4, 1798 Letter to Thomas Jefferson (1798)
A Discourse on National Sins: Delivered May 9, 1798; Being the Day Recommended by the President of the United States to be Observed as a Day of General Fast (1798)
Serious Considerations on the Election of a President: Addressed to the Citizens of the United States (1800)
A Funeral Eulogy, Occasioned By the Death of General Washington: Delivered February 22d, 1800, Before the New-York State Society of the Cincinnati (1800)
A Collection of the Essays on the Subject of Episcopacy (1806)
William Linn, D.D. (1869)
This is a sermon in 2 parts.
Published anonymously, this work is ascribed to William Linn, with assistance from John M. Mason.