He was graduated at Rutgers in 1850, and, after the completion of his theological studies at New Brunswick seminary in 1854, was ordained to the ministry of the Presbyterian church in Virginia, becoming pastor of the congregation at Charlotte Court-House (now Smithville). In 1859 he removed to Newark, N. J., and took charge of the 1st Reformed church. He was the American chaplain at Rome, Italy, in 1876-7, returned to the United States in 1878, and was pastor of a Congregational church in Springfield, Mass., from 1879 till 1884, when he took charge of a Reformed church in Brooklyn, N. Y.[3]
^"Marion Harland (1830–1922)". Encyclopedia Virginia. Retrieved 2010-06-18. She married Edward Payson Terhune in 1856 and moved to Newark, New Jersey, in 1859, when her husband, a Presbyterian minister, was given a pastorate there.
^"Mrs. C. Herrick Dies. Wrote Cook Books, 85". The New York Times. December 3, 1944. Retrieved 2007-05-24. Mrs. Christine Terhune Herrick, author of several books on cooking and housekeeping, died today at the age of 85. She was the widow of the James Frederick ...
^"Christine Herrick Dies". Chicago Tribune. December 3, 1944. Archived from the original on July 12, 2012. Retrieved 2010-06-18. Mrs Christine Herrick. Washington D.C. Dec. 2, Mrs. Christine Terhune, 85, author of a number of books on cooking and housekeeping died today. ...
^Thomas William Herringshaw (1909). "Edward Payson Terhune". Herringshaw's National Library of American Biography. Retrieved 2010-06-18. Terhune, Edward Payson, clergyman, was born about 1825 in New Brunswick, N.J. In 1859 he removed to Newark, N. J. ; and there took charge of the First Reformed Church. In 1876-77 he was the American chaplain at Rome, Italy. In 1879-84 he was pastor of a congregational church in Springfield, Mass.; and in 1884 he took charge of a reformed church in Brooklyn, N.Y. He died May 25, 1907, in New York City.