Conrad Henry Moehlman

[2] He received a Bachelor of Divinity degree from the Baptist Rochester Theological Seminary in 1905 and two years later, began teaching Hebrew and Old Testament history there.

[2] After the departure of Walter Rauschenbusch, Moehlman became the professor of church history at Rochester, which later merged with Colgate University.

Many were shocked to learn that ancient phrases to which they had long been habituated, created and perpetuated ugly stereotypes of other groups....

Moehlman engaged in a 3-way forum with Rabbi Philip Bernstein and Clarence Darrow (billed as an agnostic), chaired by David Rhys Williams, at the Rochester Convention Center on May 31, 1932, which attracted "some 2000 persons" according to an account in the Democrat & Chronicle, Rochester, NY, June 1, 1932.

Moehlman died in Avon Park, Florida in 1961 and is buried in Riverside Cemetery in Rochester, NY.

Conrad Henry Moehlman, 1952