with faithfulness and success. In 1755 the struc- ture known as Nazareth Hall was erected, and within its walls a boarding-school was opened in 1759 for boys of the Moravian church. Of this school Lembke was constituted the principal. Out of it grew, in 1785, that enlarged school which now, for more than a century, has been educating boys from all parts of the United States. Lembke was a learned divine, an able educator, and an eloquent preacher.
LEMCKE, Henry, clergyman, b. in Mecklen-
burg, Germany, 27 June, 1796; d. in Carrollton,
Cambria co., Pa., 29 Nov., 1882. His parents were
poor, but he educated himself sufficiently to gain
admission to the College of Schwerin, where he
supported himself by giving private lessons. He
entered the German array in 1813, afterward went
to the University of Rostock to study for the
Lutheran ministry, and was licensed to preach in
1819. He united with the Roman Catholic church,
21 April, 1824, and was ordained to its priesthood,
11 April, 1826. In 1833 he volunteered for mis-
sionary duty among the Germans of the United
States^ and labored first in Philadelphia and then
as assistant to Father Demetrius Gallitzin in Lo-
retto, Pa. He took up his residence at Ebens-
burg, and purchased a farm near by, on which he
afterward erected St. Joseph's church. He next
bought 400 acres of land, on which he built a
house and chapel in 1838, and in 1839 he laid out
a town on it, which he wished to name after his
friend Gallitzin, but, on the remonstrance of the
latter, called it Carrollton. In 1840 he succeeded
Father Gallitzin as pastor of Loretto, and was then
the only priest in Cambria county, but he soon
obtained the aid of others. After a successful
visit to Europe in 1844 to collect money, he bought
800 acres of land, on which he intended to estab-
lish a colonv of Benedictines, but they preferred
to settle in Westmoreland county. He became a
member of the order of St. Benedict on 2 Feb., 1852.
performed missionary duty in Kansas, and founded
the abbey of St. Benedict in Atchison, Kan. He
returned to Pennsylvania in 1858, and after a visit
to Germany labored in New Jersey till 1877, when
he withdrew to Carrollton, Pa. lie wrote his own
autobiography, part of which appeared in the jour-
nals of Cambria county, and published translations
of several controversial works in German, and " Le-
ben und Werken des Prinzen Demetrius Augustin
Gallitzin " (Munster, 1861).
LEME, Antonio Pires da Silva Pontes (lay'-meh), Brazilian scholar, b. in Minas-Geraes,
Brazil, about 1756 ; d. there in 1807. He studied
at the University of Coimbra, was graduated in
1777, and went to the East Indies, whence he
returned to Lisbon, and in 1780 accompanied
Dr. Lacerda, who was sent to Brazil by the gov-
ernment of Portugal to study the question ^of
boundaries with the Spanish colonies. In 1781
Leme explored Paraguay and the territories of
Cazalvasco and Barbados, meanwhile making copi-
ous notes on the geography of the country that
were afterward published by the government of
Brazil (1841). The commission finished its work
in 1783, and returned to Portugal. Leme now
drew a complete map of Brazil and a maritime
guide of its coasts, for which, in addition to his
other services, he was given a medal by the govern-
ment of Portugal. In 1798 he was appointed by
the king professor in the Academy of Lisbon,
and on 29 March, 1800, he was appointed gov-
ernor of the province of Espirito Santo, where he
gave much attention to the civilization of the
Indians, establishing for them a college and an
industrial school. He retired from his office in
1804, and devoted himself to the completion of his
works, but was obliged to abandon them on ac-
count of illness. He published a work entitled
" Construccao e Analyse das proposicces geometri-
cas e experiencias practicas que serven de funda-
mento a architectura naval " (1799).
LE MERCIER, Andrew (leh-mair'-se-ay'), cler-
gyman, b. in Caen, France, in 1692; d. in Boston,
Mass., 31 March, 1763. He was graduated at Geneva,
and immediately afterward, in 1715, came to this
country through the influence of Andrew Faneuil,
to succeed Rev. Pierre Daille as pastor of the French
Protestant church in Boston, over which he pre-
sided till 1748. He built a house for the relief of
shipwrecked mariners on the Isle of Sables, to which
he sent provisions, and which was the means of
saving many lives. He wrote "The Church History of Geneva, in Five Books, with a Political and Geographical Account of that Republic " (Boston, 1732), and a "Treatise against Detraction" (1733).
LE MERCIER, Francis, French missionary,
b. in France early in the 17th century : d. in Mar-
tinique, W. I., 12 June, 1690. He entered the
Society of Jesus, 14 Oct., 1620, and was sent to
Canada in 1635, where he was attached to the
Huron mission until its destruction in 1649. He
held the post of superior of the missions from
1653 till 1656, labored among the Iroquois till
1658, and was again superior from 1665 till 1670.
After leaving Canada in 1673 he was sent to the
West Indies as visitor. While he was superior in
Canada he published six volumes of " Relations."
LE MOINE, James MacPherson, Canadian
author, b. in Quebec, 24 Jan., 1825. He is the son
of Benjamin Le Moine, a wealthy merchant of
Quebec and a lineal descendant of Jean Le Moyne,
seigneurof three fiefs,
who was a near rela-
tive of Baron Le
Moyne de Longueuil.
James received his
preparatory educa-
tion in St. Thomas,
Lower Canada, at the
home of his maternal
grandfather, a Unit-
ed Empire loyalist
who fled from Phila-
delphia in 1783. In
1838 James entered
the Petit seminaire de
Quebec, where he re-
mained till 1845. He
subsequently studied
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law, and was admitted to the bar of Quebec in 1850. In 1847 he became superintendent of inland revenue at Quebec, which post he still (1887) retains. He has been president of the Literary and historical society of Quebec, and was selected by the Marquis of Lome to preside over the first section of the Royal society of Canada. Mr. Le Moine is an enthusiastic student of Canadian history and ornithology, and at his residence. Spencer Grange, near Quebec, he has an extensive aviary, a museum of natural history specimens, and a large collection of books and curios connected with the early history of Canada. He has written on the subject of Canadian history with such impartiality as rarelv to challenge adverse criticism. His works include " L'Ornithologie du Canada " (Quebec, 1860) ; " Etude sur les navigateurs arctiques Franklin, McClure, Kane, McClintock" (1862); " Etudes sur Sir Walter Scott " (1862) ; " Legend-