Biography (Wikipedia)
David H. Riddle served as pastor of the Old Stone Church in Winchester, Virginia from 1828 to 1833 (photo credit: R. Andrew Myers).
David Hunter Riddle is buried at Allegheny Cemetery, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.
Human Depravity (1835)
The Nation’s Alternative: A Sermon, Preached in Providence Hall, Before the Students of Jefferson College, August 2d, 1840 (1840)
The Morning Cometh, or, The Watchman's Voice: A Discourse on the Day of National Fast (1841)
Genuine Radicalism!: An Address Before the Geothean and Diagnothian Societies of Marshall College, Pa.: Delivered on the 26th of September, 1843 (1843)
Sound and Sanctified Scholarship: An Address Delivered at the Dedication of the New Edifice of the Western University of Pennsylvania, on Tuesday, September 8th, 1846 (1846)
The Pilgrims and Their Principles: A Sermon Before the New Society of Pittsburgh, on the Evening of December 22d, 1850, in the Third Presbyterian Church (1851)
Pontius Pilate (1851)
Our Country For the Sake of the World: A Sermon in Behalf of the American Home Missionary Society, Preached in the Cities of New York and Brooklyn, May 1851 (1851)
Our Mission: A Sermon, Delivered at the Opening of the General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church, in the City of Utica, May 15th, 1851 (1851)
Ground of Confidence in Foreign Missions: A Sermon, Preached at Portland, Maine, September 9, 1851, Before the American Board of Commissioners For Foreign Missions, at Their Forty-Second Annual Meeting (1851)
The Secret of Ministerial Power: Sermon Preached at the Installation of Dr. [Abraham] Polhemus as Pastor of the North Dutch Church of Newark, May 3d, 1857 (1858)
“Such a Time as This!”: A Sermon Preached in the First Presbyterian Church, Jersey City, on Thanksgiving Day, Nov. 24, 1859 (1860)
“The Wisdom of God in a Mystery” (1869)
Historical Address (1869)
The Mystery of Iniquity (1870)