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Jean-Pierre Badaut was an important figure within the first generation of Seventh-day Adventists in France and significantly contributed to the development of the Adventist Church in the country.
Paul Badaut pioneered the missionary work in Mauritius and later served as president of the South France Conference in the early 1900s.
Samuel Badaut was a French Adventist minister and a departmental leader in the Latin Union Conference that included Algeria, Belgium, France, Italy, Morocco, Portugal, Spain, and Switzerland.
Aimé Cosendai was a teacher, pioneer missionary, union president, director of radio work, and hospital administrator in Cameroon and in Switzerland.
Lille Eppner was one of the first female administrators at a conference level and also served the Adventist Church as a Bible worker, teacher, and accountant.
Marcel and Dorothy Fernandez were missionaries in Tahiti and Cameroon.
Marius Fridlin was a missionary in Equatorial Africa and an administrator in the Southern European Division for 40 years.
Jules Rey was a Swiss Adventist evangelist and administrator who worked in France, Switzerland, and North Africa during the first sixty years of the twentieth century.
An evangelist and administrator in France and Switzerland, Léon-Paul Tièche was one of the first leaders of the Seventh-day Adventist Church in the European French speaking countries.
Maurice Tièche was an Adventist educator, pastor, author, and broadcaster from France.
Paul Tièche was evangelist, pastor, teacher, and administrator in France and the French part of Switzerland in the 1900s.