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Showing 101 – 120 of 207

Ruth Gorle was a pioneering missionary educator and administrator who played a pivotal role in advancing Seventh-day Adventist education in Southern Africa. Notably, she was instrumental in the transition of Solusi College to offering degree-level programs and introducing a leadership course that became foundational for senior Church workers throughout the Trans-Africa Division.

Josephine Gotzian was one of the wealthiest and most consistent financiers of early Adventism from the time of her conversion in the early 1880s to the end of her life. She was a close friend and confidant of Ellen G. White.

​Edith M. Graham held multiple church leadership responsibilities in Australia and New Zealand and served as head of the Home Missionary Department of the General Conference.

Gertrude Mary Green gave fifty-four-and-a-half years of her sixty-three-year nursing career to missionary nursing, teaching and nursing administration in China and the Far East.

Jessie Dorsey Green was an Adventist educator who, with Elizabeth Evelyn Wright, cofounded the Voorhees Industrial Training School, today Voorhees College, a historically black liberal arts college in Denmark, South Carolina.

​Elizabeth Haines was an early Adventist at whose house on Danforth Street, in Portland, Maine, Ellen White received her first vision as well as several others.

Minon Hamm was an Adventist educator in the Inter-American and North American Divisions.

​Eva Perkins was an educator, editor, and administrator who served in homeland America and in South Africa alongside her first husband, Eli Miller, and her second husband, Ira Hankins.

Della Hanson, an American-born Adventist missionary educator, served at the court of Emperor Haile Selassie I of Ethiopia for more than 30 years.

Frances Keller Harding, M.D., was a pioneer in the field of women’s health both in Australia and the United States.

Chessie Harris was founder and for decades director of the Harris Home for Children in Huntsville, Alabama, a non-profit shelter that has provided a wide range of services to disadvantaged young people since its founding in 1954.

Maureen Patricia Harvey was a medical missionary in Kenya, Uganda, Malawi, and South Africa.

Maria Haseneder served the Seventh-day Adventist Church for 35 years as a nurse, medical missionary, teacher, and medical consultant in Ethiopia, Switzerland, the Belgian Congo, Ruanda-Urundi, South Africa, and India.

Hetty Hurd Haskell was a pioneer Bible instructor and second wife of Stephen Nelson Haskell.

​The first wife of Stephen Nelson Haskell, Mary E. Howe was born in Massachusetts about 1812. Apparently a self-proclaimed invalid, she was being supported by a man, possibly her half-brother, for whom Stephen Haskell, while still in his teens, came to work as a farm hand.

Marian Margaret Hay was an editor, author, and second female to graduate from the ministerial course at Australasian Missionary College.

Vaiola Kerisome, usually known as Malama among her people, was a translator and missionary briefly among the New Zealand Maoris and mainly among her people of Niue.