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Showing 41 – 60 of 105

Hjalmar A. Erickson, a medical missionary doctor, served with his wife, Helen, in Africa, China, and the Philippines. He was a hospital director, author, prisoner of war, and veteran of the United States Navy.

​Carlos and Ellen Burrill Fattebert did pioneering educational and medical missionary work in Mexico and the Philippine Islands.

David Andrew Ferris was a Seventh-day Adventist medical missionary to the New Hebrides (now Vanuatu) and the Solomon Islands.

Olive May Fisher was distinguished for her services as a nurse and nurse educator in the highlands of Papua New Guinea (PNG) at the Togoba Hansenide Colony and at Sopas Adventist Hospital, Wabag, Western Highlands Province.

Margherita Freeman was the first female Seventh-day Adventist in Australasia to graduate from university medical studies.

Philip Giddings was one of the earliest of the pioneering Caribbean Adventist missionaries and was among the earliest Caribbean students to study nursing at the Battle Creek Sanitarium and graduate from Battle Creek College.

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.

​Richard Edwin Greenidge was a pioneer in establishing Adventist education in Venezuela as he directed the first educational institution in the country, as well as laying the foundations for health institutions, with his wife Rebecca.

​Ole J. and Anna E. Grundset were among the earliest Seventh-day Adventist missionaries to evangelize Manchuria.

Henry Gilbert Hadley was a physician, philanthropist, and founder of the Hadley Memorial Hospital in Washington, District of Columbia.

Leo Blair Halliwell, a native of Odessa, Nebraska, United States, was a missionary in Brazil, promoter of the mission medical boat project in the Amazon, and president of Bahia and Sergipe Mission, Lower Amazonas Mission, and North Brazil Union Mission. Halliwell was an engineer, navigator, nurse, administrator, and missionary.

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

​George T. Harding II, M.D., hospital founder and administrator, was instrumental in initiating Adventist involvement in the field of psychiatry.

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.

Moses Alfred Haynes was a leading Caribbean physician, epidemiologist, professor, mentor, and administrator dedicating decades of his career to reducing health disparities, especially in cancer mortality, and improving healthcare systems for underserved minority communities in the United States and around the world.

Aubrey Ruel Hiscox was an educator and administrator. Hiscox and his wife, Phyllis Irene, a nurse, were missionaries to Vanuatu.

​Kristian Hogganvik was a Norwegian Adventist pioneer medical doctor and missionary in Ethiopia.