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Showing 241 – 260 of 860

Jack Radley served the Seventh-day Adventist Church caring for the mission boats in the island missions, working primarily as a captain, engineer, carpenter, and slip manager.

Catherine Jeanette Schuil was a British missionary educator, administrator, and curriculum developer for the Adventist schools in Kenya. She served for over two decades before returning to England in 1951 after her mother became ill and needed her care.

Manila Adventist College (MAC) is a coeducational semi-boarding school on the baccalaureate level, situated just in front of the North Philippine Union Conference headquarters at 1975 corner Donada and San Juan Streets, Pasay City, Philippines.

​Thomas Alfred Mitchell was a Publishing Department secretary and Home Missions secretary for Australasian Union Conference, and Signs Publishing Co. manager.

​Harold James Halliday was Sanitarium Health Food administrator, war-time administrator of National Emergency and Welfare Services, secretary/treasurer of various local conferences, and president of North Queensland and Sydney Conferences.

​Herminia de Guzman Ladion was an educator, health lecturer, renowned author of books on natural remedies, writer of many health articles, and one of the pioneer advocates of a healthy lifestyle and natural remedies in the Philippines.

​James Arthur Leland, Jr. was a missionary to the Philippines and the first manager of the Philippine Publishing House.

​Ferdinand Stahl and his wife, Ana, served for many years as tireless missionaries among the indigenous people in Bolivia and Peru. If there is a missionary couple for which Peru is known in Adventism worldwide, it is Ferdinand and Ana Stahl.

John and Lavina Haughey, prominent in church life during the early decades of the denomination’s history, were key financial supporters of James and Ellen White and often led the way in financial contributions for major church projects.

Stephen G. Haughey was an evangelist and church administrator in the United States and in the British Isles, where he devoted two decades to fostering early development of the Adventist work.

The Hawaii Conference is a church administrative unit in the Pacific Union Conference of Seventh-day Adventists.

Carlyle B. Haynes was an Adventist minister, evangelist, author, and administrator. As the first War Service Commission secretary, he forged a working relationship between the United States Army and the Seventh-day Adventist Church that opened the way for drafted church members to serve in the Army Medical Corps and helped those who were court-martialed achieve favorable outcomes.

​Albert J. Haysmer, pioneer missionary in the Caribbean islands, also gave early leadership to the General Conference department organized to foster Adventist work among Black Americans, and served as president of three conferences in the United States and Canada.

​William M. Healey was a prominent figure throughout the first half century of Adventist work on the west coast of the United States, recognized particularly for his effectiveness as an evangelist and religious liberty advocate.

W. H. Heckman was president of six conferences and two union conferences in the United States during more than 30 years of administrative leadership.

Sarepta Myrenda Irish (S.M.I.) Henry was a national evangelist for the Woman’s Christian Temperance Union and became a convert to Seventh-day Adventism in the last years of her life while a patient at Battle Creek Sanitarium. Shortly before her death she pioneered “woman ministry” in the Seventh-day Adventist Church.

Emmett J. Hibbard, minister and evangelist, taught Bible subjects at several Adventist institutions and authored numerous doctrinal articles for church periodicals.

William Bancroft Hill was a pioneering evangelist in the American upper Midwest.

William H. and Sadie M. Holden ministered together in the United States for more than 40 years. For many of those years, he served as a conference president and she as a conference departmental director.


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