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Abbie Winegar-Simpson, Battle Creek Sanitarium physician and American Medical Missionary College professor, did much to bring the “Battle Creek idea” of health reform to California through her work at St. Helena, Glendale, and Long Beach sanitariums.
William C. Sisley, architect and builder of many of Adventism’s earliest institutions, also served as manager of the church’s publishing houses in Battle Creek and London.
Carrol S. Small, M.D., taught at the Loma Linda University School of Medicine from 1937 to 1997, except for seven years of mission service in India.
Annie Rebekah Smith was a gifted writer, editor, and artist who devoted her abilities to the early publishing work of what would become the Seventh-day Adventist Church.
Cyrenius and Mary Smith were early Sabbatarian Adventists converted by Joseph Bates. Cyrenius was a farmer and, later, worked as a carpenter.
Leon Smith, son of noted pioneer Uriah Smith, was a longtime Adventist editor and writer.
Samuel S. Snow was a Millerite minister whose exposition of biblical prophecy, known as the “seventh-month message,” gave rise in the summer of 1844 to widespread expectation that Christ would return to earth on October 22, 1844.
Clifford Russell Anderson was an evangelist, medical doctor, church administrator, and published author.
Aore Adventist Hospital operated between 1961 and 1977, and again briefly in 1981. It was located on the campus of Aore Adventist High School New Hebrides (modern Vanuatu).
Peter Kipkemboi araap Butuk was a pioneer Nandi teacher, evangelist, district pastor, and church administrator.
Mozambique Union Mission is a subsidiary church administrative unit of the Southern Africa-Indian Ocean Division of Seventh-day Adventists. It was organized in 1933 and reorganized in 1972. Its headquarters is in Maputo, Mozambique.
Southern Africa-Indian Ocean Division Church Administrative Unit
Heber Pintos Britos, teacher, illustrator, and drawer, was born April 27, 1942, in the city of Montevideo, Uruguay.
Lionel Brooking, English Adventist nurse, canvasser, teacher, was one of the first converts and missionaries in Argentina.
John Lewis Brown was an Adventist pastor, missionary in three continents, pioneer in El Salvador and the Amazon region of Brazil, diffuser of Adventist publications and church administrator.
Jessie Viola Halliwell was a North American nurse, teacher, and missionary to Brazil.
South American Division Biography Educators Missionaries Medical Workers Women Groundbreakers
Messenger of Truth was the first periodical published against the Sabbatarian Adventists (later Seventh-day Adventists).
Helen Williams was a pioneering minister, Bible worker, teacher, and missionary in South Africa.
North American Division Biography Educators Groundbreakers Women Missionaries
Horace Shaw, founding editor of Focus magazine, taught at Andrews University for many years in the areas of religion and communication and used his expertise in those fields to make memorable contributions to the cause of religious liberty.
Pastor Jackson Kiplel Maiyo was a pioneer Nandi evangelist, teacher, pastor, translator, and church administrator.
East-Central Africa Division Biography Groundbreakers Educators
Daudi Inda Ogillo was a Tanzanian teacher, pastor, and pioneer missionary to Sudan.
East-Central Africa Division Biography Educators Groundbreakers Missionaries
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