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Good Health was the first health periodical published by Seventh-day Adventists. Initially entitled the Health Reformer (1866-1878), it was issued monthly at Battle Creek, Michigan, in association with the Western Health Reform Institute (WHRI), renamed Battle Creek Sanitarium in 1877. The periodical served the dual purpose of advertising the health institution and instructing the church members and wider community about natural means for the prevention and treatment of disease.
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.
Greater Boston Academy (also known as GBA) is a co-educational K-12 day school located at 108 Pond Street in Stoneham, Massachusetts (MA). It is owned by the Southern New England Conference and operated by a local school board. The school has student representation from several churches in the Greater Boston area. The chief school publication is the yearbook, The Mayflower.
Earl F. Hackman spent his early career in Home Missionary departmental leadership from local conference to General Conference levels and then moved to the presidencies of the Southeastern California Conference, the Northern California Conference, the Southern Union Conference and the Inter-American Division.
Henry Gilbert Hadley was a physician, philanthropist, and founder of the Hadley Memorial Hospital in Washington, District of Columbia.
North American Division Biography Groundbreakers Missionaries Medical Workers Couples
Harry Heber Hamilton was a professor, academy principal, and president of three colleges in the United States.
George T. Harding II, M.D., hospital founder and administrator, was instrumental in initiating Adventist involvement in the field of psychiatry.
North American Division Biography Groundbreakers Medical Workers
Warren Gamaliel Harding II, M.D., connected with Sydney Sanitarium and Hospital in Australia for several years prior to World War II, then returned to his hometown, Columbus, Ohio, where he practiced surgery for the remainder of his career.
Walter Harper was one of the pioneers of colporteur work in the Seventh-day Adventist Church. Ellen White wrote counsels to him during his two divorces.
Dr. Charles Harrison was superintendent of the Sydney Sanitarium and Hospital for three decades and a professor of anatomy at the College of Medical Evangelists (later Loma Linda University School of Medicine).
Harvey Clarence Hartman, an Adventist educator and administrator, taught in numerous academies and served as an administrator at several Adventist academies and colleges.
Thomas Wilson Steen was an educator, administrator, minister, and psychologist.
Georgia Burrus Burgess was the first Adventist missionary to India (including present India, Pakistan, Bangladesh) and the first single-woman missionary of the Adventist church to a non-Christian country.
Southern Asia Division Biography Groundbreakers Missionaries Women
Stuart Uttley worked in his early years of ministry in public evangelism, and the later years in local conference and union conference administration.
The Union Conference Record dated January 1, 1900, announced the dedication of the Avondale Health Retreat on December 27, 1899.
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.
South American Division Biography Groundbreakers Missionaries Medical Workers
Alexander William Cormack was born on October 12, 1887, in Willoughby, suburban Sydney, New South Wales. His parents were Alexander and Frances (McMahon) Cormack who had four children: Mary Augusta (b.1877), Alexander William (b.1887), Frances Elizabeth (b.1890) and Benjamin (b.1892).
Hubert Tolhurst was an early Adventist missionary to Tonga, teacher, pastor, administrator, and poet.
South Pacific Division Biography Groundbreakers Missionaries Died/Imprisoned for Faith
Pastor Bert Pietz and Mary Grace Pietz were Seventh-day Adventist (SDA) missionaries to the New Hebrides (now Vanuatu) and Papua New Guinea who also engaged in ministry in Australia, and Bert served as president of the Tasmanian Conference for six years.