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Showing 681 – 700 of 757

​D. T. Evans was the first Seventh-day Adventist minister ordained in Canada.

Charles T. Everson was among the foremost Seventh-day Adventist evangelists of the first half of the 20th century.

Elon and Anna Everts were early Millerite Adventists who were among the first Sabbatarian Adventists in Vermont. Elon is considered the one to have coined the term “investigative judgment” in connection to Sabbatarian Adventists. He was also one of the first Sabbatarian Adventist ministers to be ordained in 1853.

​Born into one of the first Sabbath-observing Adventist families, Eugene W. Farnsworth served for more than fifty years as a minister, administrator, college teacher, and evangelist.

​Lorenzo Fleming, pastor of the Casco Street Christian Church in Portland, Maine (1838-1841), contributed to the Second Advent movement as a preacher, author, and editor.

Joseph Birchard Frisbie, one of the earliest Seventh-day Adventist ministers, served the church for twenty-nine years.

Nathan Fuller was an evangelist and president of the New York-Pennsylvania Conference before moral failure brought an end to his ministry in 1869.

William Claggett Gage was a publisher, preacher, health reformer, and the first Adventist elected mayor of a city.

​Gem State Adventist Academy is a coeducational boarding high school operated by the Idaho Conference of Seventh-day Adventists.

​Lukius Mkobe was a teacher and pastor in Tanzania. He translated several of Ellen G. White’s books into Kiswahili.

Bullock-Cart Theology pursued a theology that was truly Indian while trying to preserve the core of the Adventist message at the same time.

​Abram La Rue was a mariner, gold prospector, and tireless colporteur and ship missionary who traveled the world and pioneered the Adventist work into Asia.

The Yangon Central Seventh-day Adventist church was the first congregation to be organized in Burma (now Myanmar).

Mary Mortensen Tripp Armitage was a Bible worker, foster mother to Ellen White’s granddaughters, and pioneer missionary to Africa.

Kamunyonge Seventh-day Adventist Dispensary, which is owned and operated by the Mara Conference, was opened in 1970 and is located at Nyamatare Street along Majita Road in Musoma Municipality, Mara Region, Tanzania.

​Eliza J. Burnham devoted nearly 40 years to editorial service in the Adventist publishing work, during which she helped edit several of the church’s leading periodicals and assisted Ellen White in her literary work.

Herbert Panmure Ribton was a physician and the first known Adventist missionary to enter the Muslim areas of the world. His dedicated and impressive service was very short, and in the end, he paid the ultimate price.

Howard M. Lee (李希萬, Lee, Hee-Man) entered Korea in 1910 and was a representative educational missionary who led the educational work of the Korean Adventist Church for 26 years until 1936.

Rufus and Theodora Wangerin were a missionary couple who led the missionary work of the Korean Adventist Church in the early days.


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