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Showing 721 – 740 of 740

Jeremiah Oigo was a pioneer gospel worker and church planter in Eastern Kenya. He was sent to commence the Adventist work among the Kamba people of Machakos and Makueni counties, a considerable distance from his hometown in Ranen, Migori County.

The Tri-City Sanitarium was a Seventh-day Adventist health facility located in Moline, Illinois.

Mary Wild Paulson, M.D., and her husband, David Paulson, M.D., co-founded Hinsdale Sanitarium near Chicago and led a multi-faceted work on behalf of the city’s poor and disadvantaged.

Cyril Ebden Sparrow was a pioneer Adventist literature evangelist, farmer, and businessman in South Africa.

LAPI (Lar Adventista para Pessoas Idosas or “Adventist Home for Senior People”) -Pêro Negro was an Adventist retirement home in Pero Negro, in the region of Lisbon, Portugal, from 1968 to 1982 and 1987 to 1991.

In his 30 years of service as a pastor in the Seventh-day Adventist Church, Eurico Muniz left a lasting legacy in the Adventist Church in Brazil and beyond.

Esmeralda Monteiro Gomes was an Adventist pioneer mission worker in Brazil. She helped establish several churches in places with no prior Adventist presence.

Rubens Pereira Rios was an illustrator for the Brazil Publishing House and a dedicated musician, serving as a singer, choir conductor, member of singing quartets, and composer of many musical arrangements.

The Birkenstocks were pioneer medical missionaries and founders of the Malamulo leprosarium in Malawi. They pioneered new medical treatments to help combat the scourge of leprosy in Africa.

Atlanta Sanitarium was an Adventist health institution established in 1903 in Atlanta, Georgia.

Kenneth Sturdevant and his wife, Evelyn, devoted their retirement years to medical mission work in Africa (Kenya and Tanganyika), New Guinea, and Thailand.

Milton Robison was an American missionary educator, administrator, and evangelist who dedicated much of his career to establishing and developing the education ministry in Africa. He served as the inaugural principal of Helderberg College in South Africa, and later held key positions such as secretary, education secretary, and eventually field secretary for the Southern African Division.

Oakwood Sanitarium was an Adventist health institution established at Ellen White’s urging on the campus of Oakwood Manual Training School, today known as Oakwood University.

Elsie Liu was an early Adventist translator and educator in China in the 1920s and 1930s.

Joseph Marsh was a leading Christian Connection minister and editor who threw his influence behind the Millerite movement and figured prominently in the struggle of Second Advent believers to reformulate their faith after 1844. In that process, he became a leading proponent of a distinctive form of millennialism called the “Age to Come” teaching. Adherents of this doctrine eventually formed the Church of God General Conference (Abrahamic Faith).

Buffalo Sanitarium was an Adventist health facility from 1902 to 1908. It was located initially at 868 Niagara Street (1902-1903) and in 1903 onward at 922 Niagara Street.


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