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Avery and Florence Dick were missionaries in China and the Philippines.
Southern Asia-Pacific Division Biography Missionaries Couples
Volney Denver Dortch was an Adventist colporteur, church administrator, and missionary in the United States and the Philippines.
Francisco Tamayo Geslani was an Adventist writer, medical doctor, and hospital administrator from the Philippines.
Read Smith and his wife, Lucy, did medical missionary work among the New Zealand Maoris.
South Pacific Division Biography Missionaries Died/Imprisoned for Faith
Howard Johnson Detwiler was an evangelist, pastor, educator, and church administrator who served as president of the West Virgina, New Jersey, and Potomac conferences, as well as the Columbia Union Conference.
Kenneth Smith served the country of Thailand for 12 years, including a term as president of the Thailand Mission from late 1972 to mid-1974, and served the church for more than three decades.
Jessie Dorsey Green was an Adventist educator who, with Elizabeth Evelyn Wright, cofounded the Voorhees Industrial Training School, today Voorhees College, a historically black liberal arts college in Denmark, South Carolina.
North American Division Biography Educators Groundbreakers Women
Adventist missionary and philanthropist Phebe Helen Rankin Druillard, known as Nellie, was an administrator, treasurer, and founder of institutions.
North American Division Biography Groundbreakers Missionaries Women
Dr. Sanford P. S. Edwards was prominent in Adventist medical missionary work during the first decade of the 20th century. Despite debilitating health problems that prevented him from sustaining full-time labor after 1908, he found a variety of ways to continue enhancing the mission of the church and the well-being of society.
Otis Erich was a medical missionary and treasurer who served in China during the troubled era of World War II and the Communist revolution.
Charles T. Everson was among the foremost Seventh-day Adventist evangelists of the first half of the 20th century.
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.
Carlos and Ellen Burrill Fattebert did pioneering educational and medical missionary work in Mexico and the Philippine Islands.
North American Division Biography Educators Groundbreakers Medical Workers Missionaries Couples
Orno Follett and his wife, Agnes Gertrude Wammack Follett (1883-1966), pioneered Seventh-day Adventist mission among Native Americans in the American Southwest.
Forest Lake Academy is a coeducational preparatory day school for secondary education serving grades nine to twelve, situated 11 miles northwest of Orlando, Florida, and four miles east of Apopka, Florida. The academy is fully accredited by the Middle States Association of Schools and Colleges, the state of Florida, and the SDA Board of Regents.
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.
Elijah B. Gaskell, the seventh treasurer of the General Conference (1873-1874), also contributed to the work of the church as a canvasser and as a missionary in South Africa.
Georgia-Cumberland Conference is an administrative unit of the Seventh-day Adventist Church in the Southern Union Conference.
Jimmy Jiamah Hadji Adil, Sr. was a missionary to the Muslim populations in the Philippines. He was the first Maguindanaon convert to Adventism and the first Filipino Muslim to be ordained to the Adventist ministry and become mission president.
Southern Asia-Pacific Division Biography Groundbreakers Missionaries