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Showing 161 – 180 of 868

Juan Bangloy was a pioneer Adventist educator, minister, and leader from the Philippines.

​Alma J. Scott, a prominent Washington, D.C., social reformer, served as vice-chair of the Committee for the Advancement of the Worldwide Work Among Colored Seventh-day Adventists that helped bring about landmark change in church race relations during the mid-1940s.

​Emma Marie Thompson Anderson was a pioneer Adventist missionary to China, author, bookkeeper, Bible worker, and educator. She along with her husband, Jacob, and sister, Ida Thompson, were the first group of official missionaries to China in 1902.

Anna Matilda Erickson Andross was an Adventist author and the first assistant secretary of the General Conference Young People’s Missionary Volunteer Department as organized in 1907 (the predecessor of the present Adventist Youth Ministries Department). She was also the founding editor of the Inter-American Division Messenger.

Keith Argraves was an American Seventh-day Adventist who gained fame among Adventists church members during World War II as a medic in the United States Army’s 509th Parachute Infantry Regiment and for surviving internment as a prisoner of war in Italy and Germany.

​Frank Benjamin Armitage was an Adventist minister and missionary in Africa.

Emil Edward Bietz was an Adventist educator and administrator of denominational schools and hospitals for forty-four years in North America. He also served five years as a consultant to multiple Adventist hospitals in South America, Asia, and Africa.

Elmer Lee Cardey served as a pastor and conference president but was best known for his achievements as a public evangelist both in the United States and South Africa.

​Elliott Chapman and his wife, Cora, were missionaries to Tahiti and Australia.

Ovid Elbert Davis was a pioneer missionary to the indigenous peoples of Alaska and British Columbia. He also served in ministry in Washington and Michigan states, and then became a pioneer missionary in British Guiana (after 1965 simply called Guiana) where he perished from blackwater fever while establishing a mission station near Mt. Roraima.

William Farnsworth was a farmer from Washington, New Hampshire who was an early Sabbatarian Adventist.

John Fulton was a missionary, minister, and administrator. Susan served as a counselor, carrying on many responsibilities entailed with mission work and raising children. John is referred to as the “Adventist apostle to the Fiji Islands.”

William Erik Floding was an Adventist missionary to Samoa.

​Herbert Dexter and his wife, Millie, were missionaries to Tahiti, France and Switzerland.

​The Adventist Development and Relief Agency (ADRA) began in Vanuatu in February 2008 under the leadership of David Cram.

​Johannes Nicholas de Beer served as a Seventh-day Adventist Church administrator and a pioneer of several mission stations in Southern Africa.

Will Keith Kellogg (known as W. K. Kellogg) was a businessman, entrepreneur, and co-inventor of flaked breakfast cereals. His invention and marketing of cornflakes led to the founding of the Kellogg Company (which does business as Kellogg’s) in 1906.

Eliza Happy Morton was an Adventist author, educator, pedagogical reformer, poet, musician, musical composer, church administrator, and philanthropist. She is best remembered for her geography textbooks.

​Bessie Mount was a teacher, author, editor, and administrator who served as a missionary in China for 31 years. Her Chinese name was 贝茜.芒特 (pinyin: Bèi qiàn. Máng tè). She was a prisoner of war during World War II. During her final decades of service she was a trusted staff member of the Ellen G. White Estate.

​Alma Estelle Baker McKibbin was a pioneering Adventist educator and author of the first Bible lesson textbooks for primary education.


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