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Showing 21 – 27 of 27

Traditionally, Dickson is considered to be the first Australian to observe the Saturday Sabbath, although this claim is difficult to thoroughly test.

​Eri L. Barr was a Sabbatarian Adventist leader and minister and the first Seventh-day Adventist minister of color.

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.

The Battle Creek Sanitarium was a world-renowned Adventist health resort in Battle Creek, Michigan, United States.

Seventh-day Adventist medical facility that operated for a century in Massachusetts. The sanitarium went through several name changes. It was nicknamed the Melrose Sanitarium when it moved to a new location and renamed the New England Memorial Hospital in 1967 and the Boston Regional Medical Center in 1995.


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