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Miles Grant, an Advent Christian leader and editor of The World’s Crisis and Second Advent Messenger, was a vocal opponent of Seventh-day Adventism.
The Gulf States Conference is an administrative unit of the Seventh-day Adventist Church in the Southern Union Conference.
Maria L. Huntley, pioneering home missionary, secretary, treasurer, editor, writer, religious liberty advocate, and educator, was born on August 9, 1848, in Lepster, New Hampshire.
North American Division Biography Educators Missionaries Women
Merritt Eaton Cornell was a tent evangelist, leading debater, and author of five doctrinal books.
John Stephen McCullagh was an Australian Adventist minister, evangelist, and church administrator. In his early years of ministry in the Seventh-day Adventist Church in Australia and New Zealand, Stephen McCullagh worked closely with Ellen White and made a significant contribution to the development and advancement of the denomination. Later, McCullagh demonstrated a penchant for changing theological viewpoints and denominational membership and left the Seventh-day Adventist ministry.
Milton C. Wilcox devoted more than fifty years to the Adventist cause, most of them as an author and editor of books and periodicals, most notably, Signs of the Times (1891-1913).
William Bancroft Hill was a pioneering evangelist in the American upper Midwest.
Known as “the blind preacher,” Samuel C. Hancock was an early Adventist singer, composer and evangelist whose ministry was accompanied by controversial “Spirit operations.”
Luther Loomis Howard II, evangelist and first president of the Maine Conference of Seventh-day Adventists, was born on October 18, 1825, in Leeds, Androscoggin County, Maine, to Luther Loomis Howard, Sr. and Rhoda Mitchell Howard. Five months later, Luther, Sr. died and two years after that, Rhoda married Luther’s brother, Warren.
Jonathan Trumbull Orton was an early convert to Sabbatarian Adventism in Rochester, New York.
Dores Alanzo Robinson was an evangelist, educator, and administrator who served in South Africa, England, and India during the early period of Seventh-day Adventist world mission.
North American Division Biography Educators Missionaries Died/Imprisoned for Faith
The territory of the Sabah Mission encompasses the Malaysian state of Sabah and the Malaysian Federal Territory of Labuan.
Southern Asia-Pacific Division Country (Based on SDA membership)
The Texas Conference is an administrative unit of the Seventh-day Adventist Church within the Southwestern Union Conference.
Sarah Jane Thayer, better known as Jennie, was part of the first generation of children to be raised as Sabbath-keeping Adventists and the second generation of Adventist pioneers. She held offices in the International Tract and Missionary Society, traveled to England on behalf of the denomination, and was the first editor of the Atlantic Union Gleaner.
James Harvey Morrison was a Seventh-day Adventist pastor and administrator, born in Beaver, Pennsylvania, on October 22, 1841.
Mountain View Conference is an administrative unit of the Seventh-day Adventist Church in the Columbia Union Conference.
The Northern New England Conference is an administrative unit of the Seventh-day Adventist Church in the Atlantic Union Conference.
The California Conference was a unit of church organization that initially comprised the state of California. In later organizational rearrangements it also included at times Nevada, Utah, and Arizona. It was active from 1869 to 1932. Four conferences now cover the state of California: Northern, Central, Southeastern, and Southern, and these conferences are treated in separate articles. This article deals with the beginnings of the Adventist work in California and developments in the history of the California Conference until it was dissolved in 1932.
Eli B. Miller was a pioneer Adventist educator and missionary, the first professor of elocution or homiletics in Adventist history, and contributor and editor of Bible Readings and some of the earliest Sabbath School lessons.
North American Division Biography Educators Groundbreakers Missionaries
Harvey M. Mitchell became the 16th treasurer of the General Conference of Seventh-day Adventists after several years in the Ohio Conference where he served as a minister and in a variety of roles involving business and financial management.
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