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James Henry and Margaret White were Adventist missionaries to China.
Henry Nichols White was the firstborn son of James and Ellen White.
Julia Ann White was an Adventist physician and educator. She was the first female physician at Loma Linda Sanitarium who developed the initial nursing training programs at both the Loma Linda and Glendale Sanitariums.
North American Division Biography Groundbreakers Medical Workers Women
Ellen White’s life-threatening accident at age 9 brought her formal education to an abrupt end. When in later life she was instructed to write out the messages given her through visions she keenly felt her literary deficiencies and relied upon her literary assistants to make necessary improvements, especially when preparing material for publication.
Arthur Lacey White was the third son of William Clarence and Ethel May (Lacey) White and grandson of Ellen G. White.
James White Loughhead (Lawhead) was an Adventist educator and administrator in the United States of America.
Herbert and Anna White were Adventist missionaries to China.
Judson and Minnie James were the first Adventist missionary in South India.
Southern Asia Division Biography Groundbreakers Missionaries Couples
Pastor James Kio was the fifth president of the Edo-Delta Mission of the Nigeria Union Mission from 1998 through its elevation to conference status in 2002 and continued in this role until his retirement in 2004.
Rolland James (known as R. J.) and Celia Richmond Brines were Seventh-day Adventist educators who spent two terms as missionaries in China. A hospital administrator and physician in the United States and China, R. J. was the first medical superintendent of Porter Hospital. Celia wrote the popular mission book, "Dragon Tales."
Chinese Union Mission China Biography Educators Missionaries Medical Workers Couples
James and Carolyn Russell were devoted missionaries who spread the gospel though persecuted in several locations around the world.
Harold James Meyers was a pastor, missionary, and administrator in Australia, Fiji, and New Zealand.
James Lee (Korean name Je-Myeong Lee) was the first president of the Korean Junior College, the predecessor of Sahmyook University in Korea, and was an educational missionary who established the site of Sahmyook University and founded the higher education project.
Northern Asia-Pacific Division South Korea Biography Groundbreakers Educators
Ennis and Arabella Moore were Seventh-day Adventist writers, editors, and educators, who served as missionaries to Brazil and Peru.
James H. Howard was a federal government clerk, physician, pioneer of Seventh-day Adventism in Washington, D.C. and eloquent opponent of racial segregation in the church.
Gerald J. Christo was the first Indian national to serve as Secretary and President of Southern Asia Division, and represents the transition from expatriate to national leadership at many levels—school, Mission, Union, and Division.
Arthur James Sanderson, physician and pastor, was born October 1, 1865. After earning a medical degree at Cooper Medical College of San Francisco, he became associated with St. Helena Sanitarium for 10 years, eight as medical superintendent.
Dr. James M. Hyatt was the first Adventist missionary to work in Sierra Leone and the church’s first black missionary to enter both the Gold Coast (present-day Ghana) and Nigeria.
North American Division Biography Groundbreakers Missionaries
Alfred James Sargent was a missionary to Burma (now, Myanmar).
James Harvey Morrison was a Seventh-day Adventist pastor and administrator, born in Beaver, Pennsylvania, on October 22, 1841.
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