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Frank L. Brown, Seth Penn Leet (1851-?), Reverend James Gordon Holdcroft, Marion Lawrence, Henry John Heinz, and Bishop Joseph Crane Hartzell in 1917. Joseph Crane Hartzell (June 1, 1842 – September 6, 1928) was an American Missionary Bishop of the Methodist Episcopal Church [1] who served in the United States and in Africa. [2]
John Livingston Nevius (4 March 1829 – 19 October 1893) was an American Protestant missionary in China for forty years, appointed by the American Presbyterian Mission; his ideas on mission organization were also very important in the spread of the church in Korea. He wrote several books on the themes of Chinese religions, customs and social ...
1847 Presbyterian Church in England Foreign Missions; 1858 Christian Vernacular Education Society for India; 1860 Central African Mission of the English Universities; 1865 China Inland Mission; 1865 Friends' Foreign Mission Association; 1866 Delhi Female Medical Mission; 1867 Friends' Mission in Syria and Palestine; 1877 Cambridge Mission to Delhi
The Protestant Episcopal Church Mission (PECM, also known as the American Church Mission) [1] was a Christian missionary initiative of the Episcopal Church that was involved in sending and providing financial support to lay and ordained mission workers in growing population centers in the west of the United States as well as overseas in China, Liberia and Japan during the second half of the ...
The Church in the Mission Field (June 16, 1910) Education in Relation to the Christianization of National Life (June 17, 1910) Missionary Message in Relation to the Non-Christian World (June 18, 1910) The Preparation of Missionaries (June 22, 1910) The Home Base of Missions (June 23, 1910) Missions and Governments (June 20, 1910)
Anthony Norris Groves (1 February 1795 – 20 May 1853) was an English Protestant missionary, [1] who has been called the "father of faith missions".He launched the first Protestant mission to Arabic-speaking Muslims, and settled in Baghdad, Ottoman Empire; and later in southern India.
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William Whiting Borden was born into a prominent and wealthy Illinois family, the third child of William and Mary DeGarmo Whiting Borden. Borden's father had made a fortune in Colorado silver mining, but the family was unrelated to the Borden Condensed Milk Company—an advantage for Borden since if asked about his wealth, he could honestly reply that his family was often mistaken for "the ...