Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
St. Gabriel Catholic Church (St. Gabriel, Louisiana) St. James Episcopal Church (Baton Rouge, Louisiana) St. James United Methodist Church (Monroe, Louisiana) St. John Baptist Church (Lecompte, Louisiana) St. John the Baptist Church (Dorseyville, Louisiana) St. John's Cathedral (Lafayette, Louisiana) St. John's Episcopal Church and Cemetery
Theodore Judson Jemison (August 1, 1918 – November 15, 2013), better known as T. J. Jemison, was minister of Mount Zion First Baptist Church in Baton Rouge, Louisiana in June 1953 when he led a bus boycott to protest the city's segregated public transit. It was the first boycott of its kind in the modern civil rights movement. He quickly ...
The Louisiana Baptist Convention (LBC) or Louisiana Baptists is a Baptist state convention affiliated with the Southern Baptists. Comprising approximately 1,600 affiliated churches and 620,000 members, [1] [2] the Louisiana Baptist Convention's offices are located in the city of Alexandria. The executive director of the Louisiana Baptists is ...
For premium support please call: 800-290-4726 more ways to reach us
The new church carried the same name as the original chapel of the German Coast settlement. The first pastor was Spanish Capuchin Father Bernardo de Limpach. The first church records note a marriage between Antoine Manz and Sibylla Bischof in 1772. The first church survived until being swept away by floodwaters in 1821. [5] [6]
Licensed to Baton Rouge, Louisiana, United States, the station serves the Baton Rouge area. The station is currently owned by Jefferson Baptist Church, Inc. [2] The station's motto is "The Word from Baton Rouge". The station's listening area extends from Port Allen to Denham Springs and from Prairieville to Hooper Road in Baton Rouge.
Jack Alicoate, ed. (1939), "Louisiana", Radio Annual, New York: Radio Daily, OCLC 2459636 – via Internet Archive "AM Stations in the U.S.: Louisiana", Radio Annual Television Year Book, New York: Radio Television Daily, 1963, OCLC 10512375 – via Internet Archive
With 1,260 students, [1] Parkview Baptist School is the largest private school in Louisiana. [2] The school began with students from kindergarten to sixth grade in 1981, adding grades 7–12 in 1983. PBS is now divided into three administrative units: Parkview Baptist Elementary School (K-4), Parkview Baptist Middle School (5-8), and Parkview ...