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St. Mary's Catholic Church (Memphis, Tennessee) St. Mary's Episcopal Cathedral (Memphis, Tennessee) Second Congregational Church (Memphis, Tennessee) Second Presbyterian Church (Memphis, Tennessee) (1952)
[12] [13] He also worked for the more obscure Memphis label, B. B. Productions. [14] His gospel TV program on Sundays, broadcast from about 1966 on WMC-TV, [3] [15] was the first such program hosted by an African-American in Memphis. [16] In its last years it was broadcast by WHBQ-TV. Mays' church sermons were aired on the WLOK and WBBP local ...
East Memphis is home to many churches of various denominations. The largest churches are Christ United Methodist Church with 6,000 members, [4] St. Louis Catholic Church with about 5,000 members, [5] Second Presbyterian Church with more than 4,800 members, [6] and Highpoint Church with more than 3,500 members. Other places of worship include ...
In 1950, a second campus was opened in Memphis, and in 1954 one followed in Chattanooga. By the 1950s, most of the children in residence were from homes in crisis, not orphans, so board members decided in 1953 to rename the ministry to more accurately reflect its work—Tennessee Baptist Children's Homes. The TBCH does not accept government ...
Bellevue Baptist Church is a Southern Baptist megachurch in Memphis that was founded in 1903. Its current membership is around 30,000. [89] For many years, it was led by Adrian Rogers, a three-term president of the Southern Baptist Convention.
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In 1996, the school moved to a larger campus in South Germantown, Tennessee, in the quarters of the old Germantown Baptist Church. In 2006, the school moved to Cordova, Tennessee, across the street from the Bellevue Baptist Church into a new $28 million facility located on 51 acres (35 donated by Bellevue and 16 purchased by the Seminary). [7]
Jack Alicoate, ed. (1939), "Tennessee", Radio Annual, New York: Radio Daily, OCLC 2459636 – via Internet Archive "AM Stations in the U.S.: Tennessee", Radio Annual Television Year Book, New York: Radio Television Daily, 1963, OCLC 10512375 – via Internet Archive