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Fuller was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, on March 5, 1939, the son of Charles H. Fuller, Sr. and Lillian Anderson.Raised Roman Catholic, he attended Roman Catholic High School and then Villanova University (1956–1958), then joined the U.S. Army in 1959, serving in Japan and South Korea.
A Soldier's Play is a play by American playwright Charles Fuller.Set on a US Army installation in the segregation-era South, the play is a loose adaptation of Herman Melville's novella Billy Budd, and follows the murder investigation of the Sergeant in an all-black unit.
Fuller Theological Seminary was founded in 1947 by Charles E. Fuller, a radio evangelist known for his Old Fashioned Revival Hour show, and Harold Ockenga, the pastor of Park Street Church in Boston. [5] The seminary's founders sought to reform fundamentalism's separatist and sometimes anti-intellectual stance during the 1920s–1940s. [6]
Fuller graduated from Pomona College in 1910 as a chemist and worked in his father's citrus-packing business in southern California until 1918. Fuller married his high school sweetheart, Grace Payton, in 1910. [1] Fuller was converted under the preaching of Paul Rader, pastor of Chicago's Moody Church in 1916. [2]
Charles Fuller (1939–2022) was an American playwright and writer. Charles Fuller may also refer to: Charles Fuller (footballer) (1919–2004), English footballer; Charles E. Fuller (Baptist minister) (1887–1968), American Christian clergyman and radio evangelist; Charles E. Fuller (New York politician) (1847–1925), New York farmer and ...
Charles Edward Fuller may refer to: Charles E. Fuller (Baptist minister) (1887–1968), American Christian clergyman and radio evangelist Charles E. Fuller (New York politician) (1847–1925), New York farmer and politician
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United States Congress. "Charles Eugene Fuller (id: F000407)". Biographical Directory of the United States Congress.; McLaren, Angus: A Prescription For Murder: The Victorian Serial Killings of Dr. Thomas Neill Cream (Chicago series on sexuality, history, and society) Chicago and London: The University of Chicago Press, 1995, ISBN 0-226-56068-6, p. 43