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The school was more expensive than other missions, since it required machinery for industrial training, and by 1902 the mission was forced to accept government funding. [5] As the school became established, competition for places became intense since graduates were guaranteed employment by the government, the mission or other local businesses ...
Following his return from Nigeria, Waddell established a missionary congregation and eventually retired to his home in Dublin. Days before Waddell's death on April 18, 1895, a school was founded in Duke Town, Nigeria and named the Hope Waddell Institute (later known as the Hope Waddell Training Institution) in honour of his work. It continues ...
In 1991 the order participated with many other religious organisations in the establishment of the Kimmage Mission Institute (1991-2006) to combine their training efforts. The order now has novitiates in Cameroon, Nigeria, and Kenya. Over the years in Africa they set up over 200 elementary schools, 40 secondary schools and 32 hospitals. [9]
A group of missionaries of the Primitive Methodist Church of Great Britain founded the Uzuakoli Institute (UI) in 1923. In 1931, it was renamed Methodist College. According to the records, the group of missionaries who established the College was led by Rev. Herbert Lewis Octavia Williams, its first principal.
The Convention has 15 affiliated primary and secondary schools, gathered in the Directorate of Baptist Mission Schools. [8] It has Bowen University, named in honor of Rev. Thomas Jefferson Bowen, the first American Baptist missionary to Nigeria from the Southern Baptist Convention. [9] Bowen University is located at Iwo in Osun State. Bowen ...
Mary Slessor. Mary Mitchell Slessor was born on 2, December 1848 in Gilcomston, Aberdeen, Scotland, to a poor working-class family who could not afford proper education.She was the second of seven children of Robert and Mary Slessor.
Its members take on missionary activities to all nations. Though primary evangelisation is its central mission, the Society is also committed to the apostolate of new evangelisation and the printed word. The close partners of the priest members of the Society are the Associate Missionaries of St Paul, lay faithful who support the work of the ...
There was missionary activity in Egbe so many years ago particularly through Rev. Tommy Titcombe and his wife (a British-born Canadian Missionary), on behalf of the Serving In Mission (SIM) from the United States, Canada, and the UK, who served in Egbe and Yagba land from 1908 for more than a decade, this has left a positive impact on the people of Egbe, Yagba and Nigeria at large.