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  2. Amy Carlson (religious leader) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amy_Carlson_(religious_leader)

    Amy Carlson (November 30, 1975 – c. April 16, 2021), also known by her followers as Mother God, was an American cult leader and the co-founder of the new religious movement Love Has Won. [1] Carlson and her followers believed that she was God, a 19-billion-year-old being, and a reincarnation of Jesus Christ , and that she could heal people of ...

  3. Kenneth E. Hagin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kenneth_E._Hagin

    In 1937, he became an Assemblies of God minister. [7] During the next twelve years he pastored five Assemblies of God churches in Texas: in the cities of Tom Bean, Farmersville (twice), Talco, Greggton, and Van. [8] Van, Texas was the last church he pastored before starting to travel. On November 25, 1938, he married Oretha Rooker. [6]

  4. Eugene C. Barker - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eugene_C._Barker

    In 1946, the university's Board of Regents resolved to house the Eugene C. Barker Texas History Center in the building known as "Cass Gilbert's Old Library". [17] The building was so named because it had been designed by Cass Gilbert , who had been contracted as the university's architect in 1910. [ 18 ]

  5. How Texas' history and mythology drive talk of secession

    www.aol.com/texas-history-mythology-drive-talk...

    When Texas Gov. Greg Abbott introduced his fellow governor from Tennessee this week at a border press conference, his words made reference to a bedrock piece of Lone State lore.

  6. Herman Ehrenberg - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Herman_Ehrenberg

    Herman Ehrenberg served with the New Orleans Greys during the Texas Revolution from 1835 to 1836. Ehrenberg arrived in New Orleans in October 1835. The city was abuzz with news of the newly declared Texas Revolution. All of the local papers and many of the residents supported the actions of the American settlers in Texas against the government ...

  7. Dena Schlosser - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dena_Schlosser

    Dena Schlosser (née Leitner, born 1969) is an American woman who lived in Plano, Texas, who, on November 22, 2004, used a knife to amputate the arms of her ten-month-old daughter, Margaret, who died as a result. Plano police responded to a 9-1-1 call made by

  8. 72 hate and extremist groups call Texas home, the Southern ...

    www.aol.com/72-hate-extremist-groups-call...

    Additionally, the study identified six “terrorist plots” in Texas and two extremist murders. The Southern Poverty Law Center tracked 72 hate and anti-government groups in Texas in 2022.

  9. Steve Hill (evangelist) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Steve_Hill_(evangelist)

    It was a series of meetings at Brownsville Assembly of God in Pensacola, Florida that began on Father's Day, 1995 and continued for five years. In 2000, Hill moved to the Dallas/Fort Worth area in Texas to resume traveling evangelism. In 2003, he founded Heartland Family Church in the Las Colinas section of Irving, Texas, a suburb of Dallas.