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John Gill Landrum (October 22, 1810 – January 19, 1882) was a Baptist pastor from Spartanburg, South Carolina, [1] the namesake of Landrum, South Carolina. [2] He signed the South Carolina Ordinance of Secession. He was most prominently at Mount Zion Baptist Church, where he is buried. He also served Bethlehem Baptist Church.
Mount Zion Baptist Church or Mt. Zion Missionary Baptist Church or variations may refer to: United States (by state) Mount Zion Baptist Church (Anniston, Alabama ...
Bethel Baptist Church (HM) Little Zion Baptist Church (HM) Columbia. 1900 Block Henderson Street/William J. Sumter (HM) Allen University (HM) Allen University Historic District (HM/NR) Alston House (HM/NR) Benedict College (HM) Benedict College Historic District (NR/HM) Bethel A.M.E. Church (HM/NR) Bible Way Church of Atlas Road (HM)
Mount Zion African Methodist Episcopal Church (disambiguation) Mount Zion Baptist Church (disambiguation) Mount Zion Cemetery (disambiguation) Mount Zion Church (disambiguation) Mount Zion Memorial Church, Somerset County, Maryland, U.S., a historic church; Mount Zion Methodist Church (disambiguation) Mount Zion Presbyterian Church (disambiguation)
Leonard N. Smith (born October 4, 1961 – February 20, 2022) was the senior pastor of Mount Zion Baptist Church in Arlington, Virginia, with a congregation exceeding 2,000. [1] Mount Zion Baptist Church, founded in 1866, is the oldest Black congregation in Arlington, Virginia.
The Mount Zion Baptist Church is a Baptist church in Athens, Ohio, which was frequently used as a meeting place for the Black community from its inception in 1905 until the 1990s. [1] In 1980, the building was added to the National Register of Historic Places .
Edward Victor Hill Sr. (November 10, [1] 1933 – February 24, 2003) was an American pastor. He was senior pastor at the Mount Zion Missionary Baptist Church in Los Angeles, California from 1961 until his death; under his leadership, it became one of the largest African-American congregations in the US. [2]
The organization was officially incorporated as The Robert Johnson Mount Zion Memorial Fund in late 1989, to raise money to save the 114-year-old Mount Zion Church (founded 1909) from foreclosure and to place a cenotaph historic marker (not a headstone as is often mistaken – the monument bears no birth/death dates) in the Mount Zion Missionary Baptist Church cemetery, in honor of Robert ...