Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
All Harm Ends Here is the fourth full-length recording by American indie rock band Early Day Miners. It was originally released on Indiana label Secretly Canadian . Track listing
Arkadelphia is a city in Clark County, Arkansas, United States. As of the 2020 census, the population was 10,380. [2] The city is the county seat of Clark County. [3] It is situated at the foothills of the Ouachita Mountains. Two universities, Henderson State University and Ouachita Baptist University, are located here. Arkadelphia was ...
Rev. Howard Weeks was appointed as the first pastor of Watts Street Baptist Church in September 1923. [1] In 1950, architect Marion Ham built the educational wing of the church. [1] Street view of the church. In 1960, the church, under the leadership of Rev. Warren Carr, was known for social progressivism and participating in the civil rights ...
Bono of the band U2 mentions The Old-Time Gospel Hour in the 1988 live version of the song "Bullet the Blue Sky" on the album Rattle and Hum.Toward the end of the song, there is a spoken section where he says "...and I can't tell the difference between ABC News, Hill Street Blues, and a preacher on the Old-Time Gospel Hour stealing money from the sick and the old.
25-year-old Shanquella Robinson went on a trip with six of her friends on Oct. 28. She died the next day. She died the next day. Now the FBI is investigating the circumstances surrounding her death.
Shuttlesworth got his license as a country preacher when he was changing from a Methodist to a Baptist Christian. [4] He became pastor of the Bethel Baptist Church in Birmingham in 1953 and was Membership Chairman of the Alabama state chapter of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) in 1956, when the State of Alabama formally outlawed it from operating within ...
Built in 1901, the two-story wood-framed house is a fine local example of Queen Anne styling, which has been passed from mother to daughter within the same family.The house was built by the widowed Nannie Gresham Biscoe as a family home and boarding house, offering residential spaces to students attending the nearby Ouachita Baptist College, where she also taught.
John H. Cross Jr. (January 27, 1925 – November 15, 2007) was an American pastor and Civil Rights activist. He was best known as the pastor of the 16th Street Baptist Church, an African American Baptist congregation in Birmingham, Alabama, at the time of church's racially motivated bombing in 1963.