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In 1985, New Hope was created for the publication of products designed to reach a wider audience. In 1995, more changes were made to the WMU organizations and magazine publications. Baptist Women and Baptist Young Women were included in a new organization called Women on Mission. At this time, Royal Service magazine was replaced by Missions Mosaic.
The Woman's Missionary Council of the Southern Methodist Church spoke out against lynching. [63] Women's clubs, like the Texas Association of Women's Clubs also denounced lynching. [116] The purpose of the ASWPL was to end lynching in the United States. [117] [118] Women's groups, like the NACWC, began to support desegregation in the 1950s. [75]
Council of Women for Home Missions - 1908 [5] Female Missionary Society - c. 1818 [6] ... Women's Missionary Association of the Church of the UB [2]
Women's Missionary and Service Commission, name established 1955, attached to the Mennonite Church; Woman's Missionary Union; Women's Political Council, formed 1946, active in the 1950s; Women's Refugee Commission; Women's Trade Union League, 1903–1950, encouraging women to organize trade unions; Younger Women's Task Force
Church Women United (CWU) is a national ecumenical Christian women's movement representing Protestant, Roman Catholic, Orthodox and other Christian women. Founded in 1941, as the United Council of Church Women , [ 1 ] this organization has more than 1,200 local and state units in the United States and Puerto Rico .
The Trend of the Races: a Home-Mission Study Book, George E. Haynes (Council of Women for Home Missions and Missionary Education Movement of the United States and Canada, New York, 1922) In the Vanguard of a Race, L. H. Hammond (Council of Women for Home Missions and Missionary Education Movement of the United States and Canada, New York, 1922)
At that meeting of the General Conference in Atlanta, Georgia, on May 14, 1878, [5] Dr. D. C. Kelley, then the Assistant Secretary of the Board of Missions, in report No. 4 of the Committee on Missions, recommended that the women of the Church be authorized to organize missionary work under a constitution. The need of the field was so evident ...
Belle Harris Bennett (December 3, 1852 – July 20, 1922) led the struggle for and won laity rights for women in the Methodist Episcopal Church, South. She was the founding president of the Woman's Missionary Council of the Southern Methodist Church.