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Lottie Moon. Nashville: Sunday School Board of the Southern Baptist Convention, 1927; very widely used biography, filled with details from six years of interviews with Moon. Monsell, Helen Albee. Her Own Way: The Story of Lottie Moon (1958). for middle school students; Robert, Dana L. "The influence of American missionary women on the world ...
Virginia Bethel Moon (1844–1925) was born in Oxford, Ohio in 1844. When she was young, her family lived in what is now known as the "Lottie Moon House."She moved to Memphis, Tennessee with her mother in 1862 where she began a short but notable career as an espionage agent working with Memphis entrepreneur-turned-soldier Nathan Bedford Forrest and other Confederates, including her sister ...
Fannie E.S. Heck led the Woman's Missionary Union after 1892 for about 15 years. [3] The dominant personality was Lottie Moon (1840–1912) who spent nearly 40 years (1873–1912) living and working in China. She was an early feminist pioneer for women's equality, but her reputation in Baptist memory is one of a Southern belle who followed ...
Toy wrote of Moon, "She writes the best English I have ever been privileged to read." [4] Lottie Moon went on to become a missionary in Tengchow, China. In her 1881 correspondence with Southern Baptist Foreign Mission Board secretary H. A. Tupper, Moon expressed her plans to marry Toy, who was now a professor at Harvard.
Gladys May Aylward (24 February 1902 – 3 January 1970) was a British-born evangelical Christian missionary to China, whose story was told in the book The Small Woman: The Heroic Story of Gladys Aylward, by Alan Burgess, published in 1957.
Galilee Missionary Baptist Church Chancel Choir’s Minister of Music, Hattie Wade, directs the choir in rehearsal for the Christmas performance of Nativity Thursday evening, December 7, 2023, at ...
It eventually became an online magazine with an occasional print issue. Their first publication, Southern Baptist Missionary Journal, is defunct. Lottie Moon. On July 7, 1873, the board appointed its most famous missionary, Charlotte D. "Lottie" Moon, to China. Moon served many years among the Chinese and after giving her life to foreign missions.
Armstrong was also tasked with taking lots of pictures during the mission. That's why almost every NASA Apollo 11 photo you see of an astronaut on the moon actually shows Aldrin, and not Armstrong.