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Austin Presbyterian Theological Seminary is a Presbyterian seminary in Austin, Texas. It was founded in 1902 to provide pastors for the rapidly growing Presbyterian Church in the frontier Southwest. It opened its doors to five students on October 1, 1902, at Ninth and Navasota Streets. [2]
Austin Presbyterian Theological Seminary: Austin, Texas: Theodore J. Wardlaw (President) 1938: Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) Azusa Pacific Graduate School of Theology: Azusa, California: T. Scott Daniels (Dean of the School of Theology) 1990: Wesleyan Church B. H. Carroll Theological Institute: Irving, Texas: Gene Wilkes (President) 2017: Baptist
Area: less than one acre: ... Added to NRHP: August 16, 1990: Hyde Park Presbyterian Church is a historic church at 3915 Ave. B in Austin, Texas.
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PQC entrance sign Paul Quinn College as it appeared in an 1898 publication of the A.M.E. Church journal The Educator.. The college was founded by a small group of African Methodist Episcopal (AME) Church preachers in Austin, Texas, on April 4, 1872, as the Connectional School for the Education of Negro Youth. [5]
The New Mount Carmel Center was a large group of buildings used by the Branch Davidian religious group located near Axtell, Texas, 20 miles (32 km) north-east of Waco.The Branch Davidians were established by Benjamin Roden in 1959 as a breakaway sect from Davidian Seventh-day Adventists, and was later led by David Koresh starting in the 1980s.
Lutcher Memorial Church Building, now the First Presbyterian Church of Orange, Texas, is a historic church at 902 W. Green Avenue in Orange, Texas, United States. It was built in 1912 and added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1982.
The congregation traces its roots to October 13, 1839, when Austin's first Presbyterian worship service was held at Bullock's hotel. The City of Austin was chartered two and a half months later, December 27, 1839. Present at that service was builder Abner Cook, elder in the first Presbyterian church organized in Austin. [1]