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Temple Baptist Church/King Solomon Baptist Church consists of two buildings at the intersection of Fourteenth Avenue and Marquette Avenue in Detroit, Michigan. The original church, which later became known as the Educational and Recreation Building, is a Tudor Revival structure built by architect J. Will Wilson in 1917, then remodeled and made ...
George Beauchamp Vick (1901–1975), known as G. B. Vick, or G. Beauchamp Vick, was pastor of Temple Baptist Church of Detroit, Michigan, from 1950 to the 1970s. J. Frank Norris, pastor of Temple Baptist from 1934 to 1950, appointed Vick in 1935 to help him manage the church, as Norris himself traveled between it and First Baptist Church in Fort Worth, Texas.
Third_building_of_Temple_Baptist_Church,_Redford_township.png (472 × 305 pixels, file size: 233 KB, MIME type: image/png) This is a file from the Wikimedia Commons . Information from its description page there is shown below.
Originally located at Hartford and C Streets, the church purchased the former United Auto Workers union hall located at 32 South Street in downtown Framingham in 1994. The (former) Assemblies of God New England District and a Bible School were located on Route 9 in Framingham Center until their sale in 1957.
Billington quit Goodyear and organized Akron Baptist Temple on Easter 1935 with more than 80 charter members. Months later, over 500 people belonged. In 1937, they built a $60,000 church near Rimer.
Little Rock Baptist Church owned the building from 2008 until 2014 and used it as a community center. [4] In 2008, it was occupied by the Citadel of Faith Covenant Church. [5] In June 2010, the church became occupied by The Community Church of Christ, under the leadership of Pastor R.A. Cranford.
In response, the Redford Union Schools district constructed new buildings to house the influx of students. In 1925, the Redford Union Schools district hired the Detroit architectural firm of Verner, Wihelm and Molby to design this school to serve as the District No. 1 elementary school; it was completed in December 1925.
In 1984 he became the first vice-president of Progressive National Baptist Convention, and became president in 1986. [4] In 1992 he joined the American Baptist Seminary of the West as a professor of Christian Ministries. He retired from the Allen Temple Baptist Church in 2009 and was succeeded by his son, Rev. James Alfred Smith Jr.