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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.
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 ...
Women's Missionary Association of the Church of the UB [2] Women's Missionary Association of the Presbyterian Church of England [2] Woman's Missionary Society of the Evangelical Association - 1880 [1] Woman's Missionary Society of the Methodist Episcopal Church (South) [9] Women's Missionary Society of the United Lutheran Church in America [2]
The church’s origins go back to 1902 and a backyard where Sunday school classes were held for children of the neighborhood. From there, the church developed into a pillar of Fort Worth.
The Bethlehem Center, founded in 1911 by the Women's Missionary Council of the Methodist Episcopal Church, South, was one of the oldest community centers for African-Americans in the United States. The Methodist Church asked Stevens to conduct research to determine the type of new facility the Bethlehem Center should build.
The Woman's Club of Fort Worth occupies a 2.2-acre (0.89 ha) site on Pennsylvania Avenue in Fort Worth's Near Southside, and includes structures in the Queen Anne, Colonial Revival, Italian Renaissance Revival, and Craftsman styles. All structures in the complex are painted "antique Spanish white" to unify the disparate architectural styles.
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The Society joined with the Women's Missionary Society of the Pacific Coast in 1893 and by 1901, about 500 women and girls had been helped. That year they opened the "Oriental Home for Chinese Women and Girls" at 912 Washington Street in San Francisco's Chinatown, a two-story concrete building with 22 rooms. [4]