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Union Adventist University (formerly Union College) is a private Seventh-day Adventist college in Lincoln, Nebraska. Known as Union College from 1891 to May 5, 2024, it is owned and operated by the Mid-America Union Conference of the Seventh-day Adventist Church .
Adventist University of the Philippines, Puting Kahoy, Silang, Cavite, Philippines Asia-Pacific International University (formerly Mission College), Muak Lek , Saraburi Province , Thailand Central Philippine Adventist College , Murcia, Negros Occidental , Philippines
Pages in category "Seventh-day Adventist universities and colleges in the United States" The following 16 pages are in this category, out of 16 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
Niels-Erik Andreasen – former president at Andrews University and Walla Walla College; also former teacher at Pacific Union College and former dean of Loma Linda University School of Religion; Delbert Baker – President of Adventist University of Africa; Sidney Brownsberger (1845–1930) – educator and first president of Healdsburg College ...
Pacific Union College was founded as Healdsburg Academy in Healdsburg, California, in northern Sonoma County, in 1882. [5] [8] The creation of schools in the state was urged by Ellen G. White and other church leaders in an effort to accommodate the Adventist Church's growing membership on the West Coast and to train young Adventists for its work.
Founded in 1882, Atlantic Union College in South Lancaster, Mass. is the oldest campus in the Seventh-day Adventist worldwide educational system. [5] In 1882, the school was organized as a preparatory school under the leadership of Adventist 'pioneer' Stephen Nelson Haskell to serve the needs of Adventist constituents in the northeastern part of the United States and Bermuda, and was named ...
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Washington Adventist University was established in 1904 by the Seventh-day Adventist Church as Washington Training College. In 1907, it was renamed Washington Foreign Mission Seminary, in 1914, Washington Missionary College, in 1961, Columbia Union College, and in 2009 received its current name. [3]