Presbyterian Church in the U.S.A. Woman's Board of Home Missions
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Presbyterian Church in the U.S.A. Woman's Board of Home Missions
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Presbyterian Church in the U.S.A. Woman's Board of Home Missions
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Biographical History
The Presbyterian Church in the U.S.A. organized the Woman's Executive Committee of Home Missions in 1877 to provide schools and teachers for the mission fields in the western and southwestern US. The committee supported missionaries among the Mormons in Utah and among the Native American and Spanish-speaking peoples of the southwest, later extending this work to Alaska, Puerto Rico, Cuba, and the Appalachians. The committee also published pamphlets, leaflets, a missionary magazine entitled Home Mission Monthly, and an annual "Prayer Calendar." In 1897, it changed its name to Woman's Board of Home Missions. After incorporating in 1915, it ceased to be a subsidiary of the Board of Home Missions. In 1923 the Woman's Board was merged with seven other boards and agencies of the church to create one unified Board of National Missions (BNM), and its work was divided between two units of the new Board. The Woman's Board continued to function as a holding corporation until the 1958 reunion of the PCUSA and the UPCNA.
The Presbyterian Church in the U.S.A. organized the Woman's Executive Committee of Home Missions in 1877 to provide schools and teachers for the mission fields in the western and southwestern US. The committee supported missionaries among the Mormons in Utah and among the Native American and Spanish-speaking peoples of the southwest, later extending this work to Alaska, Puerto Rico, Cuba, and the Appalachians. The committee also published pamphlets, leaflets, a missionary magazine entitled Home Mission Monthly, and an annual "Prayer Calendar." In 1897, it changed its name to: Woman's Board of Home Missions. When it incorporated in 1915, it ceased to be a subsidiary of the Board of Home Missions. In 1923 the Woman's Board was merged with seven other boards and agencies of the church to create one unified Board of National Missions (BNM), and its work was divided between two units of the new Board. Publications were taken over by the Unit of Education and Publicity, and work with the schools and hospitals in Alaska and the United States became the responsibility of the Unit of Educational and Medical Work. Katharine Bennett, president of the Woman's Board at the time of the merger, became the first vice-president of the BNM. She also chaired the Woman's Committee of the BNM, which was comprised of the BNM's female members and was created to give the women continued jurisdiction over what had been their work for over fifty years. The Woman's Board continued to function as a holding corporation until the 1958 reunion of the PCUSA and the UPCNA.
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External Related CPF
https://viaf.org/viaf/123282943
https://www.worldcat.org/identities/lccn-n90633835
https://id.loc.gov/authorities/n90633835
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Home missions
Minorities
Women in missionary work
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United States
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United States
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United States
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United States
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<conventionDeclaration><citation>VIAF</citation></conventionDeclaration>