|
If Annie Armstrong were alive today I'm sure she would find all the modern conveniences delightful. Especially computers and e-mail! But wouldn't her heart be burdened by the needs of our time? Yes, there are more missionaries now than then, but more people too! We can...
Annie Armstrong wrote letters! So many in fact that one source reported 18,000 in one year. That's 49 letters every day. Wow! "I wish, dear brother," she wrote, "that with this letter I might send you a large palm leaf and a very attractive pitcher of iced lemonade for...
Baptized at age 19, a pioneer member of Eutaw Place Church in Baltimore, MD, Annie taught Sunday School in the Primary Dept. for 30 years before the Lord called her home in 1938. She ministered to mothers, immigrants, the sick, African Americans, Native Americans, and ...
Did you know that Annie Armstrong was one of the primary shapers of the Southern Baptist Convention? I didn't! Born in 1850, she lived through the Civil War and the Great Depression. With a heart for others, she worked diligently to see God's will done working with Nat...
Annie Armstrong was instrumental in forming the WMU or Women's Missionary Union. They have offices right here in Inverness! She was their first president, then called corresponding secretary, and took her job seriously. An on-mission Christian, Annie was passionate for...