George Mowbray | |
---|---|
5th Mayor of Tulsa | |
In office 1903–1904 | |
Preceded by | George D. Blakey |
Succeeded by | H. R. Cline |
Personal details | |
Born | Melton,Leicestershire,United Kingdom | July 5,1847
Died | January 12,1910 62) Tulsa,Oklahoma | (aged
Education | The King's School,Grantham |
George W. Mowbray was an American politician and missionary who served as the fifth Mayor of Tulsa from 1903 to 1904.
George W. Mowbray was born on July 5,1847,in Melton,Leicestershire,United Kingdom to John and Catherine Lockton Mowbray. He attended Grantham Grammar School and studied religion. He started preaching at sixteen and became known as "the Boy Preacher." Although raised in the Church of England,Mowbray was ordained in the Wesleyan Methodist Church. He married Hannah E. Harley in 1867 and the couple had four children who survived to adulthood:Anna,George W. Jr.,Mary,and Grace. In 1869 his family immigrated to the United States and by 1886 he had moved to McCune,Kansas. [1]
In 1887 he moved to Tulsa as a missionary to the Muscogee Nation for the Southern Kansas Methodist Conference. In 1896 he retired from the ministry to run his late son-in-law T. J. Archer's store. He served as the fifth Mayor of Tulsa from 1903 to 1904 and was instrumental in bringing the Santa Fe Railway to Tulsa. [1] He was also the first president of the Tulsa Public Schools school board. [2] He died on January 12,1910. [1]
Methodism,also called the Methodist movement,is a group of historically related denominations of Protestant Christianity whose origins,doctrine and practice derive from the life and teachings of John Wesley. George Whitefield and John's brother Charles Wesley were also significant early leaders in the movement. They were named Methodists for "the methodical way in which they carried out their Christian faith". Methodism originated as a revival movement within Anglicanism originating out of the Church of England in the 18th century and became a separate denomination after Wesley's death. The movement spread throughout the British Empire,the United States and beyond because of vigorous missionary work,and today has about 80 million adherents worldwide.
Charles F. Parham was an American preacher and evangelist. Together with William J. Seymour,Parham was one of the two central figures in the development and early spread of American Pentecostalism. It was Parham who associated glossolalia with the baptism in the Holy Spirit,a theological connection crucial to the emergence of Pentecostalism as a distinct movement. Parham was the first preacher to articulate Pentecostalism's distinctive doctrine of evidential tongues,and to expand the movement.
Jacob Albright was an American Christian leader,founder of Albright's People which was officially named the Evangelical Association in 1816. This church as a denomination is still in existence,headquartered in Myerstown,Pennsylvania.
The College of West Africa is a Methodist high school in Monrovia,Liberia. The school was opened in 1839,making it one of the oldest European-style schools in Africa. It has produced many of Liberia's leaders. Alumni include Liberian President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf,the first woman elected as president in an African state,and Liberian Vice President Joseph Boakai.
Tulsa is the second-largest city in the state of Oklahoma and 45th-most populous city in the United States.
Rev. William Fraser McDowell,A.B.,S.T.B.,was an American bishop of the Methodist Episcopal Church.
The Episcopal Diocese of Oklahoma dates back to 1837 as a Missionary District of the Episcopal Church in the United States of America. The General Convention of the Episcopal Church recognized the Diocese of Oklahoma in 1937. The diocese consists of all Episcopal congregations in the state of Oklahoma. The ninth Bishop and sixth diocesan Bishop is Poulson C. Reed,consecrated in 2020.
Owen Park is a residential neighborhood and historic district in Tulsa,Oklahoma. Its borders are Edison Avenue on the north,the municipal Owen Park on the east,the Keystone Expressway on the south,and Zenith Avenue on the west. Opened on June 8,1910,it was Tulsa's first municipal park. The district covers 163.48 acres (66.16 ha),while Owen Park itself covers 24 acres (9.7 ha) on the east side of the District.
Robert Samuel Maclay,D.D. was an American missionary who made pioneer contributions to the Methodist Episcopal missions in China,Japan and Korea. He served as the first president of Aoyama Gakuin University.
William Fitzjames Oldham was a British-American bishop of the Methodist Episcopal Church and missionary bishop for South Asia. He distinguished himself as a missionary,an author and a church official. He was the founder of Anglo Chinese School in Singapore in 1886.
George Scott Railton was a Scottish-born Christian missioner who was the first Commissioner of The Salvation Army.
The First Presbyterian Church of Tulsa was organized in 1885 in Creek Nation,Indian Territory,before statehood. It originally met in the store owned by brothers James M. Hall and Harry C. Hall,and was served by itinerant,circuit-riding ministers.
Nicolás Villegas Zamora was a Methodist minister who is credited with the foundation of the first indigenous evangelical church in the Philippines,known as the Iglesia Evangelica Metodista en las Islas Filipinas. Zamora is also recognized as the first native Filipino Protestant minister in the Philippines.
James Hugh McBirney was an Ireland-born Oklahoma banker and bank organizer.
Charles Sanford Olmsted was a bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Colorado from 1902 to 1918. He was the first bishop elected by the Diocese of Colorado after it became an independent diocese.
Charles W. Terry (1847–1931),commonly known as C.W. Terry,was an architect based in Wichita,Kansas. Several works credited to him and partnerships he was in are listed on the National Register of Historic Places.
Belle Harris Bennett led the struggle for and won laity rights for women in the Methodist Episcopal Church,South. She was the founding president of the Woman's Missionary Council of the Southern Methodist Church. Much of her work including fundraising and organizational efforts to provide higher education for a new professional class of social workers and community organizers in the Southern Methodist Church in the U.S. and abroad. Her carefully collaborative support for African Americans and immigrants was considered radical at that time by Southerners. She was a suffragist and supporter of temperance as well.
The history of Methodism in Sichuan began in 1882 when missionaries began to arrive from the United States. Methodists founded or helped found several colleges,schools,and hospitals to aid in modernization and conversion efforts. Later,American Methodists were joined by missionaries from Canada. Methodism grew to become one of the two largest denominations of Protestant Christianity in the province by 1922,along with Anglicanism.
Eugenia St. John Mann was an American ordained minister,evangelist,temperance lecturer,and suffragist. She served as national evangelist of the Woman's Christian Temperance Union (WCTU),President of the Illinois WCTU,and national lecturer of the International Organisation of Good Templars (IOGT). St. John became ordained a minister in the Kansas Conference of the Methodist Protestant Church,and in 1892,was elected to the General Conference,being the first woman who ever sat as delegate in the General Conference of that denomination in the U.S. Mann held pastorates in ten churches,retiring from active work in 1920. She was known as a gifted orator who also composed her own songs for her evangelistic work. Mann also served as President of the Kansas Equal Suffrage Association,1885–95.