Arkansas Baptist State Convention
Appearance
The Arkansas Baptist State Convention (ABSC) was founded on September 21, 1848, at Brownsville Church in Tulip in Dallas County, Arkansas as an affiliate of the Southern Baptist Convention.[1][2] The first president was Isaac Perkins, and its first secretary was Samuel Stevenson. James Philip Eagle, governor of Arkansas and later president of the Southern Baptist Convention, presided over the Arkansas convention for 21 years.[1] Another notable former Convention President was Mike Huckabee, who would later go on to serve as Governor of Arkansas and twice attempt to gain the Republican nomination for President of the United States.
Affiliated organizations
[edit]- Arkansas Baptist Children's Homes
- Arkansas Baptist News
- Arkansas Baptist Foundation
- Arkansas Baptist Assembly, now renamed Camp Siloam
- Camp Paron
- Arkansas Woman's Missionary Union
- Ouachita Baptist University
- Williams Baptist College
References
[edit]External links
[edit]Further reading
[edit]- William Cathcart (1881). "Arkansas Baptist Convention". The Baptist Encyclopedia. Baptist History Series. Vol. 1 (reprinted by The Baptist Standard Bearer, Inc. 2001 ed.). Philadelphia: Louis H. Everts. pp. 15–16. ISBN 978-1-57978-909-1.
- Kenneth M. Startup (2009-10-27). "Arkansas Baptist State Convention". The Encyclopedia of Arkansas History & Culture. Central Arkansas Library System.
- C. Fred Williams; Samuel Ray Granade & Kenneth Moore Startup (1998). A System and Plan, Arkansas Baptist State Convention, 1848–1998. Franklin, TN: Providence House. ISBN 978-1-57736-109-1.
- Mark Newman (Autumn 1997). "The Arkansas Baptist State Convention and Desegregation, 1954–1968". The Arkansas Historical Quarterly. 56 (3). Arkansas Historical Association: 294–313. doi:10.2307/40023176. JSTOR 40023176.
- Samuel Stevenson (1853). "Arkansas State Convention". In John Lansing Burrows (ed.). American Baptist register, for 1852. American Baptist Publication Society.
- E. Glenn Hinson (1979). A history of Baptists in Arkansas, 1818–1978. Arkansas State Convention. pp. 31–32.