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First Universalist Church (Atlanta)

The First Universalist Church of Atlanta, organized in 1895, re-established a Universalist presence in Atlanta, Georgia. Initial missionary efforts in 1879 were short-lived and failed to establish a permanent presence in the city. With the explicit assistance the Young People's Christian Union, this second missionary effort enabled the Universalists to sustain their presence and construct a church building on East Harris in 1900. The Universalists occupied the church until 1918 when they merged with Atlanta's Unitarians.

First Universalist Church
First Universalist Church
Location16 East Harris Street, Atlanta, Georgia
CountryUnited States
DenominationUniversalist
History
Founded1895
Founder(s)Rev. Q.H. Shinn, Rev. W.H. McGlauflin, Young People's Christian Union
DedicatedJul 15, 1900
Architecture
StyleEnglish Gothic
Construction cost$12,000
Demolished1920
Specifications
MaterialsStained Glass Windows: The Sower, The Nativity, The Resurrection.

The combined churches selected the Unitarian church on West Peachtree Street as their collective home. The combined church known by several names over the next three decades collapsed in 1951.

History edit

Universalist Churches in Georgia edit

At the start of 1879, the Universalists in Georgia had a statewide rural presence of 10 churches with a total membership of 236. [1] In the summer of that same year, Rev. William Clayton Bowman attempted to establish an urban Universalist presence in Atlanta.

Born in 1833 in the mountain region of North Carolina, W.C. Bowman had limited access to both formal education and regular religious services. His exposure to religion came from itinerant Methodist, Baptist and Dunker preachers and revival exaltations to go to the 'mourner's bench' and 'seek religion.' Bowman, however, found more doubt than religion. He rejected the doctrine of endless punishment. "I still held to the Bible as the infallible word of God, but it was redeemed in my mind from the horrible meanings given to it by orthodoxy." Bowman self-converted to universalism.[2]

First Missionary Effort in Atlanta edit

In July 1879, Bowman held several Universalist services in the Hall of Representatives in the Georgia Capitol Building in Atlanta.[3] Later services were regularly held at the Georgia Academy of Science on Mitchell Street.[4] In October 1880, he was re-elected pastor of the city’s Universalist church.[5] Also in 1880, his Atlanta church was listed in the inventory of Georgia's Universalist churches showing a membership of 11 families.[6]

Rev. D.B. Clayton, a South Carolina itinerant Universalist minister, moved to Atlanta in 1890 to assist Bowman and publish the newly founded Atlanta Universalist newspaper.

By early 1881, the same doubt that drew Bowman from orthodox religion to Universalism drew him to the spiritualism. Bowman severed his connection with the Universalist church and began leading services at the Liberal and Spiritual Church.[7] Bowman continued his connection with the Liberal and Spiritual Church until July 1883 when he left Atlanta for Cincinnati.

Following Bowman’s departure from the nascent Universalist church, Rev. Clayton sporadically held Sunday services until the summer of 1882, after which the Universalist activities in Atlanta ceased.

Just as the Universalist missionary effort was ending in Atlanta, the Unitarians were starting their efforts to establish a church in Atlanta. By March 1883, the Unitarians had organized the Church of Our Father. This liberal church provided former members of Bowman's Universalist church a temporary home until the Universalists could resume their own missionary work in the city.

Second Missionary Effort in Atlanta edit

In October 1893, Universalist missionary work resumed in Atlanta with an announcement in the local paper stating that "Rev. Q.H. Shinn, the National Evangelist of the Universalist Church will visit the city for ten days. The Unitarians offered Rev. Shinn use of their church to hold services."

Rev. Quillen Hamilton Shinn was born in 1845 and fellowshipped in the Vermont Convention. In his early career, he preached on a circuit that included Canada and Nebraska as well as holding the pastorate in several New England churches. In 1891 he committed himself exclusively to itinerant missionary work.[8] More significantly for the resumption of missionary work in Atlanta, in 1893 the Universalist’s Young People's Christian Union (Y.P.C.U.) elected Rev. Shinn to be their national organizer.[9]

The Young People's Christian Union was organized in 1889 and adopted missionary work as its main focus.

In February 1895, in order to raise a Universalist congregation, Rev. Shinn and Rev. D.B. Clayton joined Rev. McGlauflin, the Y.P.C.U. Southern Missionary, to conduct a series of revival meetings in Atlanta. The announcement in the local papers of the weeklong revival revealed the difficulties the Universalist’s message of universal salvation faced in a community holding orthodox religious views on sin and eternal damnation. The February 15 headline in The Atlanta Constitution read, "It’s Not Infidelity. Rev. Q.H. Shinn, Universalist, Defends His Church and Creed."

The Universalists were undeterred. The November 1895 issue of Onward, the Y.P.C.U. magazine, a front-page article declared, "On to Atlanta! The ground is broken at Atlanta, Ga. The die is cast. The Rubicon crossed. We have put our hand to the plough, there is no turning back now." The Universalists continued their missionary efforts. In April 1896, Rev. McGlauflin resigned his pastorate at the Grace Universalist Church in Harriman, Tennessee, an earlier Y.P.C.U. missionary project. He moved to Atlanta, relocated the headquarters of the Y.P.C.U. Southern Missionary to that city and assumed the pastorate of the Universalist church.[10] By 1900, membership in the church had risen to just over 100 and sufficient funds had been collected to build a church at 16 East Harris Street. The church was dedicated on July 15, 1900. [11]

Christianity Questioned edit

Shortly after the dedication of the new church building, the Christian bona fides of Atlanta's Universalists (and Unitarians) was challenged by religious fervor born in the dawn of a new century from Christians in Great Britain.

To usher in the twentieth century, the Federation of Free Churches in Great Britain embraced the idea of a religious revival called the National Simultaneous Mission.[12] The idea caught the imagination of Christians in the United States who envisioned a coast-to-coast, simultaneous revival "born in prayer and the preaching of the old-fashioned Gospel and carried forward in trusting dependence on the Holy Spirit."[13] A Central Committee of Christian leaders was formed in New York. On February 8, 1903, the New York Central Committee called for a nationwide Gospel Campaign.[14]

Atlanta's Christian ministers responded enthusiastically. On February 27, Atlanta pastors from all denominations, including Rev. McGlauflin from the Universalist Church and Rev. Langston from the Unitarian church, gathered to coordinate activities. The next day, The Atlanta Constitution carried an article with the headline, "Plans Complete for Religious Revival" stating that two prominent Universalists, Rev. F.A. Bisbee and Rev. A.A. Ross, would participate.

Two days later, strong opposition was voiced regarding the participation of Universalists and Unitarians. Rev. G. Campbell Morgan, a prominent British-born evangelical who had recently moved to Massachusetts, shocked an audience of 2,200 people in an impassioned speech stating, "I can not and will not enter into any alliance with men whose creed denies the essential elements of salvation."[15]

Rev. Len G. Broughton, the fundamentalist minister of Atlanta’s Baptist Tabernacle, added his voice to the opposition. Although there were ministers who supported the Universalists and Unitarians, in the end, both denominations were excluded from the gospel campaign.

On the same day as the official opening of the gospel campaign, Rev. McGlauflin preached at his church, "When St. Paul was once thrown into prison those responsible for the act regretted it afterward and sent him word that it would be agreeable if he would quietly leave by a side door which they would leave open for him. He said, ‘No.’ If they wish me to leave let them come and openly set me free. I shall follow the apostolic example."[16]

Merger with Unitarians and Collapse edit

In February 1918 the Universalists elected to merge with Atlanta’s Unitarians. The merger was announced in a February 23, 1918 article in The Atlanta Constitution. "The Unitarian and Universalists of Atlanta will meet in public worship at the Unitarian Church, 301 West Peachtree street, tomorrow morning at 11 o'clock. This is the first meeting under a temporary merger of the two congregations which is planned to last for the duration of the war. Rev. T.B. Fisher, the retiring minister of the Universalist church, will preach on 'The Larger Destiny.' All friends are cordially invited."

The merger of the two denominations, however, continued long after the conclusion of the war in November 1918.

Once combined, the Unitarians and Universalists renamed their joint church the Liberal Christian Church. The Universalist church building on East Harris Street was sold in April 1920 for $20,000 (~$222,432 in 2022) and the proceeds were set aside to assist the newly federated congregation.

The merger continued until 1951 when the combined church was engulfed in controversy regarding accusations of communist sympathizing and racial segregation. The national organizations for both the Universalist Church of America and the American Unitarian Association withdrew support for the federated church. The American Unitarian Association, which held the property deed, sold the building in 1951. The church officially disbanded.

Renewed Efforts in Atlanta edit

Following the sale of the church building and the disbanding of the original congregation, the Universalist Church of America and the American Unitarian Association coordinated efforts to raise a new liberal church in Atlanta. Rev. Glenn O. Canfield was dispatched to the city in early 1952. He successfully regrouped several former members and attracted new members and re-chartered the United Liberal Church. In 1966, the church changed its name to the Unitarian Universalist Congregation of Atlanta (UUCA).

Universalist Church Ministers edit

Minister From To Comments
Rev. William Clayton Bowman Sep 1879 Jan 1882 Rev. W.C. Bowman organized the first Universalist church in Atlanta. He never established a permanent church building. He left the Universalist movement to join the Liberal Spiritualist movement.
Rev. Daniel Bragg Clayton May 1882 Feb 1885 Rev. D.B. Clayton along with Rev. Q.H.Shinn provided infrequent Sunday services.
Rev. Quillen Hamilton Shinn Oct 1893 Oct 1895 After a hiatus of nearly eight years, Rev. Q.H. Shinn re-started efforts to establish a Universalist society in Atlanta.
Rev. William Henry McGlauflin Oct 1895 Feb 1904 Rev. W.H. McGlauflin resigned to become the regional superintendent of the Universalist churches in Minnesota.
Rev. Clarence J. Harris Jan 1904 Mar 1905 Rev. Harris resigned to accept a call from the State Convention of Pennsylvania, at the solicitation of the General Convention, to be pastor of the movement at Alleghany and Pittsburgh.
Rev. Paul Tyner May 1905 Jun 1905 Rev. Tyner was called to serve until the end of the new church year (July 1). The church was then closed for the summer months (July – August).
Rev. Everett Dean Ellenwood Dec 1905 Apr 1913 Rev. E. Dean Ellenwood resigned to accept a call to the Washington Street M.E. Church in Elgin, IL.
Rev. Fred Amos Line Apr 1913 Oct 1915 Rev. Fred A. Line resigned to accept a call at the church in South Weymouth, MA.
Rev. John Wesley Rowlett Nov 1915 Sep 1916 Rev. John W. Rowlett provided temporary pulpit services.
Rev. Thomas Burr Fisher Oct 1916 Jan 1918 Rev. T. B. Fisher was the last minister of the First Universalist Church. The Atlanta Universalists and Unitarians locally merged to form the Liberal Christian Church.

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ "Georgia". Universalist Register with the Usual Astronomical Tables and a Counting House Almanac for 1879. Boston, MA: Universalist Publishing House. 1879. Retrieved May 11, 2016.
  2. ^ Schlesinger, Julia (1896). "Workers in the vineyard. A review of the progress of spiritualism, biographical sketches, lectures, essays and poems". University of Pittsburgh Library. Retrieved June 12, 2014. {{cite magazine}}: Cite magazine requires |magazine= (help)
  3. ^ Staff Writer (July 29, 1879). "Churches To-Day". The Atlanta Constitution. p. 4.
  4. ^ Staff Writer (Oct 26, 1879). "Churches To-Day". The Atlanta Constitution. p. 6.
  5. ^ Staff Writer (Oct 1, 1880). "Gossip". The Atlanta Constitution. p. 4.
  6. ^ "Georgia". Universalist Register with the Usual Astronomical Tables and a Counting House Almanac for 1880. Boston, MA: Universalist Publishing House. 1880. Retrieved May 11, 2016.
  7. ^ Staff Writer (July 8, 1883). "Churches Services". The Atlanta Constitution. p. 1.
  8. ^ Harris, Mark W. (2006). The A to Z of Unitarian Universalism. Lanham, Maryland: The Scarecrow Press, Inc. ISBN 978-0-8108-6333-0.
  9. ^ McGlauflin, William Henry (1912). Faith with Power: A Life Story of Quillen Hamilton Shinn, Part 4. Boston and Chicago: Universalist Publishing House.
  10. ^ McGlauflin, W.H. (May 1, 1896). "Southern Missionary". Onward, Volume 3. Boston, MA. Retrieved June 12, 2014.
  11. ^ Staff Writer (July 15, 1900). "Universalist church Is To Be Dedicated Today". The Atlanta Constitution. p. 21.
  12. ^ "Prospectus for 1901". Homiletic Review, Jul – Dec 1900. New York and London: Funk and Wagnalls Company. 1900. Retrieved Feb 24, 2018.
  13. ^ "Twentieth Century National Gospel Campaign". Homiletic Review, Jan - Jun 1901. New York and London: Funk and Wagnalls Company. 1901. Retrieved Feb 24, 2018.
  14. ^ Staff Writer (Feb 8, 1903). "Appeal for Lenten Services". The New York Times. p. 9.
  15. ^ Staff Writer (Mar 2, 1903). "Two Denominations Fail of Admission". The Atlanta Constitution. p. 1.
  16. ^ Staff Writer (Mar 9, 1903). "Union Campaign Opens at Noon". The Atlanta Constitution. p. 5.

first, universalist, church, atlanta, first, universalist, church, atlanta, organized, 1895, established, universalist, presence, atlanta, georgia, initial, missionary, efforts, 1879, were, short, lived, failed, establish, permanent, presence, city, with, expl. The First Universalist Church of Atlanta organized in 1895 re established a Universalist presence in Atlanta Georgia Initial missionary efforts in 1879 were short lived and failed to establish a permanent presence in the city With the explicit assistance the Young People s Christian Union this second missionary effort enabled the Universalists to sustain their presence and construct a church building on East Harris in 1900 The Universalists occupied the church until 1918 when they merged with Atlanta s Unitarians First Universalist ChurchFirst Universalist ChurchLocation16 East Harris Street Atlanta GeorgiaCountryUnited StatesDenominationUniversalistHistoryFounded1895Founder s Rev Q H Shinn Rev W H McGlauflin Young People s Christian UnionDedicatedJul 15 1900ArchitectureStyleEnglish GothicConstruction cost 12 000Demolished1920SpecificationsMaterialsStained Glass Windows The Sower The Nativity The Resurrection The combined churches selected the Unitarian church on West Peachtree Street as their collective home The combined church known by several names over the next three decades collapsed in 1951 Contents 1 History 1 1 Universalist Churches in Georgia 1 2 First Missionary Effort in Atlanta 1 3 Second Missionary Effort in Atlanta 2 Christianity Questioned 3 Merger with Unitarians and Collapse 4 Renewed Efforts in Atlanta 4 1 Universalist Church Ministers 5 FootnotesHistory editUniversalist Churches in Georgia edit At the start of 1879 the Universalists in Georgia had a statewide rural presence of 10 churches with a total membership of 236 1 In the summer of that same year Rev William Clayton Bowman attempted to establish an urban Universalist presence in Atlanta Born in 1833 in the mountain region of North Carolina W C Bowman had limited access to both formal education and regular religious services His exposure to religion came from itinerant Methodist Baptist and Dunker preachers and revival exaltations to go to the mourner s bench and seek religion Bowman however found more doubt than religion He rejected the doctrine of endless punishment I still held to the Bible as the infallible word of God but it was redeemed in my mind from the horrible meanings given to it by orthodoxy Bowman self converted to universalism 2 First Missionary Effort in Atlanta edit In July 1879 Bowman held several Universalist services in the Hall of Representatives in the Georgia Capitol Building in Atlanta 3 Later services were regularly held at the Georgia Academy of Science on Mitchell Street 4 In October 1880 he was re elected pastor of the city s Universalist church 5 Also in 1880 his Atlanta church was listed in the inventory of Georgia s Universalist churches showing a membership of 11 families 6 Rev D B Clayton a South Carolina itinerant Universalist minister moved to Atlanta in 1890 to assist Bowman and publish the newly founded Atlanta Universalist newspaper By early 1881 the same doubt that drew Bowman from orthodox religion to Universalism drew him to the spiritualism Bowman severed his connection with the Universalist church and began leading services at the Liberal and Spiritual Church 7 Bowman continued his connection with the Liberal and Spiritual Church until July 1883 when he left Atlanta for Cincinnati Following Bowman s departure from the nascent Universalist church Rev Clayton sporadically held Sunday services until the summer of 1882 after which the Universalist activities in Atlanta ceased Just as the Universalist missionary effort was ending in Atlanta the Unitarians were starting their efforts to establish a church in Atlanta By March 1883 the Unitarians had organized the Church of Our Father This liberal church provided former members of Bowman s Universalist church a temporary home until the Universalists could resume their own missionary work in the city Second Missionary Effort in Atlanta edit In October 1893 Universalist missionary work resumed in Atlanta with an announcement in the local paper stating that Rev Q H Shinn the National Evangelist of the Universalist Church will visit the city for ten days The Unitarians offered Rev Shinn use of their church to hold services Rev Quillen Hamilton Shinn was born in 1845 and fellowshipped in the Vermont Convention In his early career he preached on a circuit that included Canada and Nebraska as well as holding the pastorate in several New England churches In 1891 he committed himself exclusively to itinerant missionary work 8 More significantly for the resumption of missionary work in Atlanta in 1893 the Universalist s Young People s Christian Union Y P C U elected Rev Shinn to be their national organizer 9 The Young People s Christian Union was organized in 1889 and adopted missionary work as its main focus In February 1895 in order to raise a Universalist congregation Rev Shinn and Rev D B Clayton joined Rev McGlauflin the Y P C U Southern Missionary to conduct a series of revival meetings in Atlanta The announcement in the local papers of the weeklong revival revealed the difficulties the Universalist s message of universal salvation faced in a community holding orthodox religious views on sin and eternal damnation The February 15 headline in The Atlanta Constitution read It s Not Infidelity Rev Q H Shinn Universalist Defends His Church and Creed The Universalists were undeterred The November 1895 issue of Onward the Y P C U magazine a front page article declared On to Atlanta The ground is broken at Atlanta Ga The die is cast The Rubicon crossed We have put our hand to the plough there is no turning back now The Universalists continued their missionary efforts In April 1896 Rev McGlauflin resigned his pastorate at the Grace Universalist Church in Harriman Tennessee an earlier Y P C U missionary project He moved to Atlanta relocated the headquarters of the Y P C U Southern Missionary to that city and assumed the pastorate of the Universalist church 10 By 1900 membership in the church had risen to just over 100 and sufficient funds had been collected to build a church at 16 East Harris Street The church was dedicated on July 15 1900 11 Christianity Questioned editShortly after the dedication of the new church building the Christian bona fides of Atlanta s Universalists and Unitarians was challenged by religious fervor born in the dawn of a new century from Christians in Great Britain To usher in the twentieth century the Federation of Free Churches in Great Britain embraced the idea of a religious revival called the National Simultaneous Mission 12 The idea caught the imagination of Christians in the United States who envisioned a coast to coast simultaneous revival born in prayer and the preaching of the old fashioned Gospel and carried forward in trusting dependence on the Holy Spirit 13 A Central Committee of Christian leaders was formed in New York On February 8 1903 the New York Central Committee called for a nationwide Gospel Campaign 14 Atlanta s Christian ministers responded enthusiastically On February 27 Atlanta pastors from all denominations including Rev McGlauflin from the Universalist Church and Rev Langston from the Unitarian church gathered to coordinate activities The next day The Atlanta Constitution carried an article with the headline Plans Complete for Religious Revival stating that two prominent Universalists Rev F A Bisbee and Rev A A Ross would participate Two days later strong opposition was voiced regarding the participation of Universalists and Unitarians Rev G Campbell Morgan a prominent British born evangelical who had recently moved to Massachusetts shocked an audience of 2 200 people in an impassioned speech stating I can not and will not enter into any alliance with men whose creed denies the essential elements of salvation 15 Rev Len G Broughton the fundamentalist minister of Atlanta s Baptist Tabernacle added his voice to the opposition Although there were ministers who supported the Universalists and Unitarians in the end both denominations were excluded from the gospel campaign On the same day as the official opening of the gospel campaign Rev McGlauflin preached at his church When St Paul was once thrown into prison those responsible for the act regretted it afterward and sent him word that it would be agreeable if he would quietly leave by a side door which they would leave open for him He said No If they wish me to leave let them come and openly set me free I shall follow the apostolic example 16 Merger with Unitarians and Collapse editIn February 1918 the Universalists elected to merge with Atlanta s Unitarians The merger was announced in a February 23 1918 article in The Atlanta Constitution The Unitarian and Universalists of Atlanta will meet in public worship at the Unitarian Church 301 West Peachtree street tomorrow morning at 11 o clock This is the first meeting under a temporary merger of the two congregations which is planned to last for the duration of the war Rev T B Fisher the retiring minister of the Universalist church will preach on The Larger Destiny All friends are cordially invited The merger of the two denominations however continued long after the conclusion of the war in November 1918 Once combined the Unitarians and Universalists renamed their joint church the Liberal Christian Church The Universalist church building on East Harris Street was sold in April 1920 for 20 000 222 432 in 2022 and the proceeds were set aside to assist the newly federated congregation The merger continued until 1951 when the combined church was engulfed in controversy regarding accusations of communist sympathizing and racial segregation The national organizations for both the Universalist Church of America and the American Unitarian Association withdrew support for the federated church The American Unitarian Association which held the property deed sold the building in 1951 The church officially disbanded Renewed Efforts in Atlanta editFollowing the sale of the church building and the disbanding of the original congregation the Universalist Church of America and the American Unitarian Association coordinated efforts to raise a new liberal church in Atlanta Rev Glenn O Canfield was dispatched to the city in early 1952 He successfully regrouped several former members and attracted new members and re chartered the United Liberal Church In 1966 the church changed its name to the Unitarian Universalist Congregation of Atlanta UUCA Universalist Church Ministers edit Minister From To CommentsRev William Clayton Bowman Sep 1879 Jan 1882 Rev W C Bowman organized the first Universalist church in Atlanta He never established a permanent church building He left the Universalist movement to join the Liberal Spiritualist movement Rev Daniel Bragg Clayton May 1882 Feb 1885 Rev D B Clayton along with Rev Q H Shinn provided infrequent Sunday services Rev Quillen Hamilton Shinn Oct 1893 Oct 1895 After a hiatus of nearly eight years Rev Q H Shinn re started efforts to establish a Universalist society in Atlanta Rev William Henry McGlauflin Oct 1895 Feb 1904 Rev W H McGlauflin resigned to become the regional superintendent of the Universalist churches in Minnesota Rev Clarence J Harris Jan 1904 Mar 1905 Rev Harris resigned to accept a call from the State Convention of Pennsylvania at the solicitation of the General Convention to be pastor of the movement at Alleghany and Pittsburgh Rev Paul Tyner May 1905 Jun 1905 Rev Tyner was called to serve until the end of the new church year July 1 The church was then closed for the summer months July August Rev Everett Dean Ellenwood Dec 1905 Apr 1913 Rev E Dean Ellenwood resigned to accept a call to the Washington Street M E Church in Elgin IL Rev Fred Amos Line Apr 1913 Oct 1915 Rev Fred A Line resigned to accept a call at the church in South Weymouth MA Rev John Wesley Rowlett Nov 1915 Sep 1916 Rev John W Rowlett provided temporary pulpit services Rev Thomas Burr Fisher Oct 1916 Jan 1918 Rev T B Fisher was the last minister of the First Universalist Church The Atlanta Universalists and Unitarians locally merged to form the Liberal Christian Church Footnotes edit Georgia Universalist Register with the Usual Astronomical Tables and a Counting House Almanac for 1879 Boston MA Universalist Publishing House 1879 Retrieved May 11 2016 Schlesinger Julia 1896 Workers in the vineyard A review of the progress of spiritualism biographical sketches lectures essays and poems University of Pittsburgh Library Retrieved June 12 2014 a href Template Cite magazine html title Template Cite magazine cite magazine a Cite magazine requires magazine help Staff Writer July 29 1879 Churches To Day The Atlanta Constitution p 4 Staff Writer Oct 26 1879 Churches To Day The Atlanta Constitution p 6 Staff Writer Oct 1 1880 Gossip The Atlanta Constitution p 4 Georgia Universalist Register with the Usual Astronomical Tables and a Counting House Almanac for 1880 Boston MA Universalist Publishing House 1880 Retrieved May 11 2016 Staff Writer July 8 1883 Churches Services The Atlanta Constitution p 1 Harris Mark W 2006 The A to Z of Unitarian Universalism Lanham Maryland The Scarecrow Press Inc ISBN 978 0 8108 6333 0 McGlauflin William Henry 1912 Faith with Power A Life Story of Quillen Hamilton Shinn Part 4 Boston and Chicago Universalist Publishing House McGlauflin W H May 1 1896 Southern Missionary Onward Volume 3 Boston MA Retrieved June 12 2014 Staff Writer July 15 1900 Universalist church Is To Be Dedicated Today The Atlanta Constitution p 21 Prospectus for 1901 Homiletic Review Jul Dec 1900 New York and London Funk and Wagnalls Company 1900 Retrieved Feb 24 2018 Twentieth Century National Gospel Campaign Homiletic Review Jan Jun 1901 New York and London Funk and Wagnalls Company 1901 Retrieved Feb 24 2018 Staff Writer Feb 8 1903 Appeal for Lenten Services The New York Times p 9 Staff Writer Mar 2 1903 Two Denominations Fail of Admission The Atlanta Constitution p 1 Staff Writer Mar 9 1903 Union Campaign Opens at Noon The Atlanta Constitution p 5 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title First Universalist Church Atlanta amp oldid 1179969288, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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