Alice Blanchard Coleman

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Alice_Blanchard_Coleman an entity of type: Thing

Alice Blanchard Coleman (née , Merriam; pen name, Mrs. George W. Coleman; May 7, 1858 – October 22, 1936) was an American missionary society leader. She served as president of the Woman's American Baptist Home Mission Society and of the Council of Women for Home Missions (1908-16). Coleman was a trustee of Hartshorn Memorial College, Richmond, Virginia; Spelman Seminary (now Spelman College), Atlanta, Georgia; and the New England Baptist Hospital, Boston. Writing as "Mrs. George W. Coleman", she made at least two contributions to periodical literature, "The Women's Congress of Missions", 1915, and "Recent developments in Mormonism", 1918. All of Coleman's life was spent in the old South End of Boston. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Alice Blanchard Coleman
rdf:langString Alice Blanchard Coleman
rdf:langString Alice Blanchard Coleman
xsd:date 1936-10-22
rdf:langString Boston, Massachusetts, U.S.
xsd:date 1858-05-07
xsd:integer 70952745
xsd:integer 1091838626
rdf:langString Bradford Academy
xsd:date 1858-05-07
rdf:langString Alice Blanchard Merriam
xsd:date 1936-10-22
rdf:langString Christian missionary society leader
xsd:integer 1891
rdf:langString
rdf:langString
rdf:langString president, Woman's American Baptist Home Mission Society
rdf:langString president, Council of Women for Home Missions
rdf:langString Alice Blanchard Coleman (née , Merriam; pen name, Mrs. George W. Coleman; May 7, 1858 – October 22, 1936) was an American missionary society leader. She served as president of the Woman's American Baptist Home Mission Society and of the Council of Women for Home Missions (1908-16). Coleman was a trustee of Hartshorn Memorial College, Richmond, Virginia; Spelman Seminary (now Spelman College), Atlanta, Georgia; and the New England Baptist Hospital, Boston. Writing as "Mrs. George W. Coleman", she made at least two contributions to periodical literature, "The Women's Congress of Missions", 1915, and "Recent developments in Mormonism", 1918. All of Coleman's life was spent in the old South End of Boston.
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rdf:langString Alice Blanchard Merriam
rdf:langString president,Council of Women for Home Missions
rdf:langString president,Woman's American Baptist Home Mission Society

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