Marshall Keeble
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Marshall_Keeble an entity of type: Thing
Marshall Keeble (December 7, 1878 in Murfreesboro, Tennessee – April 20, 1968 in Nashville, Tennessee) was an African American preacher of the church of Christ, whose successful career notably bridged a racial divide in an important American religious movement prior to the Civil Rights Movement. Over the course of his 50-year career as a gospel preacher, he was credited with starting almost every African-American church of Christ in the state of Tennessee. Keeble enjoyed an almost unrivaled position as an African-American subject of hagiographical biography by white contemporaries within the church of which Keeble was a member. A notable example of this is Roll Jordan Roll by fellow minister and longtime Keeble associate, J. E. Choate.
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Marshall Keeble
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Marshall Keeble
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Marshall Keeble
xsd:date
1968-04-20
xsd:date
1878-12-07
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5431517
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1073792905
xsd:date
1878-12-07
xsd:date
1968-04-20
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Evangelist
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Laura Catherine Johnson, 1934–1968
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Minnie Womack, 1896–1932
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1914
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Marshall Keeble (December 7, 1878 in Murfreesboro, Tennessee – April 20, 1968 in Nashville, Tennessee) was an African American preacher of the church of Christ, whose successful career notably bridged a racial divide in an important American religious movement prior to the Civil Rights Movement. Over the course of his 50-year career as a gospel preacher, he was credited with starting almost every African-American church of Christ in the state of Tennessee. Keeble enjoyed an almost unrivaled position as an African-American subject of hagiographical biography by white contemporaries within the church of which Keeble was a member. A notable example of this is Roll Jordan Roll by fellow minister and longtime Keeble associate, J. E. Choate.
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11867
xsd:gYear
1914
xsd:gYear
1914
xsd:gYear
1878
xsd:gYear
1968