Adventist History: The Story of Two Adventist Medical Missionaries

Adventist History: The Story of Two Adventist Medical Missionaries

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This week in Adventist history, we revisit the lives of two Adventist medical missionaries, Etta Elizabeth Littlejohn Bradford and Cora Mae Abbott. Etta Elizabeth was born in Mississippi on September 15, 1883. Nearing the 1900s, she took a nursing course at the New England Sanitarium in Massachusetts and worked as Ellen White's nurse's assistant. Cora Mae was born in South Dakota on September 14, 1877. Approaching the 1900s, she attended Union College in Nebraska and trained as a nurse at the Boulder Sanitarium in Colorado. Elizabeth Henry tells us more about their stories on This Week in Adventist History. Visit https://encyclopedia.adventist.org/ for more Adventist stories and events. Established in 1863, the Seventh-day Adventist Church is a global Christian family with over 21 million members who hold the Bible as the ultimate authority. We are believers who help people understand the Bible to find freedom, healing, and hope in Jesus. To learn more about the Seventh-day Adventist Church, visit https://www.adventist.org/. Subscribe to this channel and click the notification bell so you'll never miss a new video. Follow us on these social media platforms: Facebook � https://www.facebook.com/TheAdventist Twitter � https://twitter.com/adventistchurch Instagram � https://www.instagram.com/adventistchurch

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thank you
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🙏Amen 🙏 Thank you so much for sharing this with me in Jesus name may God bless you always and keep you safe and well 🙏 in Jesus name 🙏 Amen 🙏

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