Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://wikidata.dbpedia.org/resource/Q7151125> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 31 of
31
with 100 triples per page.
- Q7151125 subject Q6134977.
- Q7151125 subject Q6938895.
- Q7151125 subject Q8341704.
- Q7151125 subject Q8869014.
- Q7151125 subject Q8948188.
- Q7151125 abstract "Paul Hardin, Jr. (November 7, 1903 – June 22, 1996) was a bishop in The Methodist Church in the U.S., elected in 1960.He was Bishop of the Alabama-West Florida Annual Conference of the Methodist Church in 1963 when he joined seven other white clergymen to write the letter A Call For Unity, making a thinly veiled reference to Martin Luther King, Jr. King replied to this letter with his Letter from Birmingham Jail.Paul was the son of Paul and Harriet (Wannamaker) Hardin. He attended Wofford College in 1920, where he studied law and then to Candler School of Theology, Emory University in 1924, where he received his divinity degree in 1927. Hardin was ordained Deacon in 1929 and Elder in 1931. He was assigned to pastorates in North Carolina and in 1949 he was appointed to Birmingham, Alabama First Methodist Church. Hardin was elected bishop on July 15, 1960, at the Southeastern Jurisdictional conference. For many years he was the resident bishop of the Columbia (South Carolina) area. From 1961 to 1964 he also had charge of the Alabama-West Florida Conference following the death of Bishop Bachman Gladstone Hodge.Bishop Hardin was a member of the General Board of Education; of the General Board of Christian Social Concerns; and president of the Council on World Service and Finance. He was a delegate to the General Conference and Jurisdictional Conference of 1960. He was a member of the Lake Junaluska Assembly and a trustee of Emory University. Bishop Hardin was installed as president of the United Methodist Church's Council of Bishops on April 15, 1971, in San Antonio, Texas. Bishop Hardin died in 1996.".
- Q7151125 wikiPageExternalLink sohp.
- Q7151125 wikiPageExternalLink menu.html.
- Q7151125 wikiPageWikiLink Q1155908.
- Q7151125 wikiPageWikiLink Q1454.
- Q7151125 wikiPageWikiLink Q1609768.
- Q7151125 wikiPageWikiLink Q161944.
- Q7151125 wikiPageWikiLink Q29182.
- Q7151125 wikiPageWikiLink Q30.
- Q7151125 wikiPageWikiLink Q4655705.
- Q7151125 wikiPageWikiLink Q4769649.
- Q7151125 wikiPageWikiLink Q5031983.
- Q7151125 wikiPageWikiLink Q6134977.
- Q7151125 wikiPageWikiLink Q621043.
- Q7151125 wikiPageWikiLink Q6607953.
- Q7151125 wikiPageWikiLink Q6938895.
- Q7151125 wikiPageWikiLink Q7519600.
- Q7151125 wikiPageWikiLink Q7751185.
- Q7151125 wikiPageWikiLink Q79867.
- Q7151125 wikiPageWikiLink Q8027.
- Q7151125 wikiPageWikiLink Q8029049.
- Q7151125 wikiPageWikiLink Q8341704.
- Q7151125 wikiPageWikiLink Q8869014.
- Q7151125 wikiPageWikiLink Q8948188.
- Q7151125 comment "Paul Hardin, Jr. (November 7, 1903 – June 22, 1996) was a bishop in The Methodist Church in the U.S., elected in 1960.He was Bishop of the Alabama-West Florida Annual Conference of the Methodist Church in 1963 when he joined seven other white clergymen to write the letter A Call For Unity, making a thinly veiled reference to Martin Luther King, Jr. King replied to this letter with his Letter from Birmingham Jail.Paul was the son of Paul and Harriet (Wannamaker) Hardin.".
- Q7151125 label "Paul Hardin, Jr.".