Academic literature on the topic 'Tennessee Association of Baptists'

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Journal articles on the topic "Tennessee Association of Baptists"

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Day, Brittany C. "Tennessee Association Wins Tax Relief, Reimbursement for CFs." ASHA Leader 24, no. 9 (September 2019): 44–45. http://dx.doi.org/10.1044/leader.sos.24092019.44.

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Travis, William G. "Tennessee Baptists: A Comprehensive History, 1779–1999. By Albert W. WardinJr. Brentwood, Term.: Executive Board of the Tennessee Baptist Convention, 1999. 704 pp. $29.95 cloth, $24.95 paper." Church History 70, no. 2 (June 2001): 390–91. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/3654489.

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Barber, Alec. "ASSOCIATION RECORDS OF THE PARTICULAR BAPTISTS OF THE WEST COUNTRY TO 1659." Baptist Quarterly 41, no. 4 (October 2005): 237–41. http://dx.doi.org/10.1179/bqu.2005.41.4.006.

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Brown, Kathleen C., Eugene C. Fitzhugh, James J. Neutens, and Diane A. Klein. "Screening Mammography Utilization in Tennessee Women: The Association With Residence." Journal of Rural Health 25, no. 2 (March 2009): 167–73. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1748-0361.2009.00213.x.

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Waldrep, Christopher. "Planters and the Planters' Protective Association in Kentucky and Tennessee." Journal of Southern History 52, no. 4 (November 1986): 565. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/2209149.

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Hill, Tina D., and Mark W. Durm. "Temporal Association of Substance Abuse and Self-Esteem." Psychological Reports 80, no. 3 (June 1997): 1058. http://dx.doi.org/10.2466/pr0.1997.80.3.1058.

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By an independent t test, mean scores on the Tennessee Self-concept Scale for 17 patients who had just begun rehabilitation for substance abuse and 8 subjects who had been in the recovery program for 1 year or longer were statistically significantly different, the former group scoring lower.
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Cofer, Joseph B., Tommy J. Petros, Hans C. Burkholder, and P. Chris Clarke. "General Surgery at Rural Tennessee Hospitals: A Survey of Rural Tennessee Hospital Administrators." American Surgeon 77, no. 7 (July 2011): 820–25. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/000313481107700713.

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Rural communities face an impending surgical workforce crisis. The purpose of this study is to describe perceptions of rural Tennessee hospital administrators regarding the importance of surgical services to their hospitals. In collaboration with the Tennessee Hospital Association, we developed and administered a 13-item survey based on a recently published national survey to 80 rural Tennessee hospitals in August 2008. A total of 29 responses were received for an overall 36.3 per cent response rate. Over 44 per cent of rural surgeons were older than 50 years of age, and 27.6 per cent of hospitals reported they would lose at least one surgeon in the next 2 years. The responding hospitals reported losing 10.4 per cent of their surgical workforce in the preceding 2 years. Over 53 per cent were actively recruiting a general surgeon with an average time to recruit a surgeon of 11.8 months. Ninety-seven per cent stated that having a surgical program was very important to their financial viability with the mean and median reported revenue generated by a single general surgeon being $1.8 million and $1.4 million, respectively. Almost 11 per cent of the hospitals stated they would have to close if they lost surgical services. Although rural Tennessee hospitals face similar difficulties to national rural hospitals with regard to retaining and hiring surgeons, slightly more Tennessee hospitals (54 vs 36%) were actively attempting to recruit a general surgeon. The shortage of general surgeons is a threat to the accessibility of comprehensive hospital-based care for rural Tennesseans.
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Elwyn, Thornton. "Particular Baptists of the Northamptonshire Baptist Association as Reflected in the Circular Letters 1765–1820." Baptist Quarterly 36, no. 8 (January 1996): 368–81. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/0005576x.1996.11752006.

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Elwyn, Thornton. "Particular Baptists of the Northamptonshire Baptist Association as Reflected in the Circular Letters 1765–1820." Baptist Quarterly 37, no. 1 (January 1997): 3–19. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/0005576x.1997.11752014.

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Weinand, Daniel C., Richard R. Polhemus, Sarah A. Blankenship, and Jan F. Simek. "First Reported Samples from the Radiocarbon Laboratory of the University of Tennessee Center for Archaeometry and Geochronology: Dates from the Mccrosky Island Archaeological Site (40SV43), Sevier County, Tennessee, USA." Radiocarbon 50, no. 1 (2008): 151–58. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0033822200043435.

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This study presents the results of archaeological samples submitted for dating at the recently constructed University of Tennessee Center for Archaeometry and Geochronology (UTCAG) radiocarbon dating laboratory (Knoxville, Tennessee, USA). The samples selected for this initial study were obtained from excavations at the McCrosky Island site (40SV43) in Sevier County, Tennessee, USA. Three of the samples dated were split between the UTCAG laboratory and another laboratory to assess the UTCAG laboratory protocols. In an effort to further validate the laboratory methods employed, several other samples were submitted without prior knowledge of contextual data. The dates obtained for these samples were then compared to their association with recovered artifacts and/or archaeological context.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Tennessee Association of Baptists"

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Shadoan, Marty Douglas. "The Development of a Revitalization Partnership Strategy for First Baptist Church of Rockwood, Tennessee to Assist a Church Needing Revitalization in the Big Emory Baptist Association." Thesis, Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary, 2019. http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=13865454.

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The project director chose to design a church revitalization partnership strategy. This strategy would enable First Baptist Church of Rockwood to assist another church in the Big Emory Baptist Association needing revitalization. The nature of the seven-step strategy provides flexibility, so the strategy can be used in a variety of ministry contexts.

Chapter one presents the purpose and nature of the ministry project. After listing the project’s ministry and professional objectives, the project director described the project’s ministry context, rationale, assumptions, limitations, delimitations, description, and definitions of terms. Through these descriptions, the project director explained the how and why of the project.

Chapter two addresses the biblical foundations for the ministry project. The project director details the benefits of a revitalization partnership from Ecclesiastes 4:9–12, the necessities for a revitalization partnership in Nehemiah 2:11–20, and an example of a revitalization partnership in 1 Corinthians 16:1–4. Each of these passages support the purpose for the strategy created through this ministry project.

Chapter three examines the ministry foundations for the ministry project. First, the project director discloses the historical foundation for revitalization partnerships. Next, the project director cites current authors emphasizing the need in revitalization partnerships for strong leaders and intentional planning. Finally, the project director details the seven-step structure for the project’s strategy.

Chapter four details the course of work the project completed to accomplish the project’s goals. The project director enumerates three phases of work. Phase one describes the people involved in the ministry project. Phase two explains the process of the ministry project. Phase three details the product of the ministry project which was validated by the expert panel and members of FBCR.

Chapter five analyzes the results of the ministry project. After presenting a summary of the project’s seven step strategy, the project director evaluates various issues such as objectives, strengths and weaknesses, and the project’s process. The project director then reflects on lessons learned and future implications for the project’s strategy.

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Wallace, Rick L. "Rural Health Association of Tennessee." Digital Commons @ East Tennessee State University, 2003. https://dc.etsu.edu/etsu-works/8799.

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Jarvis, Clive Robert. "Growth in English Baptist churches with special reference to the Northamptonshire Particular Baptist Association (1770-1830) /." Thesis, Connect to e-thesis, 2001. http://theses.gla.ac.uk/1035/.

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Thesis (Ph.D.) -- University of Glasgow, 2001.
Ph.D. thesis submitted to the Faculty of Divinity, University of Glasgow, 2001. Includes bibliographical references (p. 334-348). Print version also available. Mode of access : World Wide Web. System requirements : Adobe Acrobat reader required to view PDF document.
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Law, Thomas L. "A study guide for developing a Baptist association." Theological Research Exchange Network (TREN), 1993. http://www.tren.com.

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Sircar, John B. C. "The work of the Association of Baptists for World Evangelism in Bangladesh." Theological Research Exchange Network (TREN), 1989. http://www.tren.com.

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Hagemeier, Nicholas E. "Prescription Drug Abuse: Reflections and Visioning. First District Pharmacists Association – Tennessee Pharmacists Association." Digital Commons @ East Tennessee State University, 2014. https://dc.etsu.edu/etsu-works/1430.

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Thomas, Champ. "Kingdom harvest a strategy of evangelism in a rural association /." Online full text .pdf document, available to Fuller patrons only, 2002. http://www.tren.com.

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Herring, Ronald Edward. "Leading Rehoboth Baptist Association to develop and implement a church and denomination ministry team." Theological Research Exchange Network (TREN), 2002. http://www.tren.com.

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Smith, John David. "Developing a model for prefield preparation and orientation of international missionaries for the BMA of America." Theological Research Exchange Network (TREN), 2006. http://www.tren.com/search.cfm?p056-0076.

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Orimaye, Sylvester Olubolu, and Jodi Southerland. "Association between Alzheimer's disease and Rural Northeast Tennessee Region between 2013 and 2015." Digital Commons @ East Tennessee State University, 2018. https://dc.etsu.edu/asrf/2018/schedule/43.

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Background: Alzheimer’s disease (AD) is a type of Dementia and a neurodegenerative disease that is characterized by the gradual degrading of both memory and cognitive functions. According to the World Health Organization (WHO), the prevalence of AD is increasing globally. Currently, AD is the sixth leading cause of mortality in the United States. As the ageing population increases in the United States, it is possible that AD will move up the ladder in the top cause of mortality. Although the prevalence of AD in most urban parts of developed nations such as the United States is widely known, little is known about the prevalence and early diagnosis of the disease among the rural populations. According to a study by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), on deaths from AD between 1999 and 2014, most mortality are concentrated in the rural counties of the Appalachian region of the United States, where the mortality rate has increased by an alarming 75%. Our study focuses on the Northeast Tennessee region, which is a prominent part of the Appalachian region. We examine the prevalence of Alzheimer’s disease in the Northeast Tennessee region compared to other parts of the state of Tennessee. We sought to understand whether there is a likely association between the disease and the rural counties in the Northeast Tennessee region. Methods: We performed a cross-sectional study that computes and compares between the Prevalence Odds Ratio (POR) of the 2013 to 2015 Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services Public Use Files data on rural versus urban counties in the Northeast Tennessee region followed by the Northeast Tennessee counties versus other counties in Tennessee. In addition, we collected primary data from 44 experts and professionals working in AD-related fields within the Northeast Tennessee region using an online survey that captures the perceived observation of the experts and professionals about the increasing prevalence of AD over the last five years. Results: Findings show that the rural counties within the Northeast Tennessee region had 18.3% (POR: 1.183, C.I: 1.113-1.258), 4.7% (POR: 1.047, C.I: 0.982-1.117), and 19% (POR: 1.190, C.I: 1.121-1.264) increased odds of prevalence of AD compared to the urban counties within the region in 2013, 2014, and 2015, respectively. Similarly, the Northeast Tennessee region as a whole, had increased odds of 22.7% (POR: 1.227, C.I: 1.203-1.250), 22.5% (POR: 1.225, C.I: 1.202-1.249), and 21.2% (POR: 1.212, C.I: 1.189-1.235) of AD compared to all other counties in Tennessee during the same periods. Conclusions: Statistical analysis and findings from experts and professionals working with patients with AD in the Northeast Tennessee region show that there are more cases of AD in the Northeast Tennessee region compared to the last five years. We suggest early screening strategies for possible decrease in the morbidity and mortality rates in Northeast Tennessee region.
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Books on the topic "Tennessee Association of Baptists"

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Polk, Bob M. Missionary at heart: The story of Watauga Association of Baptists in Northeast Tennessee, 1868-2007. [Elizabethton, Tenn: Watauga Association of Baptists], 2011.

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Davis, Patricia Bullington. A history of the Judson Association of Missionary Baptist in Tennessee: Organized 1849. [McEwen, Tenn.?]: P.B. Davis, 1987.

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Cawthorn, C. P. Pioneer Baptist Church records of south-central Kentucky and the Upper Cumberland of Tennessee, 1799-1899. [United States: s.n.], 1985.

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National Association of Free Will Baptists (U.S.). A treatise of the faith and practices of the National Association of Free Will Baptists, Inc: Adopted by the National Association, November 7, 1935, at Nashville, Tennessee. Nashville, Tenn: Executive Office of the National Association of Free Will Baptists, 2001.

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Fuller, Thomas Oscar. History of the Negro Baptists of Tennessee. Memphis, Tenn: Haskins Print--Roger Williams College, 1987.

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Runyon, Edwin. Meet the General Baptists: Who are the General Baptists? Poplar Bluss, Mo: Stintson Press, 2001.

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Sketches of Tennessee's pioneer Baptist preachers: Being, incidentally, a history of Baptist beginnings in the several associations in the state ... Johnson City, Tenn: Overmountain Press, 1985.

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Tennessee partners: The University of Tennessee and its alumni organization. Knoxville: University of Tennessee, National Alumni Association, 1986.

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Craigmiles, Joe E. Primitive Baptist association minutes of the United States: A project of Trace Preservation Society, Inc. Thomasville, Ga: Thomas College, 1993.

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Army of Tennessee, Louisiana Division: The Association and tumulus. Lafayette, La: Center for Louisiana Studies, University of Southwestern Louisiana, 1999.

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Book chapters on the topic "Tennessee Association of Baptists"

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Brown, Jeannette E. "Chemists Who Work in Industry." In African American Women Chemists in the Modern Era. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190615178.003.0006.

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Dr. Dorothy J. Phillips (Fig. 2.1) is a retired industrial chemist and a member of the Board of Directors of the ACS. Dorothy Jean Wingfield was born in Nashville, Tennessee on July 27, 1945, the third of eight children, five girls and three boys. She was the second girl and is very close to her older sister. Dorothy grew up in a multi- generational home as both her grandmothers often lived with them. Her father, Reverend Robert Cam Wingfield Sr., born in 1905, was a porter at the Greyhound Bus station and went to school in the evenings after he was called to the ministry. He was very active in his church as the superintendent of the Sunday school; he became a pastor after receiving an associate’s degree in theology and pastoral studies from the American Baptist Theological Seminary. Her mother, Rebecca Cooper Wingfield, occasionally did domestic work. On these occasions, Dorothy’s maternal grandmother would take care of the children. Dorothy’s mother was also very active in civic and school activities, attending the local meetings and conferences of the segregated Parent Teachers Association (PTA) called the Negro Parent Teachers Association or Colored PTA. For that reason, she was frequently at the schools to talk with her children’s teachers. She also worked on a social issue with the city to move people out of the dilapidated slum housing near the Capitol. The town built government subsidized housing to relocate people from homes which did not have indoor toilets and electricity. She was also active in her Baptist church as a Mother, or Deaconess, counseling young women, especially about her role as the minister’s wife. When Dorothy went to school in 1951, Nashville schools were segregated and African American children went to the schools in their neighborhoods. But Dorothy’s elementary, junior high, and high schools were segregated even though the family lived in a predominately white neighborhood. This was because around 1956, and after Rosa Park’s bus boycott in Montgomery, AL, her father, like other ministers, became more active in civil rights and one of his actions was to move to a predominately white neighborhood.
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Smith, Eric C. "“The humble Baptists”." In Oliver Hart and the Rise of Baptist America, 11–32. Oxford University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780197506325.003.0002.

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In the late seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries, Baptists in middle colonies like Pennsylvania competed against a staggering variety of religious denominations and sects. Essential for establishing and maintaining their denomination in this context was the founding of the Philadelphia Baptist Association in 1707, the first Baptist institutional structure in America. In addition to tracing his family lineage, this chapter explores the early influences of the Philadelphia Baptist Association on Oliver Hart, along with the Baptist rituals and doctrines he absorbed in the Pennepek Baptist Church. Hart’s exposure to Quaker and Keithian antislavery sentiments in Pennsylvania is also considered.
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"From Opposition to Sect: Joshua Lawrence and the Kehukee Association." In The Making of the Primitive Baptists, 91–110. Routledge, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780203328170-9.

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Smith, Eric C. "“All things are become new”." In Oliver Hart and the Rise of Baptist America, 55–79. Oxford University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780197506325.003.0004.

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The Particular Baptists of the Philadelphia Association benefited tremendously from the revivals of the Great Awakening, but at the same time felt their distinctively Baptist identity threatened by the interdenominational nature of the movement, its de-emphasis on local church accountability, and its loosening of restrictions on who could speak on behalf of God. This chapter explores how Hart and the Philadelphia Association navigated these tensions in the 1740s, and how in that context Hart experienced a “regular call” to ministry. In 1749 Hart agreed to relocate to Charleston, South Carolina, where the Baptists of the South were few, weak, and divided; he would spend the next thirty years transferring a combination of Philadelphia Association church order and Great Awakening revivalism to the Baptists of the South.
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Smith, Eric C. "“Promoting so laudable a Design”." In Oliver Hart and the Rise of Baptist America, 172–98. Oxford University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780197506325.003.0009.

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The 1760s were a decade of significant institutional development for America’s Baptists, and Oliver Hart was a key figure in that advance. In the South, Hart led the Charleston Association to adopt the Charleston Confession as its doctrinal statement, setting a course for traditional Calvinism among white Southern Baptists for the next one hundred years or more. He also shaped the church government practices of Baptist churches, coauthoring the Summary of Church Discipline, which outlined the rigorous church order Baptists would become known for well into the nineteenth century. This chapter provides vivid examples of how this congregational government worked itself out in specific Baptist churches of the period. Beyond the South, Hart enthusiastically supported the Philadelphia Association project of founding Rhode Island College (later Brown University), an important signal that Baptists as a whole were becoming respectable in colonial American society. Finally, Hart’s frequent preaching excursions into the Carolina backcountry brought him into contact with the exploding Separate Baptist movement. Though they were far less sophisticated than his Charleston social circles, Hart found much to appreciate in the Separate Baptists and sought opportunities to unite them with his own Regular Baptist tribe.
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Smith, Eric C. "“A regular Confederation”." In Oliver Hart and the Rise of Baptist America, 105–24. Oxford University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780197506325.003.0006.

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The eighteenth century was an era of religious institution-building, and no figure was more important for the birth of Baptist denominationalism in the South than Oliver Hart. In 1751 Hart drew together the Particular Baptist churches of South Carolina to form the Charleston Association, the second Baptist association in America. Successfully transplanting ideas and models he had witnessed in the Philadelphia Association, Hart led the South’s Baptists to form a minister’s education fund, send missionaries to the western frontier, and formalize the doctrines and church practices that would define the Baptist South for the next 150 years.
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Rogoff, Leonard. "Breathing the Same Air." In Gertrude Weil. University of North Carolina Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5149/northcarolina/9781469630793.003.0006.

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Weil pushed a reluctant Federation of Women's Clubs to adopt a suffrage resolution. In 1914 she served as president of the Goldsboro Equal Suffrage League and five years later was elected president of the Equal Suffrage Association of North Carolina. Either North Carolina Tennessee would need to ratify the Nineteenth Amendment for women to achieve the vote, but North Carolina's political climate was conservative. Carrie Chapman Catt, president of the National American Woman Suffrage Association, appointed Weil as state field commander. The legislature repeatedly voted down granting women the franchise or legal rights, and anti-suffragists campaigned that women's suffrage was immoral and would overturn white supremacy. Although the governor reluctantly endorsed women's suffrage, the state legislature tabled the motion, and Tennessee became the ultimate ratifying state.
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Smith, Eric C. "“Seals of my ministry”." In Oliver Hart and the Rise of Baptist America, 149–71. Oxford University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780197506325.003.0008.

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Before Oliver Hart’s arrival in Charleston, the Southern colonies had produced none of their own indigenous ministers, having always looked to the Northern colonies or to Great Britain to supply their pulpits. One of Hart’s most significant contributions was to address this need. He personally trained in his home many young Baptist men called to gospel ministry and led the Charleston Association to found the minister’s education fund, the first cooperative education effort by Baptists in America. Hart actively recruited young ministers from other regions to fill the empty pulpits of the South and counseled other novice pastors on a variety of issues in his extensive correspondence. This chapter uncovers the greatest crisis of Hart’s pastoral career, the near-usurpation of the Charleston Baptist pulpit by one of his own trainees, Nicholas Bedgegood. It also recounts the story of the conversion and ministerial call of one of Hart’s most significant protégés, Edmund Botsford.
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Ewing, Adam. "The Tide of Preparation." In The Age of Garvey. Princeton University Press, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.23943/princeton/9780691157795.003.0006.

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This chapter shows how, during a period of limited political opportunities, in which African American activism was fraught with danger, Garveyites had built a massive political movement committed to modest aims at home, but premised on the notion that members were involved, in the words of a Garveyite from Tennessee, in a “world movement…which is now felt throbbing in every corner of the globe.” Here, the Universal Negro Improvement Association (UNIA) takes center stage, Garveyites continued to nurture alliances across the African diaspora and throughout the “colored” world, and they continued to imagine their often mundane local politics against the backdrop of world anticolonialism. By framing their political aims internationally, and by projecting their radical demands for African liberation forward into an undefined future, Garveyites sustained vibrant local communities of political activism amidst the decline of the national UNIA and the constraints of Jim Crow America.
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Buckley, Eve E. "Modernizing a Region." In Technocrats and the Politics of Drought and Development in Twentieth-Century Brazil. University of North Carolina Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5149/northcarolina/9781469634302.003.0007.

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This chapter examines the rise of economists as regional development experts with the establishment of new federal institutions in the 1950s, including the Banco do Nordeste do Brasil regional development bank and the Superintendência de Desenvolvimento do Nordeste (SUDENE), the latter modelled on the U.S. Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA). Economic expertise essentially displaced civil engineering for a brief period, in the face of continuing drought crises and DNOCS’s apparent inability to resolve them. The leading figure in the events that unfold is economist Celso Furtado, who led several analyses of the northeast’s development challenges at the request of President Juscelino Kubitschek and became SUDENE’s first director. As a result of rising political tensions in the early 1960s and the association of Furtado and SUDENE’s efforts with land expropriation (a measure promoted by more revolutionary groups like the “Peasant Leagues” of landless farm workers), elite and middle class sectors in Brazil supported a military coup in 1964 to overthrow President João Goulart, which undid much of the progress that Furtado and others had been working toward.
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Conference papers on the topic "Tennessee Association of Baptists"

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Consonni, Stefano, Eric D. Larson, and Ryan Katofsky. "An Assessment of Black Liquor Gasification Combined Cycles: Part A — Technological Issues and Performance Comparisons." In ASME Turbo Expo 2004: Power for Land, Sea, and Air. ASMEDC, 2004. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/gt2004-53179.

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Black liquor gasification (BLG) technologies are under active commercial development in the United States and Europe. BLG has been proposed as a future replacement for Tomlinson boilers to provide more efficient, safer, environmentally-friendlier, and more cost-competitive chemical and energy recovery at kraft pulp and paper mills. Also, some pulping process improvements are more readily implemented with BLG than with black liquor combustion. This is Part A of a two-part paper summarizing results of a large study supported by the US Department of Energy, the American Forest and Paper Association, the Southern Company, and the Tennessee Valley Authority to assess performances, emissions, costs and overall benefits of black liquor gasification combined cycle (BLGCC) technology for the U.S. kraft pulp and paper industry. Part A discusses the status of leading black liquor gasification technologies and presents detailed mass and energy balances for BLGCC integrated with a pulp and paper mill producing 1725 metric tons per day of uncoated freesheet paper. The corresponding nominal flow of black liquor solids is 6 million 1bs/day (or 438 MW of contained energy). Mass and energy balances are also presented at a comparable level of detail for state-of-the-art and advanced Tomlinson systems. Tomlinson performances are compared with that for three BLGCC configurations: (i) low-temperature, indirectly-heated gasifier coupled with a medium-power output heavy-duty gas turbine; (ii) high-temperature, oxygen-blown gasifier coupled with a medium-power output gas turbine; (iii) same high-temperature gasifier coupled with a utility-scale gas turbine, where the extra fuel input required to fully load the gas turbine is supplied by natural gas. With state-of-the-art Tomlinson technology, the integrated mill must import approximately 36 MW from the electric grid, which can be reduced to 11.5 MW with an advanced Tomlinson design. Medium-scale BLGCC allows export of 15–20 MW to the grid. This increases to 125 MW when the gasifier is coupled to the utility-scale gas turbine. The superior thermodynamic features of BLGCC are evidenced by the high ratio (0.5–0.9) of extra electricity generated by the BLGCC to extra fossil fuel purchased (higher heating value basis).
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