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Record #:
14678
Author(s):
Abstract:
John Wesley Jenkins was a Methodist Minister traveling the circuit during the late 1800s. As a devout Methodist, Jenkins envisioned an orphanage dedicated solely to aiding and housing children and widows of the Methodist faith. To realize his vision, Jenkins wrote letters to The Christian Advocate and The North Carolina Christian Advocate and finally, after appearing before a Methodist conference, convinced enough fellow church members to fund the project. The facility, called The Methodist Home was approved to by state legislature March 6, 1899 to be built in Raleigh. It opened November 29, 1900 and the first child admitted, Cassie Bright, on January 7, 1901.
Source:
The State (NoCar F 251 S77), Vol. 14 Issue 43, Mar 1947, p11
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Record #:
19436
Author(s):
Abstract:
Rev. Albert S. Barnes, of Wayne County, is the dean of orphanage superintendents in the state. He became the chief executive of the Methodist Orphanage in Raleigh in 1915, and he has served without interruption for twenty-nine years. There are currently 300 children in the orphanage, and during his tenure he has been known as \"Daddy Barnes\" to over 8,000. Madison examines Barnes' style which has made him so successful as a superintendent.
Source:
The State (NoCar F 251 S77), Vol. 11 Issue 49, May 1944, p4-5, il, por
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