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BIOGRAPHIES
These biographies appear strictly in the order the names first appear in the text of the book. Where a fuller report is published elsewhere, a summary only is given together with a reference to
the other material.
NAME PAGE
Dr. John E. Esslemont 9 Edward T. Hall 9 Mrs. Thornburgh-Cropper 9 George P. Simpson 9 Miss Ethel J. Rosenberg I I Dié’u’llah Asgharzadih 24 Lady Blomfie—ld 30 Rev. George Townshend 5 5 Mrs. Isobel Slade 6 I Mrs. Louise Ginman 6 3 Miss Florence Pinchon 72 Mrs. Claudia Coles 8 8 Sister Grace Challis 88 David Hofman I 08 Mrs. Lilian Stevens I 16
Miss Evelyn Baxter 1 1 7
Hasan M. Balyuzi I 22
Frank Hurst I 26
Mrs. Mary Basil-Hall 1 27 Albert and Jeff Joseph I 46
Dr. R. St. Barbe Baker I 6 3 Miss Jessica Young 1 72
Lady Kathleen Hornell 172 Mrs. Ursula Samandari I 72
Mrs. Marion Hofman I79
Miss Una Townshend I 8 I
Joseph Lee I 8 1 Mrs. Dorothy Ferraby I 84
Philip Hainsworth I 87
Walter Wilkins I 9 1
Mrs. Alma C. Gregory 1 9 1
Robert Cheek 191
Mrs. Joan Giddings I 94
Hugh and Violet McKinley 1 94
Dr. Lutfullah Ḥakím 195
Fred Stahler 202
Mrs. Prudence George 202
NAME
John L. Marshall
Mrs. M. Olga K. Mills Alfred and Lucy Sugar Charles N. Dunning
Miss Claire Gung
Mrs. Lizzie F. Hainsworth Miss Margaret Sullivan Cyril and Margaret
Jenkerson
Richard H. Backwell Miss Ada Williams
Mrs. Constance Langdon Davies
George K. Marshall
Mrs. Marguerite Preston Bernard Leach, CH, OBE Samuel Scott
John Ferraby
Mrs. Florence “Mother”
George
Musa Banani
‘Ali Nakhjavani
Hassan and Isobel Sabri Arthur Norton
Eric Manton
Dr. ‘Abbas and Shomais
Afnan
Edmund Cardell
Dr. John G. Mitchell Miss Irene Bennett
Miss Dorothy Wigington Ernest W. Gregory
Dr. Ernest S. Miller
Ian Semple
Miss Jean Campbell
John Craven
PAGE 210 210 210 211 211 211 211
217 218 222
224 228 231 239 240 250
256 257 257 266 267 273
278 281 307 321 362 381 395 411 414 416
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BIOGRAPHIES 467
DR. JOHN E. ESSLEMONT
Hand of the Cause of God page 9 Born in I 874 and accepted the Faith in early I 9 I 5 , Dr. Esslemont was elevated to the rank of Hand of the Cause of God after his passing on 22 November 1925 and linked by the Guardian with GeorgeTownshend and Thomas Breakwell, on the passing of George Townshend, as “One of three luminaries shedding brilliant lustre annals Irish, English, Scottish Bahá’í communities”. He was “Vice-President” of the first National Assembly from October 1923 until November 1924. For fuller details of his life and works read “Dr. J. E. Esslemont” by Dr. Moojan Momen. (Bahá’í Publishing Trust, 1975-BI 3o.)
EDWARD THEODORE HALL pageg First heard of the Faith in 1910 in the Salford, Lancashire area and with his wife Rebecca, her brother John Charles and his wife Hester Ann Craven, made contact with Sarah Ann Ridgway, one of the earliest British Bahá’ís, and later established the second Bahá’í Group in the British Isles. In 1912 Mr. Hall and Mr. Craven went to Liverpool and met ‘Abdu’l-Bahá at the boat. Five Tablets from the Master were received. In 1922 the first Spiritual Assembly was formed in Manchester with E. T. Hall as Secretary. He also “represented” Manchester on the first National Spiritual Council in 1922, and was a member of the National Assembly until 1928. He was entrusted by Shoghi Effendi with part of his early diaries and later maintained a close correspondence with the Guardian for many years. His book, “The Bahá’í Dawn; Manchester” paints a vivid picture of the early days of the Faith in Lancashire. Through Mr. Hall’s correspondence with the Editor of the ‘John O’Groats Journal’ (Mr. R. J. G. Millar) frequent reviews and letters were published for nineteen years until the Editor’s retirement. He passed away on 5 December 1962 aged 82.
MRS. THORNBURGH-CROPPER page 9 One of the first Bahá’ís of the West and possibly the first Bahá’í resident in England. Her early Bahá’í life is described in “The Chosen Highway” and in “The Bahá’í World”, Vol. VIII, pp. 649-5 1. She was a member of the National Spiritual
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468 UNFOLDING DESTINY
Assembly for its first two years and it was in her house in Westminster that the first meeting of the “All—England Bahá’í Council” was held on 6 June 1922. She passed away on I 5 t March
1938.
GEORGE PALGRAVE SIMPSON pageg Was associated with the Administration of the Faith in the British Isles from its earliest days. Elected as Chairman of the first “Spiritual Council” and President of the “National Spiritual Assembly” in 1923. He also served as the Assistant Secretary and the Treasurer for some years. All the early letters from the Guardian were addressed to him and the file copies of his letters to the Holy Land, some to the Guardian and others to the various secretaries, as well as the Minutes in his handwriting, give us our closest insight into the conditions obtaining in the 1920’s. At one stage he felt obliged to resign from the National Assembly but was still called upon to remain as its Treasurer and attend the meetings! He served the Cause with great distinction until his death on 31 August 1934. (See letter 30 September
1934)
MISS ETHELJENNER ROSENBERG page 11 “One of the pioneers of the Bahá’í Cause in the Western World”. Having first embraced the Faith in 1899 she soon afterwards went to ‘Akká, subsequently visiting many times both ‘Akká and Haifa for months at a time, learning from and assisting the Master in translating and transcribing the Teachings. Beloved by all the members of the Holy Family, her passing in November 1930 at the age of 72 evoked a cabled tribute from Shoghi Effendi, who knew her well in England and welcomed her in Haifa after the passing of‘Abd1’1l-Baha. She was the one entrusted to bring the robe of Bahá’u’lláh to England, and was a member of the National Assembly from 1923-1927. (“Bahá’í World”, Vol. IV, p. 26 3.)
pIA’U’LLAH ASG_r;ARZAD1H,
Knight of Bahá’u’lláh page 24 Born in I 880 into a Bahá’í family which emigrated to ‘Ishqábád when he was fifteen years old, Di:i’u’llah was throughout his life an active Bahá’í. His first pilgrimage was in 1903 , his second was
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BIOGRAPHIES 469
seventeen years later, after which he settled in London, and his third was at the time of the passing of the Master when Shoghi Effendi gave him the task of making copies of the Master’s Will from the original. He was a member of the National Assembly for various periods between 1925 and 1941 and settled in jersey as a Knight of Bahá’u’lláh in 1953 at the age of 73. He passed away in jersey in April 1956. (“Bahá’í World”, Vol. XIII, p. 88 I.)
SARA,LADY BLOMF1ELD(s1'rAR1Hg;1_ANUM) page 30 For fuller details of her devoted services to the Cause it is necessary to refer to “The Chosen Highway” and “The Bahá’í World”, Vol. VIII, pp. 651-6. Born in Ireland of a fearless Protestant mother and a strong Roman Catholic father, she understood from an early age the tragedy of religious intolerance which led her to search for Truth until she found the Bahá’í Revelation. She was held in high esteem in the London society of the late “nineties” but she herself was always looking for the Promised One. She was a great friend and admirer of Basil Wilberforce, Archdeacon of Westminster. Not only did she place her home in Cadogan Gardens at the disposal of the Master during His London visits but she accompanied Him to Paris. While He was in America she went to Mount Pelerin, in Switzerland, to edit the rough notes of “Paris Talks”, had them sent to Him for correction and had the book published in time for His second visit when He signed and gave away many copies. She accompanied Shoghi Effendi when he returned to Haifa after the passing of the Master and wrote the letter which was later published as “The Passing of ‘Abdu’l-Bahá”. She was a member of the National Spiritual Assembly for eight of its first eleven years. She passed away on the last day of 1939 and a remarkably fine obituary in the magazine “The Worlds Children” of March I 940 was headed “Lady Blomfleld——Apostle of World Unity”.
GEORGE TOWNSHEND,
Hand of the Cause of God page 55 First corresponded with ‘Abdu’l-Bahá about 1918. The Master wrote to him “It is my hope that thy church will come under the heavenly Jerusalem”. For very many years he tried to bring to the clergy of the Church of Ireland and particularly the senior
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470 UNFOLDING DESTINY
ones, the realisation of Bahá’u’lláh as Christ returned in the Glory of the Father. In spite of his important books, “The Heart of the Gospel” and “The Promise of All Ages”, no one in the church responded and in 1947 the Guardian called upon him to resign from the church. He complied immediately and moved with his wife and two children to a small bungalow in Dundrum near Dublin. He was one of the founder members of the first Spiritual Assembly of the Bahá’ís of Dublin and in 1951 was elevated to the rank of Hand of the Cause. For many years he gave distinguished services to the Guardian, not least of which was the writing of the introduction to “God Passes By” and his presentation on behalf of the Guardian of his paper “Bahá’u’lláh’s Ground Plan for World Fellowship” to the inaugural meeting of the World Congress of Faiths in 1936. The pamphlet he wrote to all Christians under the title “The Old Churches and the New World Faith” was sent out to 10,000 so-called “responsible people” in the British Isles on the occasion of his resignation from the church, and his last book “Christ and Bahá’u’lláh” was described by the Guardian as “his crowning achievement”. He participated in the Inter-Continental Conference, Stockholm, Sweden in July 1953 and passed away in March 1957 at the age of 81. (“Bahá’í World”, Vol. XIII, p. 841.)
MRSISOBELSLADE page 61 It has not been possible to trace exactly when Mrs. Slade became a Bahá’í but she did tell the story of how she heard of the Faith from a visiting American believer and wished to go on pilgrimage to see the Master. Before her plans were made she heard of His passing and she went in the early 1920s. In the year 1926 there is a record of her being a “substitute” member of the National Assembly elected to “represent” the London community. From the following year the delegates elected the National Assembly from the national electorate and Mrs. Slade served as a member for fourteen of the following nineteen years. She was, in different years, Chairman, Vice—President, Secretary, Treasurer and Assistant Secretary. She was a “last ditch” pioneer to Edinburgh to form the first Assembly there in 1948. To the end of her long life she would delight her visitors with fascinating stories of her experiences in the early days of the Faith in the British Isles and she passed away in September 1972 at the age of
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BIOGRAPHIES 471
98. The Universal House of Justice cabled: “PASSING ISOBEL SLADE SEVERS ONE FEW REMAINING LINKS EARLY CAUSE BRITISH ISLES DEPRIVES COMMUNITY OUTSTANDING BELIEVER STOP HER UNFLAGGING SUPPORT CAUSE GOD MORE THAN HALF CENTURY COMPRISING MEMBERSHIP NATIONAL SPIRITUAL ASSEMBLY PIONEER VISITING TEACHER SIX YEAR PLAN CONSTANT DEVOTION DUTY HIGH MORAL STATURE RENDER HER SHINING EXAMPLE FUTURE GENERATIONS STOP EXPRESS RELATIVES FRIENDS LOVING SYMPATHY ASSURE PRAYERS SACRED THRESHOLD AMPLE REWARD PROGRESS SOUL ABHA KINGDOM.”
MRs.LOUISEGINMAN page 63 Also referred to later as “Louise Charlot”. Became a Bahá’í in Burlingame, California about I 9 IO, and came to England late in I 9 19. She served on the London Spiritual Assembly for a period; pioneered to Oxford, and then to Bristol where she died in February 1963 at the age of 92.
MISS FLORENCE E.PINCHON page 72 Little is known about Miss Pinchon’s early life but she was mentioned as being active in the Faith with Dr. Esslemont and Major Tudor Pole during the First World War (See “Bahá’í World” Vol. XIV, pp. 370-2.). “Floy” had a most lucid pen and in addition to contributing to Bahá’í and non—Bahá’í magazines, wrote “The Coming of the Glory”, and “Life after Death”. She travelled as a Bahá’í teacher before the Second World War but suffered from indifferent health for many years before her death in Bournemouth in March 1966.
MISS CLAUDIA STUART COLES page 88 Having accepted the Bahá’í teachings in Washington, D.C. was one of its most loyal and enthusiastic adherents. Moved to London, England in 1920 and was for eleven years a member of the community, serving for a period as secretary of the National
Assembly. She died in London on 25 May 1931. (“Bahai World”, Vol. IV, pp. 26 3——4.)
SISTER GRACE CHALLIS page 88 Sister Challis was a Quaker when she heard of the Faith from Dr. Esslemont and she accepted it at the gathering of the
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472 UNFOLDING DESTINY
Bournemouth Bahá’ís called to hear of the passing of the Master. Always an active teacher of the Faith, she also served on the National Assembly for fifteen of its first eighteen years, mainly as its Chairman. She passed away in Bournemouth in October
1948.
DAVID HOFMAN page 108 A member of the Universal House of Justice since its formation in 1963, he became a Bahá’í in the Maxwell home in Montreal in 1933, when he began corresponding with the Guardian. Returning to England in 1936, he was elected to the British National Spiritual Assembly and was the Secretary during some of its most crucial years. He was the first Manager of its Publishing Trust and played a vital role on the National Teaching and Africa Committees of the Six and Two Year Plans. He served almost continuously on the National Assembly until his election to the Universal House of Justice. David and Marion Hofman pioneered during the Six Year Plan in Northampton, Birmingham and Oxford and during the Ten Year Crusade in Cardiff and Watford. Throughout his years of devoted service to the British community he was always in demand as a most accomplished speaker and convincing teacher.
MRS. LILIAN STEVENS page 116 Was a founder member of the first Torquay Spiritual Assembly in 1938; was for many years its secretary and in spite of prolonged illness remained a great servant of the Faith. She passed away on I January 1958.
MISS EVELYN BAXTER,
Knight qfBahd’u’IIéh page 1 1 7 Born around 188 3 of missionary parents, accepted the Faith in 1923 and served with absolute devotion throughout the remainder of her life. She was for many years a member of the London Spiritual Assembly and served for six years on the National Assembly. Throughout her Bahá’í life she corresponded frequently with the Guardian and responded to his overseas pioneer call when she became a Knight of Bahá’u’lláh for the Channel Isles in September 1953. She had already pioneered in the Six Year Plan to Birmingham, Nottingham, Hove, Oxford
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BIOGRAPHIES 473
and Cardiff. She died on 21 August 1969 and the Universal House of Justice cabled: “DEEPLY GRIEVED PASSING KNIGHT OF Bahá’u’lláh EVELYN BAXTER. AMONG FIRST PIONEERS SIX YEAR PLAN HER LONG FAITHFUL SERVICE BRITISH Bahá’í COMMUNITY PROVIDES EXAMPLE DEVOTION PORTITUDE”.
(“Bahffi World”, Vol. XV, pp. 4 5 6-7)
HASAN M. BALYUZI,
Hand qf the Cause qf God page 1 22
He was first elected to the National Spiritual Assembly of the Bahá’ís of the British Isles in 1933 and served continuously until 1960, when he retired in order to devote his whole time to the work of the Hands of the Cause. He served at the World Centre, and travelled to South America and throughout Canada in I 96 I. Mr. Balyuzi was Secretary of the first Summer School Committee in 1936, on the National Teaching Committee in I 940 and Chairman of the National Assembly almost every year from 1942 until his retirement. He was elevated to the rank of Hand of the Cause in I 9 5 7, and has made invaluable contributions to the literature of the Faith with his trilogy, “Bahá’u’lláh”, ‘“Abdu’l-Bahá” and “The Báb”; his “Edward Granville Browne and the Bahá’í Faith”, his pamphlet on “Bahá’í Administration”, and “Muhammad and the Course of Islam”. (See page 4 90)
FRANK HURST page 126 An early worker in the Trade Union Movement in Britain, Frank was an outspoken sympathiser of the Faith for over twenty years before actually accepting it in Bradford in 1939. He died in Leeds in 1949.
MRS MARY BASIL-HALL(PARv1NE) page 127 Daughter of Lady Blomfield, she was active in the Faith from her youth, particularly during the visit to Britain of the Master Whom she served with such devotion, and Who bestowed upon her the name “Parvine” on His first visit in 19 I I. She served for five years on the National Spiritual Assembly and for a short time on the National Teaching Committee of the Six Year Plan. At her passing the National Assembly cabled the Guardian, “PARVINE GLORIED IN SUCCESS PLAN PASSED TO ABHA KINGDOM MORNING 28TH” (April 1950).
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ALBERT ANDJEFFJOSEPH page 146 Associated with the Faith from the very beginnings of the Administration in the British Isles, the Joseph brothers gave long and outstanding service to the Cause. Jacob (later “Jeff ”) was Chairman and Albert (then Ibrahim) a member of the first “Spiritual Council” of the Bahá’ís of Manchester. Jacob was a member of the first “All—England Bahá’í Council” in I 922 and of the first National Spiritual Assembly in 1923. Both were mentioned in and received some Tablets from the Master and both were warmly regarded by the Guardian for their services to the Faith. Jeff died in August 1969 in Manchester and Albert in August 1978.
RICHARD ST. BARBE BAKER, O.B.E., LL.D.,
FOR.D.I.P. (CAMBRIDGE) page 163 On his return from Kenya in 1924 where he had served as Assistant Conservator of Forests since 1920, R. St. Barbe Baker was asked to speak on the faiths of the Kikuyu under the title: “Some African Beliefs” at the ‘Conference of Living Religions within the Empire’, and was approached afterwards by Claudia Stewart-Coles who exclaimed “You are a Bahá’í”. He subsequently accepted the Faith and has introduced it to many thousands of people in all walks of life in many lands, for more than half a century. The Guardian became the first Life Member of the Men of the Trees in Palestine in 1929. Later, for twelve consecutive years, he sent an official message to St. Barbe’s World Forestry Charter Gatherings attended by Ambassadors from up to sixty-two countries each year. St. Barbe took an active part on the Committee celebrating the Centenary of the Declaration of the Báb in 1944. After his first Sahara University Expedition carrying out an ecological survey of 9,000 miles in 1953, and in response to the Guardian’s desire, St. Barbe attended the First African Conference in Kampala. In 1975 St. Barbe was called upon to advise on tree planting of the site of the Tihran House of Worship in consultation with Quinlan Terry, architect. Afterwards, in collaboration with architect Hossein Amanat, he recorded his observations for the Universal House of Justice for the landscaping of their site on Mt. Carmel and for tree-scaping at Bahjí. St. Barbe attended the Intercontinental Conference Nairobi, in October 1976 and still (1979) at almost 90 is
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BIOGRAPHIES 475
introducing or teaching the Faith in many lands and would be content to “lay down his bones in service to the Faith” in his beloved Africa.
MISSJESSICA YOUNG page 172 Historically was the first British pioneer to arise when she went for a short time to Bristol.
KATHLEEN BROWN (LADY HORNELL) page 172 Was elected to the National Assembly in 1936 and served until 1945. She pioneered to Nottingham in 1946 where she later married Sir William Hornell. Her next pioneer post was in Belfast in I 9 5 2, then to Venice (1 960-1 96 5) and later to Sardinia (1 965-1968). She returned to London to live at the home of her son-in-law, Hand of the Cause, H. M. Balyuzi. She passed away in September 1977 and the Universal House of Justice cabled: “PASSING LADY HORNELL ROBS BRITISH COMMUNITY ONE OF FEW REMAINING LINKS EARLY DAYS FAITH. HER UNWAVERING FAITH CONSTANT DEDICATED SERVICES PIONEER TEACHING ADMINISTRATIVE FIELDS OVER SO MANY YEARS ASSURE HER HIGH STATION ANNALS CAUSE PROVIDE SHINING EXAMPLE PRESENT FUTURE GENERATIONS. ADVISE HOLD BEFITTING MEMORIAL MEETING. ASSURE ARDENT PRAYERS SACRED THRESHOLD PROGRESS HER LOVING SOUL ABHA KINGDOM.”
URSULA SAMANDARI (née NEWMAN),
Knight of Bahá’u’lláh page 1 72 First served on the British National Assembly in 1945 and pioneered to St. Ives in the same year. Ursula became pioneer member of the first Dublin Assembly in 1948 and pioneered again, a year later, to Belfast. In Belfast she became member of the first Local Assembly and worked with pioneer Dr. Mehdi Samandari, whom she married. They subsequently pioneered to Nairobi in 1953 and later to Somalia, where she was a Knight of Bahá’u’lláh and became a member of the first Spiritual Assembly of Mogadiscio, on which she served from 1954 until 1971. In addition to these experiences, she served on the National Assembly for North East Africa (1961-1970) and on the National Assembly of Cameroon since 1972, where she still
serves (1979).
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476 UNFOLDING DESTINY
MRS MARION HOPMAN page 179 Came to Britain in 1945 to be married to David Hofman, after having served the Faith in America with great distinction as a teacher, writer and administrator. With her husband she pioneered during the Six Year Plan in Northampton, Birmingham and Oxford, and during the Ten Year Crusade in Cardiff and Watford. She served on the National Spiritual Assembly and National Teaching Committee and as an Auxiliary Board member. Since David’s election to the Universal House of Justice, Marion was solely responsible for the family publishing business of George Ronald.
MISS UNA TOWNSHEND
Knight of Bahá’u’lláh page 181 Was the first of Hand of the Cause George Townshend’s family to embrace the Faith which her father had espoused many years previously. She was an active Bahá’í youth and on I 6 September 1946 became the first pioneer in Ireland where she opened the ‘pivotal centre’ of Dublin and was on its first Spiritual Assembly in 1948. She pioneered to Malta and was the first Knight of
Bahá’u’lláh in that island in October 1953.
JOSEPH LEE page 181 Accepted the Faith in Manchester in 1932 and was active on committees and in the teaching work for over thirty years. He served on the National Spiritual Assembly from 1933 to 1940 and pioneered to Brighton, Torquay and Exeter, sacrificing material prosperity over many years in the interests of teaching and pioneering. He passed away in May 1966 at the age of 5 5 years. '
MRS DOROTHY FERRABY (née Cansdale) page 184 Became a Bahá’í and was active in the London Youth group in the early I93o’s. She was elected to the National Spiritual Assembly in 1941 and served continuously as either Secretary, Treasurer or Recording Secretary for the next twenty years. She retired when her husband, Hand of the Cause John Ferraby, left to serve at the World Centre. That the small and scattered
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British Bahá’í community was held together in the I94o’s is generally recognised to have been due to the dedicated work of Dorothy as Secretary of the National Assembly working indefatigably in war—torn London. She became an Auxiliary Board Member in 1954 and was appointed to the European Board of Counsellors in 1968.
PHILIP HAINSWORTH page 187 Accepted the Faith in Bradford in 1938, and at the outbreak of War was the first British believer to register as a Bahá’í in the Armed Forces. He had to appeal in Court when seeking exemption from being involved in the taking of life and, being released from combatant service, was drafted into the Royal Army Medical Corps. Prior to his release from military service in 1946, he spent five weeks in Haifa and in the same year pioneered to Nottingham. He was appointed Chairman of the National Youth Committee and Secretary of the National Teaching Committee and was elected to the National Assembly in 1947. He subsequently pioneered to Oxford and Blackburn. In June 195 I he was one of the party of five pioneers who first went to Dar-es-Salaam and then on to Kampala, Uganda, where he became Secretary of the first local Spiritual Assembly in 1952 and of the Regional National Assembly in Central and East Africa in 1956. He returned to pioneer in the Leeds area in 1966, was elected to the National Assembly in 1967 and is still (1979) a member.
WALTER WILKINS page 191 Born in I 88 3 Walter embraced the Faith when he was about 40 years old. He was a keen Esperantist through which he learned of the Faith. He served for many years on the London Spiritual Assembly and was on the National Assembly for a year in 1934. Responding to the pioneer call of the Six Year Plan he moved to Birmingham in 1946, to Blackburn in 1947, to Norwich in 1948, and in 1961 at the age of 78 he pioneered to Canterbury. At the age of 82 he took a small flat in an old people’s home where for the first time in his life he was able to entertain the friends and hold Feasts and even an assembly meeting. He passed away after an accident on 19 March 1973.
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MRS ALMA CYNTHIA GREGORY page 191 Although she remembers her mother, Louise Ginman, going from town to town in the United States trying to find the Master, but reaching the place shortly after He had left, and speaks with feeling of personal involvement as a Bahá’í youth, of many early meetings in London at the homes of Lady Blomfield, Claudia Coles, Ethel Rosenberg, “Mother” George and many others of that day, she did not formally register as a Bahá’í in the British Isles until 1942. She pioneered to Northampton in August 1946 and helped to form its first Assembly, leaving for Liverpool in 1949 for the same purpose. She subsequently pioneered to Bristol, Exeter and Stornoway; was the Secretary of the National Youth Committee when it launched its “Bahá’í Youth Bulletin” from 1946 to 1948; was Secretary of the Assembly Development Committee for some years and was a member of the National Assembly for seven years between I 948 and 1956.
ROBERT CHEEK page 191 Became a Bahá’í in London on Naw-Rúz 1945, pioneered to Bournemouth in September 1946, to Bristol in 1947 to help form the first Assembly there, and to Norwich in 1948 where he has lived since except for a short special pioneer project in Blackburn in 1950-1.
MRSJOANGIDDINGS (néeBRowN13) page 194 Accepted the Faith in Bradford in 1938. She pioneered first to Cardiff and later to York and Canterbury, and was active on Assemblies and on National Committees throughout her Bahá’í life. She passed away in Canterbury in 1978. (See also note about developments in Bradford under “Cyril and Margaret _]enkerson”.)
HUGH AND VIOLET MCKINLEY page 194 Hugh McKinley and his mother, Violet McKinley, pioneered from Torquay to Cardiff in 1947, serving on the first local Spiritual Assembly when formed there in 1948. Together they pioneered to Nicosia, Cyprus in 1953, moving to Famagusta in 1958. Violet passed away there in August 1959. In 1966 Hugh pioneered to Syros in the Cyclades Islands (Greece) and returned
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to the United Kingdom in October 1977. (“Bahá’í World”, Vol. XVI, p. 5 I 2.)
DR.LUTI=U’LLAHHAKiM page 195
Was born into a family of distinguished Jewish medical doctors in I 888. His grandfather was the first Jew to embrace the Cause and Bahá’u’lláh revealed a Tablet in his honour. Luṭfu’lláh came
to study physiotherapy in England in 1910 and he was in constant attendance on the Master during His visit in 1911. He went to serve in the Holy Land and returned to England in I 920 when he accompanied Shoghi Effendi. He later served with distinction in Persia and returned, at the request of the Guardian, to Britain in October 1948, where he taught and travelled extensively until called to Haifa by the Guardian on 14 November 1950. He was appointed to the first International Bahá’í Council. He was elected to the first Universal House of Justice in 1963 but because of failing health and advanced age regretfully his resignation was accepted in October 1967 though he consented to serve until the 1968 election. He passed away in August 1968 and the House cabled the Bahá’í world: “GRIEVE ANNOUNCE PASSING LUTI=U’LLAH I_IAI<iM DEDICATED SERVANT CAUSE GOD. SPECIAL MISSIONS ENTRUSTED HIM, PULL CONFIDENCE REPOSED IN HIM BY MASTER AND GUARDIAN, HIS CLOSE ASSOCIATION
WITH EARLY DISTINGUISHED BELIEVERS EAST WEST INCLUDING HIS COLLABORATION ESSLEMONT, HIS SERVICES PERSIA BRITISH ISLBS HOLY LAND, HIS MEMBERSHIP APPOINTED AND ELECTED INTERNATIONAL Bahá’í COUNCIL, HIS ELECTION UNIVERSAL HOUSE JUSTICE WILL ALWAYS BE REMEMBERED IMMORTAL ANNALS FAITH Bahá’u’lláh.” (“Bahá’í World”, Vol. XV, pp. 4 30-4.)
FRED STAHLER page 202 Arose to pioneer Shortly after accepting the Faith in Manchester in I 947. He pioneered first to Cardiff, then to Bristol, moved for varying periods to seven other cities and finally settled in Derby in I 96 5 .
MRS. PRUDENCE GEORGE page 202 Born in England in 1896 she moved to Canada in 1928 where She accepted the Faith in 1941. She first pioneered from St. Lambert to Moncton and then from Canada to England with
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her young daughter in 1946 to settle in Blackburn, Lancs. From there to Norwich and Bournemouth in the Six Year Plan and then to Edinburgh and Portsmouth. In 1959 she pioneered to Luxembourg and then in the Nine Year Plan, to Guernsey, to Chelmsford, Essex and again overseas to the Canary Islands. In 1969 she returned to England to pioneer in Hereford and St. Austell and then back again to the Canaries where she was on the first Spiritual Assembly of Arucas. For over thirty years she served the Cause with utter consecration; carrying out at least sixteen pioneer projects in three continents. She passed away in Birmingham, England on 12. July 1974. (“Bahá’í World”, Vol.
XVI, p- 534.)
JOHNLUDLOW MARSHALL page 210 “Johnny” was a Scot, born in I 876, went to work as a tinsmith at the age of eleven and later, after marriage, settled in Birmingham to pursue his trade. He was confirmed in the Faith by the Master, Whom he met in 191 I and 1913, when he was, for many years, the only Bahá’í in Birmingham. Johnny kept excellent records of visits and lectures by some of the early visitors to Birmingham, including Martha Root, Dr. Esslemont, Mountford Mills and Helen Bishop. At the age of 71 he retired from work and pioneered to Edinburgh where he died as a result of an accident in January 1948, only three months before the first Spiritual Assembly was formed there.
MARY OLGA KATHERINE MILLS,
Knight qfBahá’u’IIéh page 2 1 0 Born in Germany in 1882 with a German father and English mother she grew up with an insatiable love for travel. In the United States she married an Englishman. It is not certain when she accepted the Faith but she was on pilgrimage in 1930 and stayed for a month as companion to Eflie Baker. She was later a great help to the friends in Berlin and Leipzig and gave much support to Adam Benke who pioneered to Sofia. After suffering many privations during the war in Germany she wrote to the Guardian in 1947 and he encouraged her suggestion to pioneer to England. She arrived in early 1948 and settled in her first pioneer post in Nottingham. Within nine months she was again on the move in response to pioneer calls. Belfast, Edinburgh, St.
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Ives, Brighton, and Bournemouth, making six moves in just over two years by a lady in her late sixties. In I 9 5 3 she responded immediately and was enrolled as a Knight of Bahá’u’lláh for Malta where, after numerous vicissitudes and a small but painful accident which affected her for many months, she was able, some twenty years later, to witness the formation of the first Spiritual Assembly in Malta. She passed away, after twenty—seven years of dedicated pioneering which covered four territories, in May 1974, when the Universal House of justice cabled: “PASSING NOBLE SOUL OLGA MILLS GRIEVOUS LOSS BRITISH Bahá’í COMMUNITY. HER LONG STEADFAST DEVOTION Bahá’u’lláh SHEDS LUSTRE ANNALS FAITH THAT COMMUNITY. ISLAND MALTA HISTORICALLY FAMOUS CLASSICAL CHRISTIAN ISLAMIC ERAS RECIPIENT NEW SPIRITUAL POTENTIALITIES THROUGH HEROIC SERVICE KNIGHT Bahá’u’lláh DEDICATED BAND PIONEERS. EXPRESS FRIENDS RELA _TIVES LOVING SYMPATHY ASSURE ARDENT PRAYERS PROGRESS SOUL.”
(“Bahá’í World”, Vol. XVI, p. 5 3 I
ALFRED AND EDITH LUCY SUGAR page 210 After hearing of the Faith from her brother, E. T. Hall, Lucy Sugar accepted the Faith on 28 November 192 I , but Alfred remained agnostic until about 1925. He became well known for his depth of knowledge of the Faith and for his cogent argument. He was a teacher of the highest order and was largely responsible for the development of the Faith around Lancashire and over the Pennines into Bradford and Leeds. Lucy was a member of the National Assembly in 1929 and Alfred was a member during eight of the following thirteen years.
Alfred died in December I 96 I at the age of 92 (or 9 3) and was followed in March 1966 by Lucy aged 90.
CHARLES WILLIAM DUNNING,
Knight of Bahá’u’lláh page 2 1 1 Born in or near Leeds, March I 88 5. Met and embraced the Faith in I 948 and within a fortnight offered to pioneer to Belfast. After serious illness and a period of recuperation in Cardiff, he Served in Sheffield until 1953. “Charlie” answered the Guardian’s call to settle in unopened territories in the Ten Year Crusade and he arrived in Kirkwall, Orkney in September 1953, opening the way, “essentially . . . alone” for the founding ofKirkwall Spiritual
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Assembly. After four years, broken by ill health and persecution, he was, for his own safety, sent back to Cardiff. After a bad fall in 1967 from which he never fully recovered, he passed away
quietly in his sleep on Christmas Day, 1967 in Cardiff. (“Baha 1 World”, Vol. XIV, pp. 305-8.)
MISS CLAIRE GUNG page 211 Born in Germany, became a Bahá’í in Torquay and later joined the small Bahá’í group in Cheltenham in 1940. She moved to Manchester and later pioneered to Northampton in November 1946 to become member of the first Spiritual Assembly there. In 1948 she again pioneered to help form the first Spiritual Assembly in the “Pivotal Centre” of Cardiff. In 1950, during the “Year of Respite”, Claire became the first pioneer actually to move from the British community to settle in Africa. Hailed by the Guardian as the “Mother of Africa” she worked for some years in Tanganyika and then moved to Uganda where she established a multi-racial kindergarten; she is still at her pioneer post at the time of writing (1979).
MRS.LIZZIE FOWLER HAINSWORTH page 211 Became a Bahá’í in Bradford in 1946 after replying to her younger son Philip that she had not become a Bahá’í during his absence in the Armed Forces because “Nobody had asked me to”. She pioneered to Nottingham in 1946, to Oxford in 1949 and, at the age of 72, was the first believer in the British Isles to offer to pioneer in the Two Year Plan to Africa. (Convention 1950.) She died in Bradford in September 19 5 I before she could join her son Philip "in Uganda. The Guardian wrote of her through his secretary, “She has truly shown an exemplary Bahá’í spirit in every way. . . . He wishes more of the Bahá’ís would arise to such heights of devotion and sacrifice.”
MISS MARGARET SULLIVAN (later MRS. MARGARET NELSON) page 211 Pioneered to Dublin and was on the first Local Assembly there in I 948. She was Caretaker of the National Ḥaẓíratu’l-Quds, London from December 1970 to August 1976, and then became a founder member of the Tameside Assembly, Lancashire.
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CYRIL AND MARGARETJENKERSON page 217 Became Bahá’ís i Bradford in 1940 and pioneered to Oxford to be members of the first Assembly there in 1949. (It is of interest to note that in 1938 there were only three Spiritual Assemblies in the British Isles—in London, Manchester and Bournemouth, and a total of about eighty registered Bahá’í’iS, yet in Bradford there were, during the course of about two years, so many new registrations that the first Assembly was elected there in 1939 and by 1949 that Community had Sent out ten pioneers from its first twenty-five believers.) The Jenkersons pioneered to Cyprus in 1978 and are still there (1979).
RICHARD H.BACKWELL page 218 Became a Bahá’í in Ceylon in 1944 where he was an officer in the Royal Air Force. Returning to Britain in 1946, he pioneered in Nottingham, Newcastle, Glasgow, Edinburgh and Leeds; was a member of the National Spiritual Assembly from 1947 until January I 9 5 5 when he pioneered to British Guiana, now Guyana. He was for a time part-time manager of the Bahá’í Publishing Trust and Editor of the Bahá’í Journal. After his return from Guiana, he settled with his family in Northern Ireland in 1963 and again served on the National Assembly until 1968 when he was appointed an Auxiliary Board Member. His valuable
up
contributions to Baha 1 literature include the compilations with which he was associated—“Pattern of Bahá’í Life”, “Principles of Bahá’í Administration”, “'The Covenant of Bahá’u’lláh”, “Guidance for Today and Tomorrow”, “A Faith for Everyman”, and his unique approach to the Christians, “The Christianity of Jesus”. He passed away on 4 October 1972 at the age of 58 when the Universal House of Justice included in their cable: “GRIEP PASSING EARLY AGE RICHARD BACKWELL GREATLY ASSUAGED TERMINATION HIS SUFFERING CONTEMPLATION DISTINGUISHED RECORD SERVICE SOUTH AMERICA BRITISH ISLES SPIRITUAL RADIANCE EVENING EARTHLY LII=E . . (“Bahá’í World”, Vol. XV, pp. 525-27.)
MISS ADA WILLIAMS page 222 Pioneered to Motherwell in 1948 and then to Blackpool in 1965. She has travelled widely to teach the Faith at home and overseas, visiting Malta, South Africa and Canada where her great spirit was most inspiring; She is still travelling (1979).
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MRS CONSTANCE LANGDON-DAVIES page 224 Was one of the early believers in Torquay where she associated with Mark Tobey, Bernard Leach and other artists and writers at Dartington Hall. She accepted the Faith in December 1936 and served on the National Assembly for fifteen of the years from 1938 until her unexpected death in Oxford in December 1954. She had pioneered to help form the first Assembly there
1949 GEORGE K. MARSHALL page 228 Became a Bahá’í i 1949 although he had lived most of his life with his father, one of the early British believers, in Birmingham. (See “John L. Marshall”.) George pioneered for a short while to Belfast and then in 1950 to Glasgow where he lived for seven years, except for a short pioneering project to maintain the Assembly in Edinburgh. He died at an early age on 30 March
1958.
MRS MARGUERITE PRESTON (née Wellby) page 231 Became a Bahá’í i 1936, was a member of the National Assembly for three and a half years during the period 1939 to 1945. She married Terence Preston, a Kenya tea grower, in August 1945 and settled in Kenya where she was the only Bahá’í until the pioneers began to settle under the Two Year Plan. Her husband died unexpectedly in July 195 I leaving her with three young children and she and her eldest child were killed in an aeroplane crash when she was returning to Kenya after a short holiday in England, in February 1952.
BERNARD LEACH,C.H.,C.B.E. page 239 It was through Mark Tobey that world famous potter and author Bernard Leach became a Bahá’í in the early I 9 3o’s. He has through his works, his books, his press, radio and television interviews introduced the Faith with love, dedication and dignity to people in many spheres of society in Britain,Japan and America. He was honoured by Her Majesty the Queen and made a Companion of Honour. Even at ninety years of age, though blind, he was serving the Cause with distinction through his writings and interviews. In March 1977, he opened, with much favourable publicity, an exhibition of his works at the
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Victoria and Albert Museum London. In 1919, when Bernard was about to leave Japan, the late Soetsu Yangi, the well-known Japanese art critic and philosopher and Bernard’s friend for over fifty years, paid tribute: “When he leaves us we shall have lost the one man who knows Japan on its spiritual side . . . I consider his position in Japan, and also his mission in his own country to be pregnant with the deepest meaning. He is trying to knit the East and West together by art, and it seems likely that he will be remembered as the first to accomplish as an artist, what for so long mankind has been dreaming of bringing about. . . .”
He passed away in May 1979 and to the National Assembly the Universal House of Justice cabled:
“KINDLY EXTEND LOVING SYMPATHY RELATIVES FRIENDS PASSING DISTINGUISHED VETERAN UPHOLDER FAITH Bahá’u’lláh BERNARD LEACH. HONOURS CONFERRED UPON HIM RECOGNITION HIS WORLDWIDE FAME CRAFTSMAN POTTER PROMOTER CONCORD EAST AND WEST ADD LUSTRE ANNALS BRITISH Bahá’í HISTORY AND HIS EAGER WILLINGNESS USE HIS RENOWN FOR SERVICE FAITH EARN ETERNAL GRATITUDE FELLOW BELIEVERS. ASSURE ARDENT PRAYERS PROGRESS HIS SOUL.”
SAMUEL SCOTT page 240 Became a Bahá’í when he was 76 years old and pioneered to Norwich at the age of 84. He passed away on 3 I December 1951, at the age of86.
JOHN FERRABY,
Hand of the Cause of God. page 250 Accepted the Faith in 1941 and was elected to the National Assembly almost immediately. He was Secretary from 1946 until December 1960 when he took up duties at the World Centre. He was also for a number of years manager of the Bahá’í Publishing Trust. On his passing in September 1973 the Universal House of justice called for memorial meetings “ALL COMMUNITIES Bahá’í WORLD” and referred to his “VALUABLE CONTRIBUTION Bahá’í LITERATURE THROUGH HIS BOOK ‘ALL THINGS MADE NEW’”. (“Bahá’í World”, Vol. XVI, p. 5 1 1.)
MRS FLORENCE “MOTHER”GEORGE page 256 Always proud of the designation “Mother” given to her by ‘Abdu’l-Bahá when she was one of the early pilgrims to the Holy
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Land, it was Mother George who introduced the Faith to Dr. John Esslemont. For very many years she conducted Sunday afternoon meetings in her Chelsea home in London and she
passed away on 4 November 1950 at the age of 91. (“Bahai World”, Vol. XII, p. 697.)
MUSA BANANI,
Hand qf the Cause of God. page 2 5 7 Pioneered with his wife Samihih to Uganda in 1951 and was elevated to the rank of Hand of the Cause in February 1952. The beloved Guardian also described him as the “spiritual conqueror of Africa”. In spite of failing health he visited most African territories, served for some five years as the sole Hand of the African Continent, and finally, after many years of constant suffering, passed away at his pioneering post in Kampala, Uganda, on 4 September 1971. The Universal House of justice cabled: “PROFOUNDLY MOURN PASSING DEARLY LOVED HAND CAUSE MUSA BANANI RECALL WITH DEEP AFFECTION HIS SELFLESS UNASSUMING PROLONGED SERVICES CRADLE FAITH HIS EXEMPLARY PIONEERING UGANDA CULMINATING HIS APPOINTMENT AS HAND CAUSE AFRICA AND PRAISE BELOVED GUARDIAN AS SPIRITUAL CONQUEROR THAT CONTINENT. INTERMENT HIS REMAINS AFRICAN SOIL UNDER SHADOW MOTHER TEMPLE ENHANCES SPIRITUAL LUSTRE THAT BLESSED SPOT. FERVENTLY PRAYING SHRINES PROGRESS HIS NOBLE SOUL. MAY AFRICA NOW ROBBED STAUNCH VENERABLE PROMOTER DEFENDER FAITH FOLLOW HIS EXAMPLE CHEER HIS HEART ABHA KINGDOM. CONVEY FAMILY MOST TENDER SYMPATHIES ADVISE HOLD MEMORIAL MEETINGS ALL COMMUNITIES BAHAi WORLD BEFITTING GATHERINGS MOTHER TEMPLES”. (“Bahá’í World”, Vol. XV, pp. 421-3.)
‘ALi NA_K_HJAVANi page 257
Left Persia in early 19 5 I , after service for the Faith in youth and teaching activities and as a member of the National Assembly, to join his wife, Violette and her parents, Musa and Samihih Banani, in the British Isles, preparatory to their pioneering to Africa. His teaching activities in Africa took him to remote African villages, and, later, as assistant to Mr. Banani when he was appointed Hand of the Cause, to many countries on the African continent. Elected Chairman of the first Regional National Assembly of Central and East Africa, then as member of the first elected
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International Council and finally as member of the Universal House of justice in 1963.
HASSANANDISOBELSABRT page 266 Hassan, a young Egyptian Bahá’í studying in England in 1945 met Isobel Locke, an American pioneer to England, and they both served with distinction in the Six Year Plan, I-_-Iassan on the National Youth and National Teaching Committees and the Nottingham, Birmingham, Belfast, Liverpool, Cardiff and Bristol Spiritual Assemblies, and Isobel on the Assemblies in Edinburgh, Blackpool, Sheffield and Bristol, as well as on the National Teaching Committee. They married in 1951 and pioneered to Tanganyika and Uganda, where Hassan was on the first National Spiritual Assembly of Central and East Africa. Isobel became a Counsellor and Hassan Secretary of the Continental Pioneer Committee for Africa. They subsequently pioneered to Kenya where they still serve (1979).
ARTHUR NORTON page 267 Was the Treasurer of the special fund for the Shrine of the Báb when he received some letters and receipts. He and his wife Marion were founder members of the Bradford Bahá’í community as well as being the first pioneers to Sheffield during the Six Year Plan. He served on the National Assembly for seven and a half years during the period 1938-1946, when he was obliged to retire due to ill-health in December 1946.
ERIC MANTON page 273 Became a Bahá’í in Northampton in 1946 where he was a member of the first Spiritual Assembly. He later pioneered to Edinburgh where he was also on the first Scottish Assembly and to the virgin territory of Northern Rhodesia in 19 5 I. He was Chairman of the first National Spiritual Assembly of South Central Africa in I 964 and of the National Assembly of Zambia for nine years from its formation in I 967. He has remained at his post and became a Zambian citizen in 1973.
DR.‘ABBAS AND §flOMAIS AFNAN, page 278 ‘Abbas Afnan was a student in Paris and came to England as a pioneer to Africa for the Two Year Plan. §_l;omais ‘Ala’i was the
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second Persian Bahá’í student to come to Northampton to train as a nurse and arrived in 1948. They married at Summer School, Cottingham, Yorkshire in I 9 5 I and pioneered soon afterwardsShomais to Ethiopia and ‘Abbas to Persia. ‘Abbas joined Shomais in Africa in 1953. They returned to England in I 9 5 8 and opened the town of Burnley where an Assembly was formed in 1961. In 1975 ‘Abbas pioneered to Newfoundland and Shomais joined him in July 1976. ‘Abbas was a member of the National Assembly from 1964 until his pioneer move, and Shomais was active in United Nations’ affairs. §l_1omais toured Persia in 1971 at the request of the Universal House of Justice, was one of the representatives of the Bahá’í International Community at the International Women’s Year Convention in Mexico in 1975 and travelled extensively in the British Isles in 1978-1979.
EDMUND (TED) CARDELL, Knight of Bahá’u’lláh page 281
I Became a Bahá’í in Canada in 1948 and returned to his father’s
farm in England some time later. He pioneered to Kenya in October I95 I where he was a founder member of the first local Assembly in Nairobi. He became Knight of Bahá’u’lláh for South West Africa in 1953 and returned to England in I 96 3. He was elected to the National Assembly in 1973 and N is still a member (I 979).
DR. JOHN GEORGE MITCHELL,
Knight cy’Bahá’u’lláh page 307 Became a Bahá’í in I 9 50, was member of the National Assembly from I 9 5 2 to 1954 from which he pioneered as a Knight of Bahá’u’lláh for Malta. He had pioneered for a short while in Blackpool. He passed away on I 9 February I 9 57 at the age of 50. (“Bahá’í World”, Vol. XIII, p. 901.)
MISS IRENE BENNETT page 321 Became a Bahá’í in Kenya in 1953 and has been in pioneering posts since that time. She has served in Portugal, Switzerland, Scotland, Kenya, Uganda (where she was an Auxiliary Board Member), Nigeria, and is presently (I 980) in the Central African Republic.
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MISS DOROTHY WIGINGTON page 362 Became a Bahá’í at Summer School, Exeter in July 1954 and has been a staunch member of the Oxford Assembly from January
1955 ERNEST WILLIAM GREGORY page 381 Responded to an experimental postal card advertisement in Sheffield and accepted the Faith there in March 1951. He was elected to the National Assembly in 1954 when John Mitchell pioneered to Malta. He served until 1963 when he became an Auxiliary Board Member. He left in April 1974 to serve at the World Centre and passed away there in April 1978. The Universal House of Justice cabled: “ANNOUNCE PASSING To ABHA KINGDOM MORNING OF FIRST DAY RIDVAN DISTINGUISHED SERVANT
I, 9
BAHA U LLAH ERNEST GREGORY. HIS OUTSTANDING CONTRIBUTION GROWTH BRITISH Bahá’í COMMUNITY AS MEMBER MANY YEARS NATIONAL SPIRITUAL ASSEMBLY AND LATER MEMBER AUXILIARY BOARD ENSURE HIM HIGH PLACE THAT cOMMUNITY’S ANNALS. HIS STIRLING QUALITIES ENDEARED HIM To ALL AT WORLD CENTRE FAITH WHERE HIS LOSS KEENLY FELT. ADVISE BRITISH COMMUNITY
JOIN PRAYERS THANKSGIVING HIS LIFE PROGRESS HIS SOUL.”
DR.ERNEST SPENCER MILLER page 395 Became a Bahá’í i September 19 5 I in Liverpool and at great sacrifice left his medical practice to pioneer to Cardiff in 1955. For some years prior to his death in October 1976, he lived partly in Liverpool and partly in Anglesey, North Wales. The Universal House of Justice cabled: “GRIEVED LOSS DEVOTED BELIEVER ERNEST MILLER WHO RENDERED DISTINGUISHED SERVICES BRITISH HOME FRONT ENDEARED HIMSELF FELLOW BELIEVERS. EXTEND SYMPATHY FRIENDS ASSURE ARDENT PRAYERS SACRED THRESHOLD PROGRESS HIS SOUL ABHA KINGDOM.”
IAN SEMPLE page 411 Heard of the Faith at the first public meeting Organised by the Oxford Spiritual Assembly in 1949 and accepted it shortly afterwards. He was elected to the National Assembly in January I 9 5 5 and was a member until Riḍván I 961 , Serving as Secretary from January 1960 to January 1961. In 1956 he pioneered to Edinburgh for two and a half years, and was appointed to the
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Auxiliary Board for the Propagation of the Faith in November
1957. He was elected to the International Bahá’í Council at
Riḍván 1961 , and to the Universal House of Justice in 1963.
MISS_]EANM.CAMPBELL page 414 Jean Campbell accepted the Faith in Oxford in 1949 in time to be on the first Spiritual Assembly there. She served as the Assembly secretary for some years, pioneered to Aberdeen in
1959 and then to Malta in February I 964 where she is still at her p
pioneer post ( I 979).
JOHN CHARLES CRAVEN page 416 Was associated closely with E. T. Hall and Rebecca Hall from the earliest days of the Faith in Manchester, and remained a dedicated worker until his death, aged 80 in 1958. “Uncle John” kept up a wide correspondence with many of the early believers, and it was in a letter to him that Dr. T. K. Cheyne D.D. made his “Declaration” of belief in Bahá’u’lláh. He received three Tablets from the Master and was on the National Assembly for six of the first eight years. His teaching of the Faith was mostly in the
Altrincham area and among his workmates.
ADDENDUM FOR H. M. BALYUZI page 473 His crowning work, “Bahá’u’lláh—the King of Glory” was still at the binders when he passed away at his home in London on I 2 February I 980. The Universal House of Justice cabled the Bahá’í world, “WITH BROKEN HEARTS ANNOUNCE PASSING DEARLY LovED HAND CAUSE HASAN BALYUZI. ENTIRE Bahá’í WORLD ROBBED oNE o1= ITS MOST POWERFUL DEFENDERS MOST RESOURCEFUL HISTORIANs. HIS ILLUSTRIOUS LINEAGE HIS DEVOTED LABOURS DIVINE VINEYARD HIS OUTSTANDING LITERARY WORKS COMBINED IN IMMORTALISING HIS HONOURED NAME IN ANNALS BELOVED FAITH. CALL oN FRIENDS EVERYWHERE HOLD MEMORIAL GATHERINGS. PRAYING SHRINES HIS EXEMPLARY ACHIEVEMENTS STBADFASTNESS PATIENCE HUMILI'I‘Y HIS OUTSTANDING SCHOLARLY PURSUITS WILL INSPIRE MANY DEvoTED woRKERs AMONG RISING GENERATIONS FOLLOW HIS GLORIOUs I=ooTSTE1>s.”