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chancel including the new pulpit, reredos, mural of the apostles and had the ceiling painted with religious symbols from all over the world. He died 15 April 1938, Good Friday, in
Detroit. His funeral was held on Easter Sunday in Central United Methodist Church, the only Easter funeral Detroit had ever known.
219:
in
Detroit. While there, Woodward Avenue, the main street in the city, was widened. In order not to lose the steeple and west wall, a thirty-foot section was removed and the steeple and wall moved back to meet the rest of the church thus shortening the knave. Dr. Fisher designed a new recessed
150:'s Missionary Movement of his denomination (1913–1915), then the Associate General Secretary of the Laymen's Missionary Movement in the U.S. and Canada (beginning in 1916), transferring his conference membership back to the North Indiana Conference in 1913. His office was located at 1
215:. This is the only time on record that a Methodist bishop has resigned for other than health reasons, and he was the only bishop ever to return to the local pastoral work. In 1934 he accepted appointment as senior pastor of
35:, elected in 1920. He also gained notability as a pastor, missionary, author, and official in the Methodist missionary and men's movements. He is also one of the founders of the prestigious Mount Hermon School,
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211:. He resigned the Episcopacy in 1930 and returned to the U.S. to become pastor of First United Methodist Church,
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Hughes, D. Dale. 1967. Conscience of A City. Detroit: Official Board of
Central United Methodist Church. p. 60.
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Hughes, D. Dale. 1967. Conscience of A City. Detroit: Official Board of
Central United Methodist Church. p. 52.
123:, India (the North West India Conference), serving 1904–1905. He transferred his conference membership to the
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Fisher, Welthy
Honsinger. 1977. To Light a Candle. New Delhi: Tata McGraw-Hill. pp. 224–225.
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Fisher, Welthy
Honsinger. 1979. To Light a Candle. New Delhi: Tata McGraw-Hill. pp. 219–225.
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Fisher, Welthy
Honsinger. 1979. To Light A Candle. New Delhi: Tata McGraw-Hill. pp. 210–211.
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Fisher, Welthy
Honsinger. 1944. Frederick Bohn Fisher: World Citizen. New York: MacMillan.
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Shirey) Fisher. He married Edith
Jackson on 4 February 1903. In 1924 he married
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Swenson, Sally. 1988. Signals of a
Century. Ottawa: Love Printing. pp. 242–244.
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Swenson. Sally. 1988. Signals of a Century. Ottawa: Love Printing. pp. 215–228.
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39:. The yellow house in Mount Hermon School is named after him as Fisher House.
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Swenson, Sally. 1988. Signals of A Century. Ottawa: Love Printing. p. 230.
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of the Methodist Episcopal Church (1911–1912). He was then appointed the
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51:. He was of English ancestry, the son of James Edward and Josephine (
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Rev. Fisher was a delegate to the World's Missionary Conference in
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265:. New York: Ray Long and Richard R. Smith Inc. 1932.
27:(14 February 1882 – 15 April 1938) was an American
127:, serving the First Methodist Episcopal Church in
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276:List of bishops of the United Methodist Church
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134:Rev. Fisher then became the Eastern Field
433:Bishops of the Methodist Episcopal Church
253:, New York: Methodist Book Concern, 1915.
247:, New York: Methodist Book Concern, 1915.
240:, New York: Methodist Book Concern, 1914.
233:, New York: Methodist Book Concern, 1913.
95:Ordained ministry and missionary service
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259:. Nashville, TN: Cokesbury Press. 1917.
296:"Fisher, Welthy Honsinger (1879-1980)"
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263:That Strange Little Brown Man Gandhi
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99:Fisher entered the North Indiana
20:Frederick Bohn Fisher circa 1920
453:American Methodist missionaries
428:Methodist missionaries in India
217:Central United Methodist Church
196:Rev. Fisher was elected to the
488:20th-century Methodist bishops
463:Harvard Divinity School alumni
257:The Man That Changed the World
1:
458:American expatriates in India
125:New England Annual Conference
83:in 1902. He studied at both
483:People from Kokomo, Indiana
188:were produced as a result.
173:(1913), Boston (1914), and
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448:American religious writers
418:American Methodist bishops
115:(1903). He then went as a
105:Methodist Episcopal Church
69:Muncie Central High School
33:Methodist Episcopal Church
138:for the Board of Foreign
49:Greencastle, Pennsylvania
468:Boston University alumni
423:Asbury University alumni
200:in 1920 and assigned as
89:Harvard Divinity School
245:The Challenge of Today
186:The Challenge of Today
182:New England Methodism,
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478:American book editors
238:New England Methodism
160:Edgewater, New Jersey
25:Frederick Bohn Fisher
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177:(1915). The volumes
213:Ann Arbor, Michigan
179:Militant Methodism,
47:Fisher was born in
231:Militant Methodism
192:Episcopal ministry
67:He graduated from
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473:Methodist writers
224:Selected writings
144:General Secretary
101:Annual Conference
85:Boston University
81:Asbury University
71:. He earned both
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43:Birth and family
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251:The Way to Win
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209:episcopal area
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175:Columbus, Ohio
152:Madison Avenue
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79:degrees from
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171:Indianapolis
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443:1938 deaths
438:1882 births
412:Categories
306:2009-06-17
282:References
198:episcopacy
117:missionary
37:Darjeeling
167:Edinburgh
136:Secretary
63:Education
270:See also
243:Editor,
236:Editor,
229:Editor,
206:Calcutta
140:Missions
131:(1907).
204:of the
146:of the
103:of the
31:of the
148:Laymen
129:Boston
109:pastor
29:bishop
184:and
121:Agra
87:and
77:A.B.
75:and
73:B.S.
119:to
111:in
53:née
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