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- Beattie, Ralph & Rene
Cover of book about Ralph & Rene (nee Amy Constance Irene Lester) Beattie. Married April 2, 1907; professed around 1909. - Beattie, Ralph & Rene
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Page 21 - Begbie, Alice & Maude Kerns
Alice Begbie & Maude Kerns. Alice went in the NZ work at age 19 - Craig, Jack #1
Jack Craig was one of the first people to profess in Otago, New Zealand. - Craig, jack #2
Jack Craig was one of the first people to profess in Otago, New Zealand. - Hardie, John & Dick McClure
Dick McClure was one of eight workers who left Liverpool, Engand on the SS Orwestry Grange on Nov. 13, 1906, arriving in Wellington, NZ on Jan. 30, 1907. Dick and John Hardie pioneered NSW in 1907. - Hodgins, Polly & Frances
Polly & Frances Hodgins, Sisters in the work, from U.K. Helped to pioneered NZ. Their brother James died in 1907 in NZ, the first Worker to die in the entire world. - Hughes, Willie & Alice, George & Lottie Wix
Willie & Alice Hughes --- George & Lottie Wix. There were three Wix siblings. Willie Hughes went to NZ in 1906. He wrote some hymns in Hymns Old & New. - Hutchinson, Adam
Adam Hutchison and Joe Williamson pioneered the South Island with two Sister Workers in 1905. - McClung Wilson & Annie (2)
Wilson & Annie McClung were a married Worker couple Wilson was overseer of NZ - McClung, Wilson & Annie
Wilson & Annie McClung were a married Worker couple Wilson was overseer of NZ - McClure, Dick (1911)
Dick McClure was one of eight workers left Liverpool, England on the SS Orwestry Grange on Nov. 13, 1906, arriving in Wellington, NZ on Jan. 30, 1907 - Murray, Archie 1913
Archie Murray was first native to enter the NZ work, in 1907 - Sullivan, John & Dick McClure
Dick McClure was one of eight workers left Liverpool, England on the SS Orwestry Grange on Nov. 13, 1906, arriving in Wellington, NZ on Jan. 30, 1907. In March, 1907, John Hardie and Dick McClure were the first Workers to pioneer NSW, arriving in Sydney from NZ. John Sullivan and Jack Little pioneered Queensland in 1905. - Tom Turner, Jack Annard, Willie Hughes, Robert Blair
Tom Turner, Jack Annand, Willie Hughes, Robt Blair Thomas M. Turner comes from the North of Ireland; he was a school teacher in County Galway, when he heard the truth and also went forth in 1900 for a time in Ireland, and was one of the first to go to Australia. He wrote hymns 202, 236 and 265. Regarding No. 236, at one Convention someone said that would be a good subject for a hymn —"The Approval of God" — within a short time, the next meeting or so, the hymn was produced and sung. Tom was 81 years old when he died April, 1959. Jack Annand wrote Nos. 164, 241, 283, 316, and 321. He was born in 1891 and died 1957. Worked on a farm as a lad, professed when 19 years old, went forth when he was 22, first in N.S. Wales, then Victoria (Aust.) then came to Poland and Scandinavian countries. He wrote No. 319 while at Deb. Conv. Robert Blair, who also laboured in New Zealand, was born at Otokia, near Dunedin N.Z. in 1874 and died in 1942. After selling some property left him in Scotland, he started out in the work in England, remaining two years before going to N.Z. where he was for several years, was for a time in Fiji, Samoa and Norfolk Isles, returning to Queensland where after 11 years he died. He wrote Nos. 185, 195, 235, 274 and 277. When he was in Exeter he pulled out a scrap of paper from his waistcoat pocket and asked another worker he met there if the verses he had written on it would do for a hymn, iIt is now our No. 276. Willie Hughes laboured in N.Z. He wrote "Went forth" in 1906 and wrote Nos. 62, 66, 114 and 116 - Walker, Alex & Wife Queenie
Both Alex Walker and Queenie Higgins were workers who married in 1920 and dropped out of the work. They had 4 children. - Wix, Lottie 1
Lottie Wix, sibling of Alice, George and Mabel who professed in 1908 and all went in the work. - Head Workers- Willie Phyn & Walter Frank
NZ Head Workers: Willie Phyn & Walter Frank - Head Worker - Willie Hughes; 1944-1963
Willie Hughes - Head Worker - Wilson McClung, Annie McClung & W. Hughes
Wilson & Annie McClung, married Worker couple; Head Worker of NZ from 1914-1944 Willie Hughes Head Worker 1944-1963 - 1913 NZ Convention
William Irvine on back row. Note only two sister workers. No Sister Workers were on the 1913 NZ Workers List, while the 1912 list had 10. One reason for their disappearance was the concern over whether Sister Workers were scriptural, so the Brother Workers continued without them. When the Brother Workers had no converts the following year, the Sisters were recalled. There were six Sisters on the Workers List in 1914.