Английская Википедия:Anne Luther Bagby

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Шаблон:Short description Шаблон:Infobox person/Wikidata Anne Luther Bagby (March 20, 1859- December 22, 1942) was an American Baptist missionary from Texas. She was the first woman from the Texas Baptists to become a foreign missionary.[1] She also served as a leader of the Texas Baptists when she was not doing missionary work in Brazil.[2] Overall, Bagby worked as a missionary for sixty-one years.[3] Six of her nine children also became missionaries.[4]

Biography

Bagby came to Texas from Kentucky with her parents who came to work at what was formerly known as Baylor Female College (now University of Mary Hardin-Baylor).[5] Crossing the country, she was baptized in the Mississippi River when she was eleven.[6] Her father, John Luther, became the president of Baylor Female College.[7] Bagby felt that she had a "calling to become a missionary at age 19".[5] Some accounts, however, state that Bagby felt the calling to be a missionary by age 12.[8] Bagby graduated from the University of Mary Hardin-Baylor in 1879[9] and became a teacher.[6] She met her husband, William Buck Bagby at a missions conference.[5] In 1880, she and William Buck were married.[10] Also in 1880, Anne Bagby helped to organize the first Woman's Missionary Union in Texas.[11]

Bagby and her husband, William Bagdy, went to Brazil as missionaries in 1881.[12] Bagby, who had always wanted to be a missionary, had convinced her husband to go.[10][13] Anne Bagby and her husband may have also both been influenced to do their missionary work in Brazil through their correspondence with Alexander Travis Hawthorn who had lived in Brazil.[14][15] The Bagbys started out preaching in the colony of Santa Barbara (in Brazil) which was a settlement established by ex-Confederates attempting to start a "new Southern aristocracy."[12] Trouble in Santa Barbara convinced the Bagbys to move the mission to Salvador Bahia.[12]

In 1882, she and her husband, along with Zachery and Kate Taylor, created the first Baptist church for Brazilians in Salvador Bahia.[16] The church was formally organized in October 1882 and consisted of five members, the missionaries themselves and a local priest, Senior Teixeira, who had been converted.[17] Bagby and Kate Taylor wanted to create Bible classes and other programs, but waited.[6] During their time in Salvador Bahia, William Bagby was arrested during a baptism ceremony and imprisoned.[6] When Anne Bagby found out, she insisted that she be imprisoned along with him, and was. Eventually they were both released.[6]

Later, the mission went to Rio de Janeiro in 1891.[18] However, the bulk of the group's successes were in São Paulo City, where Anne Bagby created a flagship school for girls.[12] Bagby felt that starting a school would afford her a "comparable, if not superior, influence" to preaching, which was exclusive to men at the time.[13] The school was taken over by Bagby in 1901.[11] Bagby was involved in the training of teachers for the school, which was twice the size of any other Protestant school in Brazil at the time.[8] By 1913, the school had 175 students.[6] In 1919, Bagby traveled to Houston in order to attend the annual session for the Women's Missionary Union.[19]

Bagby's husband died of pneumonia in 1939.[8] Anne Bagby died in Brazil on December 22, 1942.[8] Two books have been published about their lives and missionary work. The first was written by Helen Bagby, The Bagbys of Brazil (1954 Шаблон:OCLC) and a second was published more recently by Daniel B. Lancaster, The Bagbys of Brazil: The Life and Work of William Buck and Anne Luther Bagby (1998 Шаблон:ISBN). Kathryn Thompson Presley, reviewing Lancaster's book for The Southwestern Historical Quarterly, called his book "refreshingly honest" and carefully detailed.[15]

References

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External links

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