. Holston Methodism [electronic resource]: from its origin to the present time . nd HenryCollege. He is a son of the Rev. Andrew Hunter,elsewhere sketched in this work. Dr. Keith returned to the Holston Conference anddied a member of it. Bishop Galloway held three sessions of the HolstonConference: In 1891, in Chattanooga, Term.; in 1896,in Cleveland, Tenn.; and in 1906, also in Conference was fortunate in having such a manin the chair. * Bishop Charles Betts Galloway, , , son ofCharles Betts Galloway, , was born in Kosciusko,Miss., September 1, 1849. His opportuniti
. Holston Methodism [electronic resource]: from its origin to the present time . nd HenryCollege. He is a son of the Rev. Andrew Hunter,elsewhere sketched in this work. Dr. Keith returned to the Holston Conference anddied a member of it. Bishop Galloway held three sessions of the HolstonConference: In 1891, in Chattanooga, Term.; in 1896,in Cleveland, Tenn.; and in 1906, also in Conference was fortunate in having such a manin the chair. * Bishop Charles Betts Galloway, , , son ofCharles Betts Galloway, , was born in Kosciusko,Miss., September 1, 1849. His opportunities werefirst-class, and he fully profited by them. His fatherwas a prosperous physician, a gentleman of culture,and emphatically a Christian in faith and a boy Bishop Galloway attended the schools ofthe village in which he was born. When the familyremoved to Canton, Miss., he entered the male schoolof that place and studied there till he matriculated inthe University of Mississippi, which he did in 1866. Inthe first years of his college life he made a profession. BISHOP C. B. GALLOWAY. CONFERENCES OF 189I AND 1892. 44I of faith in Jesus Christ. He was less than nineteenyears old when he graduated. In the summer of 1868he was licensed to preach, and in the winter of the sameyear he was admitted into the Mississippi Conference. On his twentieth birthday he was married to MissHattie E. Willis, of Vicksburg. Bishop Galloway was a handsome man. His framewas well proportioned, his eye kindled with a fasci-nating light, and his features were classical. While astudent of the university he began to manifest thoseoratorical powers which afterwards made him so dis-tinguished. His manners were easy and dignified. Inthe discharge of his ministerial and episcopal duties heblended gentleness with firmness. As an orator he fol-lowed the best models of ancient and modern could have made a great politician and could, perhaps, have risen to the first places in
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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1900, booksubjectmethodi, bookyear1904