Ned Caswell Laments on the Mission
"Azusa St. is awfully dead; the Seymours are not there." Ned Caswell.
Ned Caswell Notes Change
Ned Caswell writes, "At Azusa St. tonight a young, colored man preached and there was no regular testifying. What a change from the former Glory! The Seymours were not there."
Tsao Hsein
June 1910, Thomas Junk is working in Tsao Hsien in Shan-Tung Province. He ministers to the extremely poor people of the region, collecting orphans and people without relatives. He provides for them during a time of famine.
Assemblies of God Missionaries
Ansel H. and Henrietta Post arrive in Alexandria, Egypt, where they will minister until Ansel's death. From 1916 onward, they are Assemblies of God missionaries.
H. M. Turney in South Africa
H.M. Turney resigns from the Apostolic Faith Mission of South Africa. One congregation he has pastored will become the seed to the Full Gospel Church of South Africa. A second one will become the base church for the Assemblies of God of South Africa.
Lillian Keyes to Become a Presbyterian Missionary
January 1910, Lillian Keyes applies to become a Presbyterian missionary in China. She signs a pledge that she will no longer teach Apostolic Faith doctrine.
Articles of Incorporation in Portland
Jennie E. Seymour, Malinda Mitchell, and Edward W. Doak file articles of incorporation on behalf of the Azusa Street Mission in Portland, Oregon. They wish to establish a legal presence in Portland as an auxiliary body to the Apostolic Faith Mission of Los Angeles, California. Ned Caswell reports, "I was at Azusa St. a little while today. Only a few old-timers and not much stirring."
Ned Caswell report
Ned Caswell records: "This afternoon I was at Azusa St. The crowd was fair and the meeting tame, as the inner circle retired to have a private meeting of their own. I saw Owen (Irish) Lee and his wife, just down from Portland, where there seems to be considerable friction. I saw Seymour this week also."
Frank Bartleman Report
Mid-September 1909, Frank Bartleman attends the Azusa Street Mission after an absences of 6 weeks. He reports: "Azusa had lost out greatly since we left. 'How the mighty have fallen' came to me most forcibly. But the Spirit came upon three of us mightily in prayer one evening there. He assured us He was going to bring the power back to Azusa Mission as at the beginning."
Edward McCauley in Monrovia
Edward McCauley's work in Monrovia, Liberia, now stands at 154.