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THE FIRST COLORED Professional, Clerical and Business DIRECTORY OF BALTIMORE CITY 7th Annual Edition, 1919-1920
Volume 499, Page 91   View pdf image (33K)
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BISHOP JOHN HURST

Rt. Rev. John Hurst. Presiding Bishop of the Florida Confer-
ence, African Methodist Episcopal Church, and resident bishop of
Baltimore District,

Probably no man in Baltimore has the confidence of the public
in general more than has Bishop Hurst, In conjunction with his
arduous duties as presiding officer of the Florida Conference of his
denomination, he takes a keen interest in civic affairs and is always
in the forefront of any movement that has for its object the betterment
of mankind. In a recent address before one of the conferences, the
Bishop took occasion to forcefully criticize the conditions affecting
the negro in the South. The address was generally regarded as one
of the most fearless expositions of conditions ever expressed by a
colored man south of the Mason and Dixon Line.

Bishop John Hurst is one of the best known churchmen in the
country. He is a member of a number of bodies, including the
American Political and Social Science Association and the National
Association for the Advancement of Colored People. In the last
named body he is a member of the Executive Committee, as well as
serving as a member of the Spingarn Medal Committee.

Bishop Hurst owes much of his success to his charming wife,
Mrs. K. Bertha Hurst. Their only son, Benoni Price Hurst, is an
interne at Howard University. Bishop and Mrs. Hurst reside at
1808 McCulloh Street.

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THE FIRST COLORED Professional, Clerical and Business DIRECTORY OF BALTIMORE CITY 7th Annual Edition, 1919-1920
Volume 499, Page 91   View pdf image (33K)
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