List of Moody Bible Institute people

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

[1] This is a list of people affiliated with Moody Bible Institute as officers, faculty, alumni, or liaisons.

Presidents

Dwight L. Moody

Alumni and faculty

Others associated with MBI

  • William Whiting Borden – trustee; although he died at age 25, Borden graduated from Yale, started the Yale Hope Mission while an undergraduate there and then graduated from Princeton Theological Seminary; he pledged almost all of his approximately $1,000,000 fortune to missions and was training to become a missionary to China when he died of cerebral meningitis (According to this author, Borden was not related to the milk family. His father was a lawyer, and his grandfather was in Chicago real estate.)[66][67]
  • Nathaniel S. Bouton – original trustee; organized and incorporated the Union Foundry Works, which was "one of most prominent" manufacturers of industrial steel "in the west"; former superintendent of public works in Chicago, who was the first superintendent to pave the city's streets[68]
  • Henry Parsons Crowell – trustee president; an industrialist who was the president and CEO of the Quaker Oats Company and a philanthropist (Crowell Trust); he guided MBI for 40 years, starting in 1904[69]
  • Sir William Dobbie – British lieutenant general; associated with the Second Boer War, World War I and World War II; in 1945, for three months Dobbie and his wife testified of their Christian faith across the United States and to the First Lady at the time, Eleanor Roosevelt, under the auspices of MBI[70]
  • John V. Farwell – original trustee; dry goods salesman, vice-president of the Chicago Board of Trade and presidential elector on the Lincoln ticket, in 1860[68]
  • T.W. Harvey – original trustee and first trustee vice-president; lumber dealer and banker; founded Harvey, Illinois[71]
  • Harry A. Ironside – one of the many evangelists who participated somewhere around the U.S. (48 states at the time), or in the British Isles, in MBI's 1936-'37 50th-anniversary celebration of the institute and the 100th-year birthday celebration for D.L. Moody[72]
  • Elbridge G. Keith – original trustee and treasurer; banker and former president of Chicago Title and Trust Company[71]
  • Howard Atwood Kelly – trustee; noted gynecologist and surgeon and one of the four founding staff members/-professors of Johns Hopkins Hospital, in Baltimore, Maryland[69]
  • Cyrus H. McCormick, Jr. – original trustee; perfected and patented his father's reaper invention which harvested field crops;[71] this revolutionized farming worldwide; however, almost 20 years later, the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office legally ruled that the McCormicks' invention was not the first crop-harvesting reaper invented in the U.S.; McCormick Harvesting Machine Company was founded, which eventually became International Harvester through a merger with Deering Harvester Company and three smaller companies; then, McCormick's company became part of Case IH (JI Case), their former parent corporation, together, being Tenneco; but, as of 2013, the assets of International Harvester and Case Corporation are currently owned by the agricultural division of CNH Industrial, an American-Italian company based in the UK
  • Robert S. Scott – original trustee; dry goods salesman who eventually became the senior partner of Carson Pirie Scott,[71] now billing itself as, "Carson's."
  • Mel Trotter – one of the many evangelists who participated somewhere around the U.S. (48 states at the time), or in the British Isles, in MBI's 1936-'37 50th-anniversary celebration of the institute and 100th-year birthday celebration for D.L. Moody[73]
  • Cecilia Tshabalala – alumnus, South African women's rights activist and clubwoman[74]

References

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