Home Up

GP Bowser
 

Home
Leadership
Ministers
Our Ministries
History
Links
FAQ

Click here to return to the previous page.

Allow time for the pictures to load . . . they are worth the wait.


G. P. Bowser standing before one of his preaching charts and his wife Francis (Fannie) Rebecca, holding the Bible.


G. P. Bowser


The three Bowser children, standing, left to right, Clara Scaggs, Philista Folke, and seated Thelma Holt.

George Phillip Bowser was born February 17, 1874 in Maury County, about sixty miles south of Nashville, Tennessee. When G.P. was very young his father was killed and his mother moved the family to Nashville where she worked hard to see that her children were well educated. After finishing grade school he took the opportunity to attend Walden University where he mastered five languages in addition to English: Greek, Hebrew, French, German and Latin.   G.P. was very religious and his childhood religious experience in the Methodist church was giving him second thoughts. Sam W. Womack, and other Christians in Nashville, took interest in him, teaching him the truth and he soon obeyed the Gospel and started preaching it.

Even though he lost his left arm earlier in life in an accident he became a master printer and at the age of twenty-eight, he edited a newspaper called, "The Christian Echo." He started a Christian school for black children on Jackson Street in Nashville and opened it on January 6, 1907. He also started schools in Silver Point near Cookville, Tennessee and was instrumental in setting up schools in Detroit, Fort Worth and a University in Terrell, Texas. This great man dedicated his life to Christian education among blacks. He died March 23, 1950.

 

Send mail to webmaster@jacksonst.org with questions or comments about this web site.
Copyright © 2002 Church of Christ - Jackson Street
Last modified: 03/08/07