Identity area
Type of entity
Corporate body
Authorized form of name
Pilgrim Holiness Church
Parallel form(s) of name
Standardized form(s) of name according to other rules
Other form(s) of name
Identifiers for corporate bodies
Description area
Dates of existence
1897-1968
History
-
Origins (1897–1900):
- The International Holiness Union and Prayer League was founded in 1897 by Rev. Martin Wells Knapp and Rev. Seth C. Rees in Cincinnati, Ohio.
- It aimed to promote holiness and revivalism, including literature, associations, and missions.
- In 1900, the name changed to International Apostolic Holiness Union to reflect a return to apostolic Christianity.
-
Expansion and Structure (1900–1913):
- Revival efforts led to missions, churches, rescue homes, and schools.
- Missionaries were sent globally (Africa, India, Japan, West Indies, South America).
- In 1905, the name changed to International Apostolic Holiness Union and Churches, signaling a shift toward a denomination.
- In 1913, it became International Apostolic Holiness Church.
-
Mergers and Growth (1919–1925):
-
In 1919, the Holiness Christian Church (originated in Pennsylvania, 1882) merged with the International Apostolic Holiness Church, forming the International Holiness Church. Additional mergers followed:
- Pentecostal Rescue Mission (New York, 1897) in 1922.
- Pilgrim Church (Pasadena, 1917) also in 1922; the unified name became Pilgrim Holiness Church.
- Pentecostal Brethren in Christ (Ohio, 1924).
- People's Mission Church (Colorado Springs, 1899) in 1925.
-
-
Leadership and Governance (1926–1958):
- Rev. Winfred R. Cox and Rev. Seth C. Rees were elected superintendents in 1926.
- Governance evolved with a single general superintendent (1930), later transitioning to a broader General Board and multiple superintendents (1958).
- Key leadership included Rev. Rees, Rev. W. L. Surbrook, Rev. L. W. Sturk, and Rev. William H. Neff.
-
Organizational Development (1930s–1950s):
- Offices for missions, Sunday schools, education, and publishing were established.
- Terminology changed (e.g., “assemblies” became “conferences” in 1942).
- The Pilgrim Pension Plan and educational institutions (like Owosso College) were developed.
-
Later Growth and Merger (1958–1966):
- The church expanded international representation and changed some department names (e.g., Foreign Missions to World Missions).
- In 1966, the Pilgrim Holiness Church and the Wesleyan Methodist Church agreed to merge, forming what would become The Wesleyan Church.
Places
Indianapolis, IN, Cincinnati, OH
Legal status
Functions, occupations and activities
Mandates/sources of authority
Internal structures/genealogy
General context
Relationships area
Access points area
Subject access points
Place access points
Occupations
Control area
Authority record identifier
PHC
Maintained by
Institution identifier
PHC
Rules and/or conventions used
Status
Draft
Level of detail
Dates of creation, revision and deletion
Language(s)
- English