Resource shares the experiences of mostly unsung heroines of Adventism’s early days.
March 18, 2025 | United States | Heather Moor, Adventist Learning Community, North American Division News
In 1940 the Review and Herald Publishing Association published a book with a dark-blue cover that you have probably never seen, written by an author you likely do not know. On the front are three words—They Also Served—and the name: Covington.
This book, written and researched by Ava Covington Wall roughly 80 years after the founding of the Seventh-day Adventist Church, was the first book detailing the many women who contributed to the church’s founding and growth, who have “pioneered with the pioneers, stood by their side, some even going before them.”[1] Yet their stories are still not widely known.
Out of print for more than 80 years, this now-elusive book offers just a glimpse of the many women involved in the early Adventist denomination. Many more stories remain largely lost to time as generation after generation fades, their memories—and history—lost with them.
The new podcast by Heidi Olson Campbell, historian and author, highlights the contributions of women to the Seventh-day Adventist Church and American Christianity as a whole. [Photo: Adventist Learning Community]
These women were poets, educators, doctors, abolitionists, missionaries, writers, preachers, social reformers, and Bible instructors—women such as Charlotte Blake, among the first Black female doctors in the United States; Alma McKibbin, who defied a tragic diagnosis to become one of Adventism’s most influential Bible instructors, regardless of gender; Sojourner Truth, the famous abolitionist and activist, who was also a Millerite with close ties with Adventism; and Lucy Post, Georgia Burrus Burgess, and Anna Knight, among the first single women from the United States to serve as missionaries abroad.
About the Host
They Also Served is hosted by Heidi Olson Campbell, a historian and author who is interested in the impact of religion and politics on perceptions of gender roles in early modern Europe.
Campbell teaches in Maryland and recently defended her dissertation on Paul’s cross sermons—a site of governmental and popular religious debate during the long English Reformation. It examines how exemplars for women changed in religious rhetoric in this series of sermons during the sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries.
Heidi Olson Campbell, host of new podcast They Also Served: Stories of Adventist Women. [Photo: Adventist Learning Community]
Apple: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/they-also-served-stories-of-adventist-women/id1710398149
Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/4b1jCLfWLL3u5rhTJo7Zun?si=fbc36ca9938d4364
YoutubeMusic: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLnPjGoqHCdBCB04x9rIC4KHR_QPQLCD_
Podbean: https://theyalsoserved.podbean.com/
Click here to follow They Also Served podcast on Facebook, and click here to follow it on Instagram.
Heather Moor is a project manager with Adventist Learning Community.
[1] Ava Covington, They Also Served (Takoma Park, Washington, D.C.: Review and Herald Pub. Assn., n.d.), p. 5.
[2] George Eliot is the pen name of English author Mary Ann Evans.
The original version of this story was posted on the North American Division news site.