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Training School in Louisville added to her reasons for resigning.Ĭaring for her own travel expenses until 1901, Miss Armstrong traveled great distances-3,300 miles in 21 days, visiting 19 places, and making 26 addresses. The fact that she did not approve of establishing the W.M.U.
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"The clerk made daily visits to the home-and the work was continued." She refused to accept a salary from 1900 until her resignation in 1906, when the union voted that the corresponding secretary must be paid. In 1899, while corresponding secretary of Woman’s Missionary Union, she was absent from the Mission Rooms, which served as the Woman’s Missionary Union office, for nearly two weeks due to sickness, and it was the first time this had occurred in 11 years. Never discouraged, "Miss Annie" wrote, spoke, planned indefatigably. She led in framing the constitution of Woman’s Missionary Union which made the organization auxiliary to the Southern Baptist Convention instead of an independent body with power to collect and administer its own money and send out its own missionaries. 20, 1871, and taught the infant class there for at least 30 years. She left Seventh Church with 117 others, joined Eutaw Place Baptist Church at its organization, Feb. and Mary (Walker) Armstrong, she did not become a Christian until she was 19, after which she was baptized by Richard Fuller into the Seventh Baptist Church of Baltimore, Md.