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Dr Charles Crawford Jarrell

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Dr Charles Crawford Jarrell

Birth
Death
26 Nov 1961 (aged 87)
Burial
Oxford, Newton County, Georgia, USA Add to Map
Plot
Jarrell
Memorial ID
View Source
Charles Crawford Jarrell, Methodist clergyman, educator, and author, was born November 17, 1874, in Milledgeville, Georgia, and died November 26, 1961, in Oxford, Georgia. He became a professor at Emory College (1896-1899; 1916-) and Young Harris College (1900-1901), and did graduate work in Europe (1911-1912). Jarrell was a pastor of churches in Augusta, Monroe, Athens, Atlanta, and other Georgia cities (ca. 1930-1937), and served as president of the Methodist Episcopal Church, South, Hospital Association and the American Protestant Hospital Association (1935). He was on President Hoovers' Hospital Advisory Board (1932), authored nine books, and served on the boards of trustees of Paine, Reinhardt, and Wesleyan colleges. Jarrell retired in 1944.
Archived Collection maintained at Emory UniversityJARRELL, CHARLES CRAWFORD, 1874-1961.Charles Crawford Jarrell papers, 1826-1961Emory UniversityStuart A. Rose Manuscript, Archives, and Rare Book LibraryAtlanta, GA [email protected] link: http://pid.emory.edu/ark:/25593/8zh1w
Descriptive SummaryCreator: Jarrell, Charles Crawford, 1874-1961.Title: Charles Crawford Jarrell papers, 1826-1961Call Number: Manuscript Collection No. 428Extent: 13.5 linear feet (27 boxes) and 1 oversized papers box (OP)Abstract: Papers of Methodist minister and Emory College professor Charles Crawford Jarrell including correspondence, photographs, memorabilia, printed materials, and sermons.Language: Materials entirely in English.

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Scope and Content Note
The collection consists of the papers of Charles Crawford Jarrell from 1826-1961. The papers include correspondence, photographs, memorabilia, printed materials, notebooks, sermons, manuscripts, and histories. Materials relate to Charles Crawford Jarrell's work with Methodist hospitals, the Methodist Church, his education at Emory College, and to the churches he pastored; to his father, Methodist leader Anderson Joseph Jarrell, and to his uncle, Methodist historian George Gilman Smith; and to the Jarrell and Smith families and the Jarrell Plantation in Juliette, Georgia.
Charles Crawford Jarrell, Methodist clergyman, educator, and author, was born November 17, 1874, in Milledgeville, Georgia, and died November 26, 1961, in Oxford, Georgia. He became a professor at Emory College (1896-1899; 1916-) and Young Harris College (1900-1901), and did graduate work in Europe (1911-1912). Jarrell was a pastor of churches in Augusta, Monroe, Athens, Atlanta, and other Georgia cities (ca. 1930-1937), and served as president of the Methodist Episcopal Church, South, Hospital Association and the American Protestant Hospital Association (1935). He was on President Hoovers' Hospital Advisory Board (1932), authored nine books, and served on the boards of trustees of Paine, Reinhardt, and Wesleyan colleges. Jarrell retired in 1944.
Archived Collection maintained at Emory UniversityJARRELL, CHARLES CRAWFORD, 1874-1961.Charles Crawford Jarrell papers, 1826-1961Emory UniversityStuart A. Rose Manuscript, Archives, and Rare Book LibraryAtlanta, GA [email protected] link: http://pid.emory.edu/ark:/25593/8zh1w
Descriptive SummaryCreator: Jarrell, Charles Crawford, 1874-1961.Title: Charles Crawford Jarrell papers, 1826-1961Call Number: Manuscript Collection No. 428Extent: 13.5 linear feet (27 boxes) and 1 oversized papers box (OP)Abstract: Papers of Methodist minister and Emory College professor Charles Crawford Jarrell including correspondence, photographs, memorabilia, printed materials, and sermons.Language: Materials entirely in English.

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Scope and Content Note
The collection consists of the papers of Charles Crawford Jarrell from 1826-1961. The papers include correspondence, photographs, memorabilia, printed materials, notebooks, sermons, manuscripts, and histories. Materials relate to Charles Crawford Jarrell's work with Methodist hospitals, the Methodist Church, his education at Emory College, and to the churches he pastored; to his father, Methodist leader Anderson Joseph Jarrell, and to his uncle, Methodist historian George Gilman Smith; and to the Jarrell and Smith families and the Jarrell Plantation in Juliette, Georgia.


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