| 1911 |
Fire Baptized Holiness and Pentecostal Holiness Church merged in Falcon, NC; S.D. Page elected first general superintendent |
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| 1913 |
2nd General Convention, Toccoa, GA |
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| 1915 |
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Tabernacle Pentecostal Church, under leadership of N.J. Holmes, consolidated with PHC in Canon, GA. |
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| 1917 |
Pentecostal Holiness Advocate launched; G.F. Taylor served as editor until 1934, except for 1925-1929; Advocate served as official voice of church until 1997 |
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3rd General Conference, Abbeville, SC |
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| 1919 |
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G.F. Taylor founded Franklin Springs Institute (name changed to Emmanuel College in 1939) |
| 1921 |
4th General Conference, Roanoke, VA |
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| 1925 |
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King's College operated in Oklahoma from 1925 until 1932. |
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5th General Conference, Franklin Springs, GA |
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| 1929 |
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6th General Conference, Oklahoma City, OK |
| 1931 |
First Hispanic conference of the Pentecostal Holiness Church was organized in March, 1931. |
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| 1933 |
7th General Conference, Marion, NC |
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| 1937 |
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8th General Conference, Roanoke, VA |
| 1941 |
9th General Conference, Franklin Springs, GA |
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| 1943 |
National Association of Evangelicals organized, with PHC as a charter member |
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| 1945 |
10th General Conference, Oklahoma City, OK |
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| 1946 |
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Southwestern College founded in Oklahoma City; R.O. Corvin president. |
| 1947 |
Oral Roberts launched a healing ministry with his first city-wide campaign in Enid, Oklahoma. |
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| 1948 |
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Eight groups, including PHC, formed Pentecostal Fellowship of North America (PFNA) |
| 1949 |
11th General Conference, Jacksonville, FL |
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Carmen Home for aged citizens opened in Carmen, OK. |
| 1953 |
12th General Conference, Memphis, TN |
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| 1957 |
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13th General Conference, Oklahoma City, OK |
| 1961 |
14th General Conference, Richmond, VA |
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| 1965 |
15th General Conference, Greensboro, NC |
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| 1967 |
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Affiliation signed with Pentecostal Methodist Church of Chile. |
| 1969 |
16th General Conference, Memphis, TN |
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| 1973 |
17th General Conference, Roanoke, VA |
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| 1974 |
International Headquarters moved from Franklin Springs, GA to Oklahoma City, OK where the denomination has more congregations than any other city in the world. |
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| 1975 |
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General Executive Board added word International to name |
| 1977 |
18th General Conference, Oklahoma City, OK |
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| 1981 |
19th General Conference, Oklahoma City, OK |
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| 1983 |
Target 2000 adopted by General Board of Administration |
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Affiliation signed with Wesleyan Methodist Church of Brazil |
| 1985 |
20th General Conference, Richmond, VA |
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| 1989 |
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21st General Conference, Oklahoma City, OK |
| 1990 |
First World Conference of PH Churches met in Jerusalem |
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| 1993 |
22nd General Conference, Jacksonville, FL |
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| 1994 |
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PFNA dissolved. Pentecostal/Charismatic Churches of North America (PCCNA) emerged as a racially inclusive organization. |
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Name of International Headquarters changed to Resource Development Center. |
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| 1996 |
First Solemn Assembly held in Fayetteville, NC (August) to repent of the sins of Spiritual Pride, Judgementalism, Controlling Spirit, Racism, Male Domination, Elder-Brother Syndrome and Greed. |
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Sieze the Future Summit satellite broadcast beamed to 38 points of presence in the US. |
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| 1997 |
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23rd General Conference convenes in Kansas City, MO. James D. Leggett elected General Superintendent. |
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Mission 21, established at the 23rd General Conference, implemented an aggressive evangelism initiative called Reach 3 - Plant 3. Reach 3 - Plant 3 challenged each member to reach at least three persons for Christ and each church to plant at least three congregations; one like itself, one cross-culturally, and one trans-nationally. |
| 1998 |
The IPHC celebrated its centennial anniversary with the release of a centennial history, a promotional video, and special services in Oklahoma and North Carolina. |
| 1999 |
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First Hispanic Pastors Conference held in Austin, Tx in August. |
| 2000 |
IPHC General Executive Board and World Pentecostal Holiness Fellowship (WPHF) adopted its first constitution; San Jose, Costa Rica. WPHF members include Bishop James D. Leggett, chairman, Donavan Ng (Asia), Gordon McDonald (Canada), Reggie Thomas (Africa), Teodor Bulzan (Europe), Jose Angel Salas Miranda (Latin America); affiliate members include Bishop Javier Vasquez (Methodist Pentecostal Church of Chile) and Bishop Elisiario Alves dos Santos (Wesleyan Methodist Church of Brazil). |
| 2001 |
24th General Conference convened in Cincinnatti, OH. James D. Leggett re-elected General Superintendent. |
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| 2003 |
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Third IPHC World Conference met in San Jose, Costa Rica, on February 13-18, 2003 |
| 2005 |
25th General Conference convened in Oklahoma City, July 26-29, 2005. James D. Leggett re-elected to a rare third term as General Superintendent. |
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