| Figures | ||
| 6.1 | Photo depicting unidentified African next to a child blowing the horn probably for worship (about 1900) | 145 |
| 6.2 | Two of the three surviving pioneer missionary couples to the Zulu people (undated ca. early 1870s). Daniel and Lucy Lindley (top), Aldin and his second wife Charlotte Grout (bottom) | 147 |
| 6.3 | James and Dolly Bryant (left, ca. 1840s), Charles and Katherine (Katie) Lloyd (right, ca. 1862) | 155 |
| 7.1 | Mary K. Edwards (left) as a young woman (ca. 1868), Gertrude Hance (right, date of image unknown), recruited in 1870 by the Woman’s Board | 205 |
| 7.2 | Mbalasi Makanya (now Makhanya), the American mission’s first baptized African convert, shortly before her death at the age of about 90 in 1874 | 227 |
| 7.3 | Ira Nembula (left), the son of Mbalasi, Mabuda Cele (center) as a young preacher and evangelist at Umzumbe, James Dube (right), another offspring of a royal family and a successful businessman | 229 |
| 7.4 | A composite photo of second-generation AZM male missionaries (ca. 1870–71) | 231 |
| Maps | ||
| 1 | American Board Missions in Sub-Saharan Africa Colonies during the nineteenth century | XVIII |
| 2 | AZM’s Pioneer stations in Natal, including two major outstations (Emushane and Noodsberg) founded by African preacher-evangelists in the 1860s | XIX |
List of Illustrations
In: God's Interpreters: The Making of an American Mission and an African Church
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