Louis Klopsch (March 7, 1852 – March 6, 1910) was a German-American journalist, publisher, and fundraiser for charitable causes. He originated red letter editions of the Bible.
LouisKlopsch (March 7, 1852 – March 6, 1910) was a German-American journalist, publisher, and fundraiser for charitable causes. He originated red letter...
On 19 June 1899, LouisKlopsch, then editor of The Christian Herald magazine, conceived the idea while working on an editorial. Klopsch asked his mentor...
newspaper which ceased publication in 2006. Under the leadership of LouisKlopsch, the Herald sponsored a variety of domestic ministries including The...
Bibles, first published by German-born entrepreneur and philanthropist LouisKlopsch in 1901, which highlight the words of Jesus in red, owing to the color...
celebration held in November. In 1895 the Mission was bought by Dr. LouisKlopsch, owner of the Christian Herald, to save it from economic distress. It...
in Sleepy Hollow Cemetery in Tarrytown, New York, near her friend, LouisKlopsch. Her daughter Mary Barr Munroe became a noted clubwoman and conservationist...
convention through Palestine and published an account of the journey with LouisKlopsch. He was an executive officer at the Priscilla Publishing Company in...
1895, Wilson met LouisKlopsch, the head of the Christian Herald newspaper, while fundraising in New York; after their meeting, Klopsch made the school...
(82 kg). Finney was of Scotch-Irish descent; he was named in memory of LouisKlopsch, a German-American immigrant and founder of The Christian Herald magazine...
marble memorial plaque in the mission gives an 1879 year and a bio of LouisKlopsch, who took over the mission as a charity in 1895, repeats this 1879 year...
the ship Quito, which sailed from Brooklyn. Christian Herald editor LouisKlopsch, who had lobbied the government to pay the shipping costs, also cabled...
fastest shrinking city in the state". al.com. Retrieved March 5, 2019. Klopsch, Louis; Talmage, Thomas De Witt; Sandison, George Henry (1975). Christian Herald...