This is a list of Association of Baptist Churches in Ireland churches.
* Antrim Baptist Church (Co. Antrim)
* Antrim Road Baptist Church (Belfast) Old link
* Armagh Baptist Church (Co. Armagh)
* Balbriggan Baptist Church (Co. Dublin)
* Ballyclare Baptist Church
* Ballycrochan Baptist Church
* Ballycullen Community Church
* Ballygomartin Baptist Church
* Ballykeel Baptist Church
* Ballymena Baptist Church
* Ballymoney Baptist Church
* Ballynahinch Baptist Church
* Banbridge Baptist Church
* Bellaghy Baptist Church
* Bethany Baptist Church
* Bloomfield Baptist Church (Belfast)
* Calvary Baptist Church (Belfast)
* Carndaisy Baptist Church
* Carr Baptist Church
* Carrickfergus Baptist Church
* Carrickmacross Baptist Church (Co. Monaghan)
* Carrigaline Baptist Church
* Carryduff Baptist Church
* Castlederg Baptist Church
* Castlereagh Baptist Church
* Cavan Baptist Church
* Central Craigavon Baptist Church
* Clady Water Baptist Church (Templepatrick/Dunadry area)
* Cliftonpark Avenue Baptist Church (Belfast)
* Coagh Baptist Church (Co. Tyrone)
* Coleraine Baptist Church
* Comber Baptist Church
* Cookstown Baptist Church
* Baptist Church
* Cregagh Baptist Church
* Crumlin Baptist Church
* Donaghadee Baptist Church
* Douglas Baptist Church (Cork)
* Downpatrick Baptist Church
* Dromore Baptist Church (Co. Down)
* Dunamanagh Baptist Church
* Dundalk Baptist Church
* Dundonald Baptist Church
* Dungannon Baptist Church
* Dunseverick Baptist Church
* East End Baptist Church (Belfast)
* Emmanuel Baptist Church (Lisburn)
* Enniskillen Baptist Church
* Finaghy Baptist Church
* Gilnahirk Baptist Church
* Glenarm Baptist Church
* Glengormley Baptist Church
* Gortmerron Baptist Church
* Grace Baptist Church
* Grace Bible Fellowship
* Grange Baptist Church
* Great Victoria Street Baptist Church
* Greenisland Baptist Church
* Grosvenor Road Baptist Church
* Grove Baptist Church
* Hamilton Road Baptist Church
* Jamestown Road Baptist Church
* Kilkeel Baptist Church
* Killicomaine Baptist Church
* Killyleagh Baptist Church
* Kilrea Baptist Church
* Knockconny Baptist Church
* Lambeg Baptist Church
* Lanntara Baptist Church
* Larne Baptist Church
* Lee Valley Bible Church
* Letterkenny Baptist Church
* Limavady Baptist Church
* Limerick Baptist Church
* Lisburn Baptist Church
* Lisnagleer Baptist Church
* Living Hope Church (Trim Co Meath)
* Londonderry Baptist Church
* Lurgan Baptist Church
* Magherafelt Baptist Church
* Midleton Baptist Church
* Millisle Baptist Church
* Milltown Baptist Church (Belfast)
* Moira Baptist Church
* Monkstown Baptist Church (Newtownabbey)
* Mountpottinger Baptist Church
* Mullaghmeen Baptist Church Enniskillen, Co. Fermanagh
* Newcastle Baptist Church
* Newry Baptist Church
* Newtownards Baptist Church
* Newtownbreda Baptist Church (Belfast)
* Omagh Baptist Church
* Orangefield Baptist Church (Belfast)
* Portadown Baptist Church
* Portrush Baptist Church
* Portstewart Baptist Church
* Poyntzpass Baptist Church
* Rathcoole Baptist Church
* Rathfriland Baptist Church
* Saintfield Baptist Church
* Shankill Baptist Church (Belfast)
* Sion Mills Baptist Church
* Sligo Baptist Church
* Stonepark Baptist Church (Brookeborough, Co. Fermanagh)
* Strandtown Baptist Church
* Swords Baptist Church
* Tandragee Baptist Church
* Thurles Baptist Church
* Tobermore Baptist Church
* Warrenpoint Baptist Church
* Waterford Baptist Church
* Westside Baptist Church (Bandon, Co. Cork)
* Whitehead Baptist Church
* Windsor Baptist Church
* Antrim Baptist Church (Co. Antrim)
* Antrim Road Baptist Church (Belfast) Old link
* Armagh Baptist Church (Co. Armagh)
* Balbriggan Baptist Church (Co. Dublin)
* Ballyclare Baptist Church
* Ballycrochan Baptist Church
* Ballycullen Community Church
* Ballygomartin Baptist Church
* Ballykeel Baptist Church
* Ballymena Baptist Church
* Ballymoney Baptist Church
* Ballynahinch Baptist Church
* Banbridge Baptist Church
* Bellaghy Baptist Church
* Bethany Baptist Church
* Bloomfield Baptist Church (Belfast)
* Calvary Baptist Church (Belfast)
* Carndaisy Baptist Church
* Carr Baptist Church
* Carrickfergus Baptist Church
* Carrickmacross Baptist Church (Co. Monaghan)
* Carrigaline Baptist Church
* Carryduff Baptist Church
* Castlederg Baptist Church
* Castlereagh Baptist Church
* Cavan Baptist Church
* Central Craigavon Baptist Church
* Clady Water Baptist Church (Templepatrick/Dunadry area)
* Cliftonpark Avenue Baptist Church (Belfast)
* Coagh Baptist Church (Co. Tyrone)
* Coleraine Baptist Church
* Comber Baptist Church
* Cookstown Baptist Church
* Baptist Church
* Cregagh Baptist Church
* Crumlin Baptist Church
* Donaghadee Baptist Church
* Douglas Baptist Church (Cork)
* Downpatrick Baptist Church
* Dromore Baptist Church (Co. Down)
* Dunamanagh Baptist Church
* Dundalk Baptist Church
* Dundonald Baptist Church
* Dungannon Baptist Church
* Dunseverick Baptist Church
* East End Baptist Church (Belfast)
* Emmanuel Baptist Church (Lisburn)
* Enniskillen Baptist Church
* Finaghy Baptist Church
* Gilnahirk Baptist Church
* Glenarm Baptist Church
* Glengormley Baptist Church
* Gortmerron Baptist Church
* Grace Baptist Church
* Grace Bible Fellowship
* Grange Baptist Church
* Great Victoria Street Baptist Church
* Greenisland Baptist Church
* Grosvenor Road Baptist Church
* Grove Baptist Church
* Hamilton Road Baptist Church
* Jamestown Road Baptist Church
* Kilkeel Baptist Church
* Killicomaine Baptist Church
* Killyleagh Baptist Church
* Kilrea Baptist Church
* Knockconny Baptist Church
* Lambeg Baptist Church
* Lanntara Baptist Church
* Larne Baptist Church
* Lee Valley Bible Church
* Letterkenny Baptist Church
* Limavady Baptist Church
* Limerick Baptist Church
* Lisburn Baptist Church
* Lisnagleer Baptist Church
* Living Hope Church (Trim Co Meath)
* Londonderry Baptist Church
* Lurgan Baptist Church
* Magherafelt Baptist Church
* Midleton Baptist Church
* Millisle Baptist Church
* Milltown Baptist Church (Belfast)
* Moira Baptist Church
* Monkstown Baptist Church (Newtownabbey)
* Mountpottinger Baptist Church
* Mullaghmeen Baptist Church Enniskillen, Co. Fermanagh
* Newcastle Baptist Church
* Newry Baptist Church
* Newtownards Baptist Church
* Newtownbreda Baptist Church (Belfast)
* Omagh Baptist Church
* Orangefield Baptist Church (Belfast)
* Portadown Baptist Church
* Portrush Baptist Church
* Portstewart Baptist Church
* Poyntzpass Baptist Church
* Rathcoole Baptist Church
* Rathfriland Baptist Church
* Saintfield Baptist Church
* Shankill Baptist Church (Belfast)
* Sion Mills Baptist Church
* Sligo Baptist Church
* Stonepark Baptist Church (Brookeborough, Co. Fermanagh)
* Strandtown Baptist Church
* Swords Baptist Church
* Tandragee Baptist Church
* Thurles Baptist Church
* Tobermore Baptist Church
* Warrenpoint Baptist Church
* Waterford Baptist Church
* Westside Baptist Church (Bandon, Co. Cork)
* Whitehead Baptist Church
* Windsor Baptist Church
Erin Hay (born November 25, 1970) is an American country music singer.
Background
Erin was born and raised in Southern California. Born to Edward (who died from cancer when Erin was six years old) and Patricia Hay on November 25, 1970, she attended Los Amigos High School. She was exposed to all kinds of music growing up, from her mother's Frank Sinatra, Rosemary Clooney and Judy Garland albums to her two older brothers (Joe and Ken) playing Rock and Roll to her Dad's favorite, Marty Robbins. But at age seven, when Erin heard Dolly Parton sing for the first time, her love and admiration for traditional Country Music began to grow.<ref nameFreespace.Virgin /> She discovered Loretta Lynn after the film Coal Miner's Daughter came out and soon after discovered Tammy Wynette. These great ladies, along with the likes of George Jones, Jack Greene and Roy Acuff, became her influences, and it was through them that Erin was introduced to stories of Nashville and the Grand Ole Opry. She quickly took to the music and to the tradition. This is what she loves to sing.<ref nameFreespace.Virgin />
College years
In 1987, Erin entered the Fountain Valley Jr. Miss Pageant and won the Performing Arts Award for performing a comedic monologue from Lily Tomlin's one woman show, "The Search for Signs of Intelligent Life in the Universe." Erin had plans of attending the UCLA Department of Theater. She had aspirations of following in the footsteps of her two other idols, Lucille Ball and Carol Burnett. This, of course, never happened.<ref nameFreespace.Virgin /> While attending college in California, Erin realized she did not take the acting craft as seriously as everyone else did. What she did take seriously was her music. The real turning point came after a visit backstage at the Grand Ole Opry and a meeting with Roy Acuff.<ref nameFreespace.Virgin />
Move to Nashville
Erin moved to Nashville in 1991 with her mother to attend Belmont University as a Music Business major. Since the move, she has interned at RCA Records and Sony Music, recorded many demos for Nashville songwriters and performed at many Nashville clubs. Erin recorded her first independent album in 1992 with the help of producer and songwriter, Lonnie Ratliff. It was a cassette tape compiled mostly of demo recordings and included a song called "Somebody's Angel," which she later re-recorded. Erin graduated from Belmont in 1995 and was hired by a film production company in Nashville, working with such artists as Garth Brooks, Faith Hill and Janet Jackson<ref name=Freespace.Virgin /> in the behind the scenes aspects of live concert TV production and music videos, eventually venturing into the freelance film production world.
Music
But Erin's first love was still her music. She completed her second independent album, Honky Tonk Heaven,<ref name=Freespace.Virgin /> in October 2000. It received great reviews around the world and was a No. 6 import CD in the UK in April 2000. Erin released her third independent album, The Circle, in 2001-fourteen cuts of the music she loves, music she hopes would have made Mr. Acuff proud. She is proud to have two duets on that album with Grand Ole Opry stars Ernie Ashworth ("Gotta Travel On") and Jack Greene (Tommy Collins' song, "High On A Hilltop.") She is now working with the Nashville bases producer Lonnie Ratliff
Praise for Hay
Erin is also very proud of the liner note her idol, Loretta Lynn, graced her with for the project:
"Erin is a great singer. Maybe the Opry will find that out someday. I love her singing."
Dolly Parton also graced Erin with a treasured quote about the Parton-penned song she recorded on The Circle, "Tomorrow Is Forever:" <ref name=Freespace.Virgin />
"I am so proud of the record Erin did on "Tomorrow Is Forever." I think she did a beautiful job. It’s always been one of my favorite songs; and it touched me that it was someone else’s favorite as well. It’s old, but so am I! Hopefully, songs live forever. It’s always nice to have new, young artists record them."
More albums
The Circle album became a No. 3 import CD in the UK in February 2002. In August 2004, she got hired on at a business management company in Nashville, working with such clients as Blake Shelton and Craig Morgan. In 2005, she released her 4th album titled Somebody's Angel, which was also very well received. One of the singles off the album, a song written by Bill Jackson called "The Tree," gave Erin her biggest overseas chart success to date. Erin released her 5th album in 2006, a collection of songs from her 3 previous albums and 5 cuts from an upcoming project titled Blue Country Song, due out the end of 2007.
MP3.com work
Erin also enjoyed a lot of success on mp3.com, a website that was devoted to independent artists. She has obtained a wide following in the European/overseas market (largely due to the mp3.com exposure,) being dubbed the "New Queen of the Honky Tonk Angels." Erin's song, "I Got the Blues Again," is one of the most downloaded Country songs to date on mp3.com, and it was featured in the Robert Altman/Alan Rudolph film, Trixie, in 2000. She is very grateful to the people of mp3.com and to the overseas and US disc jockeys playing her music. Erin has traveled to Denmark, Australia and Sweden to perform and is looking forward to many more performances both overseas and in the US. She is definitely having fun on her road to the Grand Ole Opry, and if Erin is destined to sing on that great stage someday, it will be the pinnacle in her singing career, not just a stepping stone.
Discography
*Somebody's Angel Cassette (1993)
*Honky Tonk Heaven (2000)
*The Circle (2001)
*Somebody's Angel (2003)
*The Collection (2006)
Background
Erin was born and raised in Southern California. Born to Edward (who died from cancer when Erin was six years old) and Patricia Hay on November 25, 1970, she attended Los Amigos High School. She was exposed to all kinds of music growing up, from her mother's Frank Sinatra, Rosemary Clooney and Judy Garland albums to her two older brothers (Joe and Ken) playing Rock and Roll to her Dad's favorite, Marty Robbins. But at age seven, when Erin heard Dolly Parton sing for the first time, her love and admiration for traditional Country Music began to grow.<ref nameFreespace.Virgin /> She discovered Loretta Lynn after the film Coal Miner's Daughter came out and soon after discovered Tammy Wynette. These great ladies, along with the likes of George Jones, Jack Greene and Roy Acuff, became her influences, and it was through them that Erin was introduced to stories of Nashville and the Grand Ole Opry. She quickly took to the music and to the tradition. This is what she loves to sing.<ref nameFreespace.Virgin />
College years
In 1987, Erin entered the Fountain Valley Jr. Miss Pageant and won the Performing Arts Award for performing a comedic monologue from Lily Tomlin's one woman show, "The Search for Signs of Intelligent Life in the Universe." Erin had plans of attending the UCLA Department of Theater. She had aspirations of following in the footsteps of her two other idols, Lucille Ball and Carol Burnett. This, of course, never happened.<ref nameFreespace.Virgin /> While attending college in California, Erin realized she did not take the acting craft as seriously as everyone else did. What she did take seriously was her music. The real turning point came after a visit backstage at the Grand Ole Opry and a meeting with Roy Acuff.<ref nameFreespace.Virgin />
Move to Nashville
Erin moved to Nashville in 1991 with her mother to attend Belmont University as a Music Business major. Since the move, she has interned at RCA Records and Sony Music, recorded many demos for Nashville songwriters and performed at many Nashville clubs. Erin recorded her first independent album in 1992 with the help of producer and songwriter, Lonnie Ratliff. It was a cassette tape compiled mostly of demo recordings and included a song called "Somebody's Angel," which she later re-recorded. Erin graduated from Belmont in 1995 and was hired by a film production company in Nashville, working with such artists as Garth Brooks, Faith Hill and Janet Jackson<ref name=Freespace.Virgin /> in the behind the scenes aspects of live concert TV production and music videos, eventually venturing into the freelance film production world.
Music
But Erin's first love was still her music. She completed her second independent album, Honky Tonk Heaven,<ref name=Freespace.Virgin /> in October 2000. It received great reviews around the world and was a No. 6 import CD in the UK in April 2000. Erin released her third independent album, The Circle, in 2001-fourteen cuts of the music she loves, music she hopes would have made Mr. Acuff proud. She is proud to have two duets on that album with Grand Ole Opry stars Ernie Ashworth ("Gotta Travel On") and Jack Greene (Tommy Collins' song, "High On A Hilltop.") She is now working with the Nashville bases producer Lonnie Ratliff
Praise for Hay
Erin is also very proud of the liner note her idol, Loretta Lynn, graced her with for the project:
"Erin is a great singer. Maybe the Opry will find that out someday. I love her singing."
Dolly Parton also graced Erin with a treasured quote about the Parton-penned song she recorded on The Circle, "Tomorrow Is Forever:" <ref name=Freespace.Virgin />
"I am so proud of the record Erin did on "Tomorrow Is Forever." I think she did a beautiful job. It’s always been one of my favorite songs; and it touched me that it was someone else’s favorite as well. It’s old, but so am I! Hopefully, songs live forever. It’s always nice to have new, young artists record them."
More albums
The Circle album became a No. 3 import CD in the UK in February 2002. In August 2004, she got hired on at a business management company in Nashville, working with such clients as Blake Shelton and Craig Morgan. In 2005, she released her 4th album titled Somebody's Angel, which was also very well received. One of the singles off the album, a song written by Bill Jackson called "The Tree," gave Erin her biggest overseas chart success to date. Erin released her 5th album in 2006, a collection of songs from her 3 previous albums and 5 cuts from an upcoming project titled Blue Country Song, due out the end of 2007.
MP3.com work
Erin also enjoyed a lot of success on mp3.com, a website that was devoted to independent artists. She has obtained a wide following in the European/overseas market (largely due to the mp3.com exposure,) being dubbed the "New Queen of the Honky Tonk Angels." Erin's song, "I Got the Blues Again," is one of the most downloaded Country songs to date on mp3.com, and it was featured in the Robert Altman/Alan Rudolph film, Trixie, in 2000. She is very grateful to the people of mp3.com and to the overseas and US disc jockeys playing her music. Erin has traveled to Denmark, Australia and Sweden to perform and is looking forward to many more performances both overseas and in the US. She is definitely having fun on her road to the Grand Ole Opry, and if Erin is destined to sing on that great stage someday, it will be the pinnacle in her singing career, not just a stepping stone.
Discography
*Somebody's Angel Cassette (1993)
*Honky Tonk Heaven (2000)
*The Circle (2001)
*Somebody's Angel (2003)
*The Collection (2006)
History of the Denali Ski Patrol
The Denali Patrol had it roots in the Anchorage Ski Club and Arctic Valley (formerly known as Alpenglow). These began back in 1937 when the Anchorage Ski Club (ASC) was formed. Before and after the Arctic Valley Road was put in by the US Army, between 1944-1945, ASC and the Army built and maintained several rope tows.
The Alaska Division of National Ski Patrol was formed in May 1953 which included the Denali and Juneau Patrols. Today there are Ski Patrols in Fairbanks, Anchorage, Girdwood, Cordova, and Juneau. With members from the Juneau patrol and others from outside the state, Denali patrolled the 1963 National Alpine Ski Championships at Mt. Alyeska. The Denali Ski Patrol, the oldest patrol in the Anchorage area, later split to form the Sourdoughs, (now Alyeska), and Hillberg patrols.
Back in 1964 Denali was the first ski patrol to win the Minnie Dole award for the second time, and during the 1970s continued to win awards nationally.
Since then the patrol has been involved in Jr. National Ski Patrol seminar, Extreme Skiing Competitions at Thompson Pass, Arctic Winter Games, Alaska Mountain Rescue Convention, mountain runs, and just patrolling on the weekends.
The Denali Patrol had it roots in the Anchorage Ski Club and Arctic Valley (formerly known as Alpenglow). These began back in 1937 when the Anchorage Ski Club (ASC) was formed. Before and after the Arctic Valley Road was put in by the US Army, between 1944-1945, ASC and the Army built and maintained several rope tows.
The Alaska Division of National Ski Patrol was formed in May 1953 which included the Denali and Juneau Patrols. Today there are Ski Patrols in Fairbanks, Anchorage, Girdwood, Cordova, and Juneau. With members from the Juneau patrol and others from outside the state, Denali patrolled the 1963 National Alpine Ski Championships at Mt. Alyeska. The Denali Ski Patrol, the oldest patrol in the Anchorage area, later split to form the Sourdoughs, (now Alyeska), and Hillberg patrols.
Back in 1964 Denali was the first ski patrol to win the Minnie Dole award for the second time, and during the 1970s continued to win awards nationally.
Since then the patrol has been involved in Jr. National Ski Patrol seminar, Extreme Skiing Competitions at Thompson Pass, Arctic Winter Games, Alaska Mountain Rescue Convention, mountain runs, and just patrolling on the weekends.
Lesa Wilson is an American actress, singer, model and beauty pageant titleholder. She appeared on American Idol in 2004, was Miss Georgia USA in 2006, and was second runner-up in the competition for Miss USA 2006. She portrayed the superhero Rhea Jones (a.k.a. Lodestone) in the web television series Doom Patrol in 2019. Stay tuned for her latest work portraying Bobbie Burman in StarGirl (CW 2020) and Alexandra Stone in Steven Spielberg's "Amazing Stories" set to release late 2020.
Biography
Wilson graduated from Armuchee High School in Rome, Georgia, in 1998 and obtained a diploma in radio and television broadcasting from Coosa Valley Technical High School.
Wilson auditioned for the third season of American Idol in 2004 and made it to the semi-finals. She sang Melissa Etheridge's "Come to My Window" and was eliminated.
Wilson won the 2006 Miss Georgia USA title at the state pageant in Newnan, Georgia. It was her first attempt at the title, although she had competed in other competitions such as Hawaiian Tropic and Venus Swimwear. She then represented Georgia in the Miss USA 2006 pageant in Baltimore, Maryland, in April 2006 and was second runner-up. Wilson passed on her crown to 2007 Miss Georgia USA Brittany Swann, who had placed third runner-up to Wilson in the 2006 pageant.
She appeared in the web television series Doom Patrol in 2019 as the superhero Rhea Jones (a.k.a. Lodestone), and is the first actress who has portrayed the character in a live adaptation.
Biography
Wilson graduated from Armuchee High School in Rome, Georgia, in 1998 and obtained a diploma in radio and television broadcasting from Coosa Valley Technical High School.
Wilson auditioned for the third season of American Idol in 2004 and made it to the semi-finals. She sang Melissa Etheridge's "Come to My Window" and was eliminated.
Wilson won the 2006 Miss Georgia USA title at the state pageant in Newnan, Georgia. It was her first attempt at the title, although she had competed in other competitions such as Hawaiian Tropic and Venus Swimwear. She then represented Georgia in the Miss USA 2006 pageant in Baltimore, Maryland, in April 2006 and was second runner-up. Wilson passed on her crown to 2007 Miss Georgia USA Brittany Swann, who had placed third runner-up to Wilson in the 2006 pageant.
She appeared in the web television series Doom Patrol in 2019 as the superhero Rhea Jones (a.k.a. Lodestone), and is the first actress who has portrayed the character in a live adaptation.