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Stanley H. Frodsham

Stanley Howard Frodsham (1882–1969). Born in 1882 in Bournemouth, England, to a Congregational Christian family, Stanley H. Frodsham became a pivotal figure in the early Pentecostal movement as a pastor, editor, and author. Inspired by Hudson Taylor’s biography as a young man, he converted at a London YMCA, quitting smoking and swearing, and pursued faith-driven work. After serving as a YMCA secretary in Johannesburg, South Africa, in 1906, he visited Canada, returning to England in 1908 to receive the baptism in the Holy Spirit at Alexander Boddy’s Sunderland revival, speaking in tongues. That year, he launched Victory, a Pentecostal newsletter, and joined Bournemouth’s first Pentecostal church. In 1910, he married Alice Rowlands in Canada, with Smith Wigglesworth officiating, and they settled in the U.S. by 1916, where Frodsham pastored with the Assemblies of God (AOG). Elected AOG general secretary in 1916 and editor of The Pentecostal Evangel in 1921, he shaped Pentecostal literature for nearly 30 years, writing 15 books, including With Signs Following (1926), Ever Increasing Faith (1924, compiling Wigglesworth’s sermons), and Smith Wigglesworth: Apostle of Faith (1948). His involvement in the controversial Latter Rain Movement in the 1940s led to tensions with the AOG, prompting his 1949 retirement and resignation from their ministerial list, though he continued preaching in Latter Rain circles, teaching at Elim Bible Institute. Frodsham died in 1969, leaving a legacy as “God’s prophet with a pen.” He said, “The mightiest factor in this great Pentecostal Revival has been the wonderful missionary spirit that has characterized it.”