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J.J. Haley

Jesse James Haley (1851–1924) was an American preacher and evangelist within the Disciples of Christ, known for his extensive missionary work across the United States, Australia, New Zealand, and England. Born in Rockcastle County, Kentucky, he was raised on a farm near Winchester in Clark County, blending mountain roots with Bluegrass upbringing. Educated at Kentucky University and North Western Christian University (now Butler University), where he earned an M.A., Haley began his ministry in 1873 in Mississippi. In 1874, he married Lizzie Clark and soon after embarked for Australia, arriving in Sydney to preach with moderate success for over two years before moving to Dunedin, New Zealand, and later Melbourne, where he served the influential Lygon Street Church for six years, arguably his most impactful work. Returning to the U.S. in 1885, Haley preached in San Francisco, Midway, Kentucky, and St. Louis, where he also engaged in editorial work. From 1890 to 1895, he ministered in England under the Foreign Christian Missionary Society, followed by a successful nine-year pastorate in Cynthiana, Kentucky, where a new stone church was built. His travels broadened his perspective, yet he remained anchored to the Restoration Movement’s core principles, advocating Christian unity and biblical authority. A thinker rather than a showman, Haley’s preaching resonated with thoughtful audiences, and his legacy was honored in 1915 when Melbourne’s church invited him back for their jubilee celebration. He died in 1924, leaving a reputation as an evangelical, progressive preacher with a global reach and deep denominational loyalty.