1media/goldhar-ms0020-pt2-006-058-01_thumb.jpg2022-09-22T19:50:04-07:00Dawn Schmitz058a3a82673b345aeb84d7969cae24e0a5c62dd1413247Letter in which Billy Graham tells Harry Golden he is a good friend.Short note on Billy Graham letterhead, signed "Billy." Includes the sentence: "You too are a good friend -- and I love you very much!"plain2024-10-02T11:13:52-07:00Harry Golden Papers MS0020, J. Murrey Atkins Library, The University of North Carolina at Charlotte1973textThis Item is protected by copyright and/or related rights. You are free to use this Item in any way that is permitted by the copyright and related rights legislation that applies to your use. For other uses you need to obtain permission from the rights-holder(s). If you have additional information about any of the materials in this collection, or if you believe that you own the copyright, please contact us and include a specific description of the material in question.Graham, Billy, 1918-2018Dawn Schmitz058a3a82673b345aeb84d7969cae24e0a5c62dd1
This page is referenced by:
12022-09-19T17:14:59-07:00The Rev. Billy Graham7plain2024-10-29T14:33:32-07:00Billy Graham was already a renowned evangelist when he met Golden in the 1950s. They shared a warm correspondence and collaborated on behind-the-scenes efforts to free organizer Boyd E. Payton of the Textile Workers Union of America who was charged in an alleged plot to dynamite a power station and mill buildings during a 1958 strike by workers of the Harriet & Henderson Cotton Mills. Golden also arranged for Graham to preach at Belmont Abbey in Belmont, NC, in 1963, reportedly marking the first time that the Baptist minister had been invited to speak from the pulpit of a Roman Catholic institution.