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Hurley Harlan Dunn
1894-1981

Biographical Sketch On The Life Of Hurley
Harlan Dunn
Hurley
Harlan Dunn was born April 6, 1894, in Sebastian County, near
Greenwood, Arkansas. He was the son of Franklin Wade and Martha Rebekah (Posey) Dunn. He was the tenth child born to his parents.
Dunn's father was also a highly respected gospel preacher and farmer
for many years in western Arkansas.
On September 7, 1913, Hurley married Miss Lundy
Beatrice Floyd. To this union five girls were born: Mildred,
Lucille, Geneva, Mescal and Nyna.
Dunn attended the rural schools of Sebastian County and
had some credit from Arkansas State Teachers College in Conway,
Arkansas.
He began preaching in 1933 at Lone Star congregation
near Greenwood. He did evangelistic work entirely. As he said, "I
preached in meetings from the gently lapping shores of the Pacific
Ocean and eastward almost to the crashing waves of the Atlantic;
from the Gulf of Mexico northward to Canada, but not beyond the
borders of our nation." Dunn preached the gospel in 14 States.
He lived practically all of his life in Sebastian
County and was extremely active in community affairs, in addition to
his zeal for preaching the gospel. He served on the Greenwood,
Arkansas, School Board for 25 years.
Dunn had one debate with a Freewill Baptist preacher,
W. A. Hearon, at a mission point in Southwest Arkansas. Later he
wrote of this debate, "I stayed on and preached in the evenings for
ten days. The Lord blessed our efforts there, for there were only
two members of Mr. Hearon's congregation left. I was so elated that
I wanted to debate every week following. However, I soon realized it
would not have been a good decision. I was considered a hard
preacher, and debating would have made me more so.
Brother Warlick,
Brother Nichol, and our other great debaters did not allow their
debates to affect their manner of preaching."
Through the years Dunn collected an enviable library,
including some rare Restoration volumes, and he acquired a
remarkably thorough knowledge of the Bible. He wrote articles for
several gospel papers and a book of sermons with autobiography,
"From Rages To Riches," published by the Gospel Light, Delight,
Arkansas. Through independent study he became a powerful Bible
preacher. He was self-educated, self motivated, and self supported;
a farmer, school teacher, and community leader.
From the age of eight to fourteen, Dunn attended
country schools. At the age of 15, he took the prescribed
examination and received a second-grade license to teach in one-room
schools, which at that time included grades one through eight. For
several years he taught and farmed, while always studying his Bible.
He carried a New Testament and memorized much of it while plowing.
He saw the value of education and served on the Greenwood, Arkansas,
school board.
When he was sixteen he was baptized by Joe Mays, a part
Cherokee. From that time Dunn determined to preach. It was not until
1933, when he was 39, with only two girls still at home, that he was
to begin evangelistic work. Then for 40 years he preached in
meetings in Arkansas and other States, from coast to coast,
baptizing hundreds of people. His audiences varied as he preached in
tabernacles, under brush arbors, country school houses, in towns,
cities, and hamlets. Many calls were for mission meetings, and his
wife stayed with the farm to help pay his expenses. He never
complained or asked for help. To the end of his life he said, "The
Lord has been so good to me. How can I ever thank Him enough."
In 1941, he and Lundy were forced to sell their farm
near Greenwood to the Government to become a part of Fort Chaffee.
They bought another farm in the Dayton community, five miles from
Huntington, where they lived for 35 years and greatly strengthened
the church in that area. They were largely responsible for the
erection of a modern church building at Dayton and the training of
several young preachers.
Dunn died December 20, 1981, in Little Rock, Arkansas.
He was survived by his widow, Lundy B. Dunn and by four daughters:
Mildred Ralston, Geneva Guthrie, Mescal Johnson, and Nyna Keeton.
One daughter, Lucille Andrews, preceded her father in death. He was
also survived by one sister, Mrs. J. B. Waters of Huntington,
Arkansas; seven grandchildren and 14 great-grandchildren.
Memorial services were conducted in Little Rock,
Arkansas, by John Gipson and Danny Burleson of the Sixth and Izard
Church of Christ, and by Larry Bridges, preacher for the Church of
Christ in Dayton, Arkansas. Burial was in Little Rock in Forest
Hills Memorial Park.
-In Memoriam, Gussie Lambert, pages
80-82

Directions To The
Grave Of Hurley H. Dunn
H.H. Dunn is
buried in Little Rock, Arkansas. In Southeast Little Rock take I-30
south of the I-430 Interchange and take the first exit (129 or 128).
and go west on Otter Creek East Blvd. Go to the traffic light (Hwy.
5) and turn left. The numbers are very tricky here, but go south on
Hwy. 5 for about a mile until you cross the Saline County line. Just
a little further and you will come to the Forest Hills Memorial Park. The address
is 10201 Highway 5 North, Little Rock, Arkansas, 72209. Office
Phone:501-455-1067. You will pull in to the cemetery on the right,
across from the funeral home. Enter through the gates and bear around to your first
left. Garden Of The Pines will be on your right. Go toward the
middle of the section and stop your car. Go in four plots and look
for the grave marker GUIN. The Dunn plot is just behind. The grave
says his name was Hurley H. Dunn, but this is a mistake. His name
was Hurley Harlan Dunn.
GPS Coordinates
N34º 38' 809" x W 92º 26' 840"
Facing West
Section 1 Lot 435 Space 4






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