The first non-Protestant Christian country entered was
Russia, where an Adventist minister went in 1886. On October
20, 1890, the schooner Pitcairn was launched at San Francisco
and was soon engaged in carrying missionaries to the Pacific
Islands. Seventh-day Adventist workers first entered non-Christian
countries in 1894 -- Gold Coast (Ghana), West Africa,
and Matabeleland, South Africa. The same year saw missionaries
entering South America, and in 1896 there were representatives
in Japan. The Church now has established work in 209 countries.
The publication and distribution of literature were major
factors in the growth of the Advent movement. The Advent
Review and Sabbath Herald (now the Adventist Review),
general church paper, was launched in Paris, Maine, in
1850; the Youth's Instructor in Rochester, New York, in
1852; and the Signs of the Times in Oakland, California,
in 1874. The first denominational publishing house at
Battle Creek, Michigan, began operating in 1855 and was
duly incorporated in 1861 under the name of Seventh-day
Adventist Publishing Association.
The Health Reform Institute, later known as the Battle
Creek Sanitarium, opened its doors in 1866, and missionary
society work was organized on a statewide basis in 1870.
The first of the Church's worldwide network of schools
was established in 1872, and 1877 saw the formation of
statewide Sabbath school associations. In 1903, the denominational
headquarters was moved from Battle Creek, Michigan, to
Washington, D.C., and in 1989 to Silver Spring, Maryland,
where it continues to form the nerve center of ever-expanding
work.