Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. Blessitt with his cross in St Peter’s Square, Rome, December 1979 - Edoardo Fornaciari/Getty Images Arthur Blessitt, who has died ...
Arthur Blessitt, a onetime street preacher in Los Angeles who set off on a cross-country trek on Christmas Day in 1969 hauling a 12-foot cross to begin what became a more than 43,000-mile pilgrimage ...
Arthur Blessitt, whose fervent efforts to convert the hippies, freaks and addicts along Hollywood's Sunset Strip were just a prelude to his decision to carry a 110-pound wooden cross from Los Angeles ...
NEW YORK (Hollywood Reporter) - Of the many wacky entries in the Guinness Book of World Records, one of the most intriguing is the one concerning the "world's longest walk." The record belongs to ...
Of the many wacky entries in the Guinness Book of World Records, one of the most intriguing is the one concerning the "world's longest walk." The record belongs to Arthur Blessitt, who has managed to ...
In 1968 Arthur Blessitt picked up a cross. Today, forty years later, Arthur has been on every continent and island nation with his twelve-foot cross, encountering people from diverse backgrounds, ...
Arthur Blessitt’s deep belief and faith in the salvation of Jesus Christ via death on the cross, led him to first preach on the streets of Los Angeles in the 1960s and then to carry a wooden cross to ...
Arthur Blessitt is a Mississippi-born evangelist who wanders the globe toting a 12-foot wooden cross on his shoulder. He's been doing it for 40 years, starting in Los Angeles, where he had a Sunset ...
A one-week showing of "The Cross: The Arthur Blessitt Story" begins today at the AMC Loews Foothills Theatre, 7401 N. La Cholla Blvd. Blessitt's story begins in Los Angeles in the 1960s, when he ...
Arthur Blessitt, right, is a Mississippi-born evangelist who wanders the globe toting a 12-foot wooden cross on his shoulder. He's been doing it for 40 years, starting in Los Angeles where he had a ...
Imagine what an inquisitive filmmaker like Errol Morris or Werner Herzog could have done with the peculiar true-life story of Los Angeles evangelist Arthur Blessitt, the self-proclaimed “Minister of ...