Margaret Peoples's career as a missionary began as a single woman at the age of twenty two. Her first appointment was to Moshiland, Ouagadougou (now known as Burkina Faso). To get to the region, she traveled through
Sierra Leone with three other missionaries—a married couple with the surname Leeper, and a woman, Jenny Farnsworth. The travel was difficult and Margaret caught a fever that lasted for several days. In 1921 she arrived in Mossi Land with another group of missionaries that included another single woman along with two married women and their spouses, Wilbur Taylor and Harry Wright. Margaret was younger than most missionaries that she met on her first trip to Africa. She had an adventurous personality and was quick to try new things. When offered a choice between a bicycle and a horse for travel, she chose an untrained horse even though she had never ridden one before. Margaret was also eager to learn new languages and customs. While learning the Mossi language, Mooré, Margaret developed an alphabet for the language and translated the
Gospel of Mark. She also wrote stories in Mooré and used them to teach Mossi women to read. Margaret Peoples is the first known Western person to be fluent in Mooré. In 1925, Peoples returned to the United States for a three month break. She was ordained during this break by her pastor in Philadelphia, E.S. Williams. On her way back to Africa she stopped in
France for nine months to learn French. When she returned to Africa, she married her husband, W. Lloyd Shirer, and appended his last name after hers. Her son and daughter were born in Africa while she was working as a missionary and were left in the care of local women when she went on preaching tours. Peoples Shirer also home schooled the children during this time. However, by the mid-1930s the children were sent to live with an uncle in the United States. In 1931, Margaret and her husband became the first Pentecostal missionaries to Ghana. The couple also opened the first Assemblies of God mission station in Ghana in the late 1930s and used it as a base for mission trips in Nigeria. In 1939, a leader of a church in
Port Harcourt, Nigeria, Augustus Wogu, affiliated his congregation with the Assemblies of God following the work of the Margaret and her husband. The church in Port Harcourt marked the beginning of the Assemblies of God in Nigeria. As a missionary, Peoples Shirer participated in the destruction of local "fetish objects" and encouraged her converts to convert others to Pentecostal Christianity. Peoples Shirer, like many Assemblies of God missionaries at the time, considered
Catholics to be in need of salvation and confronted and argued with Catholics on the mission field. While on a furlough in the United States in the mid-1940s, Margaret's husband had an affair. As a result, the couple lost the support of the Assemblies of God for their missions work. Nonetheless, the couple stayed together and returned to Africa in 1947. The couple took jobs with the support of the governments of Ghana and Congo. In the late 1960s, the couple, still without the support of the Assemblies of God, worked at a Bible college in Haiti. In Haiti, Margaret's husband also worked for a literacy program sponsored by the Haitian government. Margaret's husband died in 1972 and she returned to the United States. In the States, she continued to preach and hold meetings in Assemblies of God churches located in the Springfield, Missouri area. She also worked to recruit future missionaries. Margaret Peoples Shirer died of a stroke on September 25, 1983. == Influence ==