Skip to main content

Box 28

 Container

Contains 84 Results:

Photocopy of a manuscript "Yours In the Bonds of Love", written by Clara Sargent Shepherd and George W. Shepherd, foreword written by Shirley Brower Shepherd, October 8, 1965

 File — Box: 28, Folder: 15
Identifier: Series 16
Scope and Contents note From the Series:

Clara Sargent Shepherd was born in St. Paul Minnesota in 1889. She traveled to China in 1919, living in Nanking, Kuling, and Peking.

Dates: October 8, 1965

Map of China showing the distribution of the Missionary body, 1923

 File — Box: 28, Folder: 11
Identifier: Sub-series 10.7
Scope and Contents note From the Series: Jean Lingle was born on March 4, 1868 in Cincinnati, Ohio. As a newlywed, she moved to China with her husband, Rev. William H. Lingle in 1889. The Lingles spent the next 43 years working as Presbyterian missionaries and educators in China. For a time Mrs. Lingle worked as the principle of the Fuhsiang High School for Girls.In 1932 Mr. and Mrs. Lingle moved to Pasadena, California. They had two daughters, Mrs. Margaret Lingle Amos and Mrs. Dorothea Lingle Brannon. Mrs. Lingle died...
Dates: 1923

Copy of the Report of the Lydia Lord Davis School for Girls, Fenchow, Shansi, 1921

 File — Box: 28, Folder: 3
Identifier: Series 5
Scope and Contents of the Collection From the Collection: The materials that comprise the American Missionaries and Educators in China collection originated from Claremont Graduate School's Oral History Program. In 1969 the China Missionaries Project began, creating oral histories for 44 individuals who served as missionaries or educators in China. During the course of this project several of the missionaries and educators donated their papers to Honnold/Mudd Library Special Collections.The collection contains many different types of...
Dates: 1921

Report of the Fenchow Girls' School, 1918

 File — Box: 28, Folder: 3
Identifier: Series 5
Scope and Contents of the Collection From the Collection: The materials that comprise the American Missionaries and Educators in China collection originated from Claremont Graduate School's Oral History Program. In 1969 the China Missionaries Project began, creating oral histories for 44 individuals who served as missionaries or educators in China. During the course of this project several of the missionaries and educators donated their papers to Honnold/Mudd Library Special Collections.The collection contains many different types of...
Dates: 1918

Copy of detailed outline of events from the Japanese occupation, September 27 to May 27-30, 1944

 File — Box: 28, Folder: 4
Identifier: Series 6
Scope and Contents note From the Series: Lyda Suydam Houston was born in Shanghai, China in 1891. Fukien Province from 1924 until 1950 except for furlough periods. She served as a teacher and principal, did Christian homework with women and children, refugeed with the school, was interned by the Japanese from September, 1944, to May, 1945, under a kind of house arrest. From 1948 until 1950 she established neighborhood work in a flooded district of Foochow. In 1950 she was ordered to leave China by the Communists.Excerpted...
Dates: September 27 to May 27-30, 1944

Copy of rough draft of personal narrative with notations, September 24, 1944

 File — Box: 28, Folder: 4
Identifier: Series 6
Scope and Contents note From the Series: Lyda Suydam Houston was born in Shanghai, China in 1891. Fukien Province from 1924 until 1950 except for furlough periods. She served as a teacher and principal, did Christian homework with women and children, refugeed with the school, was interned by the Japanese from September, 1944, to May, 1945, under a kind of house arrest. From 1948 until 1950 she established neighborhood work in a flooded district of Foochow. In 1950 she was ordered to leave China by the Communists.Excerpted...
Dates: September 24, 1944

Copy of letter from Houston to family, May 27, 1945

 File — Box: 28, Folder: 4
Identifier: Series 6
Scope and Contents note From the Series: Lyda Suydam Houston was born in Shanghai, China in 1891. Fukien Province from 1924 until 1950 except for furlough periods. She served as a teacher and principal, did Christian homework with women and children, refugeed with the school, was interned by the Japanese from September, 1944, to May, 1945, under a kind of house arrest. From 1948 until 1950 she established neighborhood work in a flooded district of Foochow. In 1950 she was ordered to leave China by the Communists.Excerpted...
Dates: May 27, 1945

Letter from Houston, Diongloh, Fukien, China to Paul, November 5, 1937

 File — Box: 28, Folder: 5
Identifier: Series 6
Scope and Contents note From the Series: Lyda Suydam Houston was born in Shanghai, China in 1891. Fukien Province from 1924 until 1950 except for furlough periods. She served as a teacher and principal, did Christian homework with women and children, refugeed with the school, was interned by the Japanese from September, 1944, to May, 1945, under a kind of house arrest. From 1948 until 1950 she established neighborhood work in a flooded district of Foochow. In 1950 she was ordered to leave China by the Communists.Excerpted...
Dates: November 5, 1937

Letter from Houston, Diongloh, Fukien, China to friends, December 28, 1932

 File — Box: 28, Folder: 5
Identifier: Series 6
Scope and Contents note From the Series: Lyda Suydam Houston was born in Shanghai, China in 1891. Fukien Province from 1924 until 1950 except for furlough periods. She served as a teacher and principal, did Christian homework with women and children, refugeed with the school, was interned by the Japanese from September, 1944, to May, 1945, under a kind of house arrest. From 1948 until 1950 she established neighborhood work in a flooded district of Foochow. In 1950 she was ordered to leave China by the Communists.Excerpted...
Dates: December 28, 1932

Poem "A Soliloquy on Wings" written in Diongloh, Fukien, 1937

 File — Box: 28, Folder: 5
Identifier: Series 6
Scope and Contents note From the Series: Lyda Suydam Houston was born in Shanghai, China in 1891. Fukien Province from 1924 until 1950 except for furlough periods. She served as a teacher and principal, did Christian homework with women and children, refugeed with the school, was interned by the Japanese from September, 1944, to May, 1945, under a kind of house arrest. From 1948 until 1950 she established neighborhood work in a flooded district of Foochow. In 1950 she was ordered to leave China by the Communists.Excerpted...
Dates: 1937