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Page 17 text:
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George Pleasant Bostie, Rutherford County, 1883, Tungchow, Pochow. China. Thomas Cotton Britton. Northampton County, 1886, Central China. Carson Leunon Powell, Columbus County. 1872, Algeria Africa, took up work about 18S7. Christopher Columbus Newton. New Hanover County, 1870, Lagos, West Coast of Africa. 1SS9. Ezra Francis Tatum. Davie County. 1SS7. Central China. Francis Marion Royall. Sampson County, 1891. China: Palestine. Haifa. Thomas Lee Blalock, Mitchell County. 1S92. Central China. Thomas Jackson Hudson. Person County. 1893. China, Gospel Mission. William Elwyn Crocker. Spartanburg. South Carolina. 1S90. China. LeRoy Norcross Chappell . Wake County. 1881. Central China. Chinkiang. George Washington Green. Caldwell County. 1870. Canton. South China. Samuel Judson Porter. Columbus County. 1893. Brazil. Jesse Colman Owen. Transylvania County. 1899. Tungchow. North China. Wade Dobbin Bostie. Rutherford County. 1899, Tungchow, Pochow, China. James Monroe Justice, Henderson County, 1905. Buenos Aires. Argentine. Eugene Alfred Turner. Wake County. 1906, Y. M. C. A., China. Thomas Xeil Johnson, Tennessee, 1898, Japan; Shanghai College, China. William Carey Newton. Lagos. Africa. 1895. North China. Charles Alexander Leonard. Iredell County. 1907. China. Harbin. Manchuria. John Burder Hipps. Madison County. 1907. Shanghai College. China. Arthur Raymond Gallimore. Davidson County. 1910. South China. Gordon Poteat, Greenville. South Carolina. Central Cina. Lucius Bunyan Olive. Wake County. 1912, Central China. Albert Rutus Phillips, Stokes County, 1913, Buenos Aires, . rgentine. Victor V. McGuire, Cherokee County, 1913. South China. Canton. George Nutt Herring. M.D., Sampson, son of D. W. H.. 1913. No rth China. Gordon Rea Herring, son of D. W. H.. 1919. Central China. John Todd Anderson. M.D.. South Carolina, Central China, 1912. Clarence Dixon Boone. Haywood County. 1899. Mexico. Milton Lav Braun. Buncombe County. 1915. Kaifeng. Interior China. Charles James Fox Anderson. Virginia. 1893. Rome. Italy. Henry Hudson McMillan, Scotland County. 1908. Soochow. Central China. Lonnie Elwood Blackman. Wayne County. 1916, Central China. Julius Carlyle Powell, Duplin County, 1916, Oyo, West Coast of Africa. George William Greene, son of G. W. G., 1916. Canton, South China. Edwin McNeill Poteat. Caswell County. 1881. Shanghai College. China. Orris Golden Tillman. Florida. 1918. Burhani. Philip Ernest White, Perquimans County. 1919. Interior China. Milledge Theron Rankin. Sumter County. South Carolina. 1918, South China. Manly Whitfield Rankin, Sumter County, South Carolina. 1922, South China. Willard Voniver Nix. Henderson County. 1921. Tukuoka. Japan. Dan Thomas Hurley, Randolph County. 1921. Rumania. Frank Tennyson Neely Woodward. Davie County. 1921. South China. James Clarence Anders. M.D.. Virginia. 1922. Ogbomoso. Africa. Robert Gilmer Proctor. Guilford County. 1923. Beige Congo. Africa. Arthur Samuel Gillespie. Cleveland County. 1926. Interior China. This is indeed a noble company. Of them the following have departed this life: M. T. Yates. G. P. Bostie. W. E. Crocker. G. W. Greene. C. C. Newton. LeRoy N. Chappell. John T. Anderson. C. L. Powell. Dan T. Hurley — nine in all; leaving thirty-nine (39) still living. Some, like Leonard, are among the ablest foreign missionaries now living; Royall has preached the Gospel and baptized converts in America. Europe. Asia and Africa, even in the River Jordan. Some are at home, some in Darkest Africa; all are serving their Divine Master. G. W. Paschaix. S S I K:
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Page 16 text:
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mmmmmr?mm:.! ' mi Foreign Missionaries of Wake Forest College THE missionary has always been strong in Walie Forest. It is symbolized on the banner of the Philomathesian Society, which shows the angel of the Kei-etation flying over the lands of the earth with a trumpet to his mouth and in his hand a scroll on which is written in Greek the words TO EUAG- GELION AIONION, meaning THE EVERLASTING GOSPEL. In 1S40, one year after Wake Forest Institute became Wake Forest College, was regis- tered a student, who had already devoted his life to the work of giving the Gospel to the heathen. This student was Matthew Tyson Yates, whose work is featured in this volume of the Howi.kb. While a student in the College he organized the Wake Forest Missionary Society, which continues to this day. Graduating in 1.S46. he was appointed a missionary to China the same year by the Foreign Mission Board of the Southern Baptist Convention, formed the year before. Shortly after his graduation he married Miss Eliza Moring of Chatham County. After receiving much attention from the Bap- tists both of the South and the North the young ' couple sailed from Boston in December. 1S46. After a long voyage around the Horn they reached their destination at Shanghai and took up their work in September, 1S47. Here Yates labored for more than forty years, and laying wisely and well the foundations of his work he builded thereon as a wise master-builder, and made the Central China Mission the pride of Southern Baptists. Long before the end of that time his wisdom and ability had brought him recognition as one of the great missionaries of all time, worthy to be mentioned along with Carey and Judson. Hardly was Yates well located in Shanghai when he began to beg for men to come to assist in the great work of winning China to Christ. Naturally his eyes turned to his own Alma Mater, and he eagerly yearned to have among his fellow-laborers men trained at Wake Forest College. But he had to wait many long years before this desire was satisfied. In his early years in China the sectional troubles that led to the Civil War were engrossing the attention of the young men of his native land, and the call for Christian leaders in North Carolina and in the constantly expanding frontier was so strong that the call to the foreign field was unheeded. Such was the condition too dur- ing the period of the Civil War and Reconstruction. In 1S6!I. however, a young man was graduated from the College with valedictory honors who purposed to devote his life to the work in Shanghai. This was Robert Samuel Prichard, son of Rev. J. L. Prichard. himself a graduate of Wake Forest College, who fell at his post during a yellow fever epidemic in Wilmington in 1S62. After graduation at Wake Forest the young Prichard spent two years at the University of Virginia. He was making preparation for his de- parture for Shanghai, when he became a victim of a rapidly developing con- sumption of the lungs. It was seventeen years later, in January, 1886. that Yates then an old man. opened his door and his heart to welcome his first helper from Wake Forest. This was D. W. Herring, who had graduated from Wake Forest College in 1882. and further fitted himself for missionary work by a course in the Louis- ville Seminary. With him was R. T. Bryan, a graduate of the University of North Carolina. From that day a stream of Wake Forest graduates was pouring into the foreign mission fields, so that in a few years Wake Forest College had the distinction of having among her alumni more foreign mis- sionaries than any other institution in the world. Below will be found a list of the names of these Wake Forest missionaries with indication of the places from which they came, the year each left college, and the field of labor of each. Matthew Tyson Yates, Wake County, 1846, Shanghai, Central China. David Wells Herring, Pender County, 1882. Shanghai. Central China; Interior China. r - ■v ,..:,..„;.i»il«iii ■«W m J. -i fe iiiii ' iiiiiiiiiiiiipiiiiiiriiifliiiipii i ' III
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Page 18 text:
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i l 1 VATES left his home in western Wake County in the year 1838 for the private ocademy of Mr G. W. Thompson which was located about three miles from Wake Forest College, After studying there for one year, he taught for a session. It was upon his return to the academy the following year that he surrendered himself for whatever service God might hove for him, and at this time Mr Thompson and Dr Wait prevailed upon him to go to Wake Forest College He prepared himself for a missionary to the Chinese According in the fall of 1840 we find Yates riding up to the Wake Forest campus on horseback to enroll as a student The first year he remained with the preparatory group, and then entered into the regular college work. Four years later he graduated, and soon was accepted by the Baptist Foreign Mission Board at Richmond, Virginia as a missionary to China It was not, however, until September 12, 1847 that he sailed into Shanghai to begin his Herculean task. lidf 1 1 ■-11,1 |.ii as:j2iM «• j «•;•} «» '
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