Also included in the International Mission Photography Archive. and New Women's Hospital, Foochow, China. Church of England Zenana Missionary Society, 27, Chancery Lane, London, W.C. (Series IX.-Medical.) The photo depicts six Chinese patients in the hospital. There are two women, four children, one male, and one Western nurse. The back of the postcard is blank.
Also included in the International Mission Photography Archive. and Mission des Peres Franciscains Francais au Chan-Tong Oriental(Chine) 2. Mgr. Wittner encadre de deux jeunes pretres chinois. The photograph shows three priests posed in full clerical garb. The back of the card is blank.
Also included in the International Mission Photography Archive. and Mission des Peres Franciscains Francais au Chan-Tong Oriental(Chine) 5. Le P. Irenee, le Pere chinois TCHANG et deux eleves seminaristes a Chefou" The photo shows one Western priest with two Chinese priests and one older Chinese male seated outdoors. The back of the postcard is blank.
Also included in the International Mission Photography Archive. and China Gered kind in de armen zijner beschermster, meesteres der H. Kindsheid. The picture shows two Chinese women with a baby. One woman is older than the other. The younger woman holds the baby wrapped heavily in blankets. The back of the postcard is addressed to a Mlle Georgette Flolleroet(?). Capronstraad."
A river gunboat, a common sight on China's waterways in Imperial days. (This was the gunboat that escorted the Logans on the houseboat in 1901). Note cannon on the bow, and captain's cabin on the stern. At night the crew was sheltered by a striped blue-and-white tent-like canopy held up by their shipped oars. During the night, one member of the crew manned the drum, which beat out the watches during the night - a comforting, if occasionally disturbing, sound to travelers anchored nearby for the night., Also included in the International Mission Photography Archive., and Captions for this set of lantern slides from the papers of Oliver and Jennie Logan, American Presbyterian missionaries in Hunan, were provided by their daughter Elsa.
A sea-going junk, with an eye painted on the bow. An explanation current in pidgin-English" was as follows: 'No gottee eye, how can see? No can see, how can savvy? No can savvy, how can go? No can go, how can get to place?'", Also included in the International Mission Photography Archive., and Captions for this set of lantern slides from the papers of Oliver and Jennie Logan, American Presbyterian missionaries in Hunan, were provided by their daughter Elsa.