China Records Project Miscellaneous Personal Papers Collection
Container / Volume:
Box 333 | Folder 2
Image Count:
1
Resource Type:
Prints & Photographs
Description:
A Moslem restaurant sign with the tea pot and the Arabic in the center. At the top are two Chinese characters 'ching' and 'chen,' clean and true. Just these two characters on many signs make a shop one where Moslems may eat. These correspond to the 'kosher' characters on a Jewish eating house. and Also included in the International Mission Photography Archive.
Also included in the International Mission Photography Archive., Lorenzo and Ruth Bennett Morgan were American medical missionaries in the Jiangsu and Anhui provinces of China, serving under the Presbyterian and Methodist mission boards from 1905 to 1946., and Wuhu General Hospital "After 1935"
A peak-roofed building of stone and timber stands atop a grassy hill., Also included in the International Mission Photography Archive., Lorenzo and Ruth Bennett Morgan were American medical missionaries in the Jiangsu and Anhui provinces of China, serving under the Presbyterian and Methodist mission boards from 1905 to 1946., and The photo is marked 1904 but the Morgans did not arrive in China until 1905.
Also included in the International Mission Photography Archive., Looking southwest alongside rest house, Haichow [now Haizhou] - Bampoo Road runs east and west. A small stone house with an arched doorway and round windows is immediately next to the road with an arched gateway structure just beyond it., and Lorenzo and Ruth Bennett Morgan were American medical missionaries in the Jiangsu and Anhui provinces of China, serving under the Presbyterian and Methodist mission boards from 1905 to 1946.
Also included in the International Mission Photography Archive. and The Chinese Pagoda. The photograph shows a scale model of a Chinese pagoda in a large building. The back of the card is addressed to "Miss E. L. Emery Prospect House Oakhill Bath" The inscription reads: "Dear G Hope Father got back safe today and I hope you enjoyed yourself tonight Tell Father Dr Whittaker got his letter at 2-30 pm, so it must have been delayed somewhere. The strawberries were lovely, could not keep them in case they went"
Also included in the International Mission Photography Archive., Severance Hall. Dec. 22, 1929, University of Nanking., and This photograph is from the papers of Frank and Verna Garrett who served under the United Christian Missionary Society in the Nanjing area from 1896 to 1932.
Also included in the International Mission Photography Archive., Lorenzo and Ruth Bennett Morgan were American medical missionaries in the Jiangsu and Anhui provinces of China, serving under the Presbyterian and Methodist mission boards from 1905 to 1946., and The new surgery building of the Ellen Lavine Graham Memorial Hospital is shown from the ground level. The hospital was in Lianyungang near Haichow [now Haizhou].
Also included in the International Mission Photography Archive., Approach to temple of Yu Shaohsing [now Shaoxing], and From the collection of the Hartwell family, two generations of American Baptist missionaries serving in China between 1858 and the 1940s.
Also included in the International Mission Photography Archive., 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., and The new hospital, built in 1902-1903, according to plans drawn up by OTL [Oliver Tracy Logan]. Believed to be the first foreign hospital building in the province of Hunan. (In the picture may be seen OTL [Oliver Tracy Logan], JML [Jennnie Manget Logan], and EML [Elsa M. Logan])
“The ‘new’ hospital, finished in 1916. Its first patients were soldiers who had been wounded in a clash between a local war-lord up the river, and Peking government troops.” This is an exterior view of the hospital that was built in Changteh [now Changde], Hunan, China., 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.