Also included in the International Mission Photography Archive., Mary W. Caldwell was a missionary serving under the American Presbyterian Mission, South in Taichow, Jiangsu province, who took a trip through Gansu province in 1926., and Wayside Temple (Kansu Prov.) Wooden structure set in front of steep hillside. Statues of people and horses are visible behind a slatted wooden front. Banners with Chinese characters hang from top.
Also included in the International Mission Photography Archive. and Water Wheels on the upper Yellow River, above Kaolan. The man standing in the middle background by the upright post is six feet two inches. Water is carried to the top in long rectangular boxes fastened to the circumference of the wheel. Many of these wheels are owned by Moslem villages.
Also included in the International Mission Photography Archive., The well our water comes from The well is in a village setting and is constructed from stone and wood. Two wheelbarrows loaded with water buckets are positioned next to the well. Three Chinese men are present., and This photo is from the papers of Rev. Dean Goddard, an American Baptist missionary who served in Ningpo, Chekiang, China from 1870-1903.
Also included in the International Mission Photography Archive., Margaret Hart Barbour, the photographer, was an American Episcopal missionary in Shanghai at St. John's University from 1916 to 1923., and The Water Gate, Wusih An arched bridge with another bridge visible through it.
Also included in the International Mission Photography Archive. and Soochow A woman is washing clothes and a man is collecting water from the canal, standing on a small wooden platform attached to stone wall that forms the foundation of a row of houses.
Also included in the International Mission Photography Archive. and Wards of Sleeper Davis Memorial Hospital. Brick buildings of Methodist hospital in Peking
Also included in the International Mission Photography Archive., Ernest Forster, the photographer, was an American Episcopal missionary who stayed in Nanjing during the period of the Japanese occupation, 1937-1938., and War damage in the southern section of Nanking where most of the fighting in connection with the fall of the city took place. Picture taken March 17, 1938.
Also included in the International Mission Photography Archive., Ernest Forster, the photographer, was an American Episcopal missionary who stayed in Nanjing during the period of the Japanese occupation, 1937-1938., and View from the tower of St. Paul's Church of the ruins of our large Chinese residence building which was used to house a preaching hall, a reading room, a baby clinic, Sunday School classrooms, and living quarters for our Chinese workers. It was burned by Japanese troops on two occasions, about December 14, 1937 and January 26, 1938.
Also included in the International Mission Photography Archive., Ernest Forster, the photographer, was an American Episcopal missionary who stayed in Nanjing during the period of the Japanese occupation, 1937-1938., and The remains of the house and shop of these two brothers after the occupation of the city. They lived in the southern section of the city which was badly damaged by the fighting. Their old father died of fright when a Japanese soldier threatened him with a sword. March 17, 1938.