Mary Reed was the first Australian missionary of the China Inland Mission. She was a wealthy woman in her own right (See paper on Henry Reed of Tasmania). She was well-educated, and deeply committed evangelical Protestant Christian. She was a friend of Geraldine Guinness with whom she first travelled to China. Although she made two attempts at missionary service she found it impossible to remain in China, due to acute asthma, to live in China, Upon her return to Australia she became the Tasmanian organiser for the CIM. She made an unhappy marriage to Frederick Fysh. Her son, Hudson Fysh, a World War I military pilot, was one of the founders of Qantas Airways Ltd
Nineteenth-Century Britain was known for its political and military power – the British Empire –...
Robert and Emily Tutty were pioneering missionaries in Dovele (Solomon Islands), Bougainville, and t...
A photograph of Maryknoll Fathers and the first Maryknoll Sisters in China. Top [left to right] Frs....
Australians, in the main, are unaware of the role which Australia played in the evangelization of Ch...
© 1978 Dr. Lesley DixonLate in the nineteenth century, when cultural and commercial contact between ...
With ever-increasing notoriety, owing to her successful missionary activities and charismatic preach...
The Rev. Robert Stewart was educated at Marlborough College, a private school in England, and took h...
Prior to the emergence of formal Bible-training institutes in south-eastern Australia from 1892 onwa...
This thesis examines the British women’s missionary movement in Hong Kong and China from the mid-nin...
Arthur Allum was the first Australian Seventh-day Adventist minister to be sent by the Church to Chi...
By using little known primary sources in Chinese and English, this thesis will discuss Australia’s d...
During the period 1920-1930, British Protestant missionaries engaged in many cultural activities in ...
During the period 1920-1930, British Protestant missionaries engaged in many cultural activities in ...
Fong Ding and Fong Wong See from Canton China bought up six boys and three girls in Pine Creek, of w...
Towards the end of the nineteenth century the British Empire was confronted by two great Chinese que...
Nineteenth-Century Britain was known for its political and military power – the British Empire –...
Robert and Emily Tutty were pioneering missionaries in Dovele (Solomon Islands), Bougainville, and t...
A photograph of Maryknoll Fathers and the first Maryknoll Sisters in China. Top [left to right] Frs....
Australians, in the main, are unaware of the role which Australia played in the evangelization of Ch...
© 1978 Dr. Lesley DixonLate in the nineteenth century, when cultural and commercial contact between ...
With ever-increasing notoriety, owing to her successful missionary activities and charismatic preach...
The Rev. Robert Stewart was educated at Marlborough College, a private school in England, and took h...
Prior to the emergence of formal Bible-training institutes in south-eastern Australia from 1892 onwa...
This thesis examines the British women’s missionary movement in Hong Kong and China from the mid-nin...
Arthur Allum was the first Australian Seventh-day Adventist minister to be sent by the Church to Chi...
By using little known primary sources in Chinese and English, this thesis will discuss Australia’s d...
During the period 1920-1930, British Protestant missionaries engaged in many cultural activities in ...
During the period 1920-1930, British Protestant missionaries engaged in many cultural activities in ...
Fong Ding and Fong Wong See from Canton China bought up six boys and three girls in Pine Creek, of w...
Towards the end of the nineteenth century the British Empire was confronted by two great Chinese que...
Nineteenth-Century Britain was known for its political and military power – the British Empire –...
Robert and Emily Tutty were pioneering missionaries in Dovele (Solomon Islands), Bougainville, and t...
A photograph of Maryknoll Fathers and the first Maryknoll Sisters in China. Top [left to right] Frs....