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John Lawrence Goheen

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John Lawrence Goheen
Born(1883-12-10)December 10, 1883
DiedFebruary 3, 1948(1948-02-03) (aged 64)
New York, U.S.
NationalityIndian
Occupation(s)missionaries, Agriculturist, writer
SpouseJane Lea Corbett
RelativesHunter Corbett (father-in-law)

John Lawrence Goheen (December 10, 1883 – February 3, 1948) was an American missionary, educator and administrator, agriculturist, social worker, and writer who spent most of his career working in India. He made a major contribution to literacy through the Bombay Literacy Campaign of 1939. He established Adult Education Associations in various parts in India with a slogan "Every home a literate home".[1] He promoted religious organizations for literacy conferences.

Early life

He was born on December 10, 1883[2] in Kolhapur,[3] in India, where his parents were stationed as American Presbyterian missionaries. When he was seven years old, his parents sent him to Wooster, Ohio in the United States for education.[4] He graduated from Wooster Academy in 1902 and from the University of Wooster in 1906.

From 1920 to 1921, he was enrolled in special courses in agriculture at the State Agricultural College in Davis, California. He was director of physical education at Occidental College and Franklin College, and also served as athletic director in a high school in Cleveland, Ohio.

He married Jane Lea Corbett in 1908. Jane was born in Tacoma, Washington in 1886. She received her early education in Chefoo, China, where her father Hunter Corbett served as an American missionary. She took her college training in the United States, graduating from the College of Wooster in 1907.

Missionary work in India

In 1910 John and Jane Goheen accepted an appointment from the American Presbyterian Missionaries for missionary service in Sangli in western India.[5] The Goheens arrived in India in 1911 and soon after he was placed in charge as the Principal at Sangli Boys School. He transformed the school into an Industrial and Agricultural Educational Institute and instituted an extension service as The Sangli Moveable School.[6] This brought improved agricultural techniques to the villages surrounding Sangli. He was appointed as a member of Bombay Literacy mission. He served a long term as executive secretary of the West India Mission of American Presbyterian Missionaries.

Administrator of Ichalkaranji

Narayanrao Babasaheb Ghorpade, the Ruler of Ichalkaranji State, which is near Sangli, requested Goheen to administer the Ichalkaranji State while Ghorpade was visiting Europe. Goheen accepted the request and took the position of an administrator of the state in then Bombay Presidency of British India. He worked as administrator of Ichalkaranji state from 1930 to 1934. Soon after taking the charge of the office in Ichalkaranji, he was very much impressed with the administration of the ruler, as well as the spirit and enterprise which pervaded in Ichalkaranji State, a territory of about 80 villages and Ichalkaranji town. He wrote a book about Ichalkaranji State called Glimpses of Ichalkaranji.[7]

Allahabad Agricultural Institute

In 1944, Goheen was elected as a principal of Allahabad Agricultural Institute, one of the oldest agricultural institutes in India located in Allahabad in north India.[8]

Jane Goheen

His wife Jane Goheen worked as a teacher in academic and Bible classes in Sangli School. After Mr. Goheen's appointment to the Allahabad Agricultural Institute, Jane Goheen taught in the school of home economics, where Christian girls were trained to teach the women of India better ways of living and caring for their families. During her last few years of service, she worked with the women of Kolhapur and surrounding villages, organizing them more effectively for the work of the church. She retired in 1952 and died in 1977.

Death

In September 1947 Goheen went to New York for specialized medical treatment. He died on February 3, 1948[9] at the age of 64. His collection of manuscripts, photographs, and correspondence is kept at the Presbyterian Historical Society in Philadelphia.[10]

Recognition

In 1937 the College of Wooster presented John Lawrence Goheen with an honorary Doctor of Law degree for outstanding accomplishment in the mission field.

Books

  • Glimpses of Ichalkaranji
  • Keeping Milk Goats in India (1933)

Archival Collection

The Presbyterian Historical Society in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, has a collection of John Goheen's incoming and outgoing Correspondence from 1910 to 1947.

See also

  • Mahatma Gandhi, letters to Americans Page 144 – Bharatiya Vidya Bhavan, 1998 Intellect: Volume 67
  • Collected works ( Letter to J L Goheen on Page 369), Author Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi . Publisher- Publications Division, Ministry of Information and Broadcasting, Govt. of India, 1984
  • India Shall Be Literate, By Frank C. Laubach 1940

References

  1. ^ Laubach, Frank (1940). INDIA SHALL BE LITERATE (1 ed.). National Christian Council , Nagpur. pp. 85, 104. ISBN 9781406712759.
  2. ^ Smith, Harold Frederick; Corbett, Charles Hodge (1965). Hunter Corbett and his family – Google Books. Retrieved September 20, 2010.
  3. ^ Hunter Corbett and his family Harold Frederick Smith, Charles Hodge Corbett College Press, 1965 Page 93
  4. ^ Hunter Corbett and his family Page 94
  5. ^ The First Presbyterian Church of Franklin, Indiana
  6. ^ "Goheen Family Papers, 1864–1951". History.pcusa.org. April 23, 2010. Retrieved September 20, 2010.
  7. ^ The United States in Asia: a historical dictionary By David Shavit Page 193
  8. ^ website= http://www.history.pcusa.org/collections/findingaids/fa.cfm?record_id=222
  9. ^ New York Times February 4, 1948
  10. ^ National Union Catalog of Manuscript Collections. Library of Congress. 1986.