Jump to content

Eleanor Chesnut

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Eleanor Chesnut, from a 1906 publication.
Eleanor Chesnut, from a 1906 publication.
Eleanor Chesnut's signature, from a 1905 publication.

Eleanor Chesnut (January 8, 1868 — October 29, 1905), sometimes written as Eleanor Chestnut, was an American Christian medical missionary and translator who worked in China from 1894 until her murder in 1905.[1]

Early life

[edit]

Eleanor "Nell" E. Chesnut was born in Waterloo, Iowa.[2] She was a twin, and her mother died soon after her birth; she was raised by neighbors named Merwin, and later by relatives in Hatton, Missouri.[3] She attended Park College, a Presbyterian school in Missouri.[4] She graduated from the college in 1888, and attended Women's Medical College, the Illinois Training School for Nurses, and Moody Bible Institute, in her preparation for becoming a medical missionary.[5][6]

Mission work in China

[edit]
A building of the former mission hospitals still stands in Lianzhou.

Eleanor Chesnut worked briefly as a physician at the women's reformatory in Framingham, Massachusetts. She sailed from San Francisco for China as a missionary in 1894.[7] She worked in Lianzhou,[8] where she ran a women's hospital, traveled by horseback to hold clinics in small villages,[9] and trained local women as nurses.[2][10] She advocated for the building of schools and public health measures. She also translated books into the Lianzhou dialect, including the Gospel of Matthew and a nursing textbook.[11] In a letter, she wrote, "I don't think we are in any danger, but if we are, we might as well die suddenly in God's work as by some long-drawn-out illness at home."[5]

During a furlough in the United States from 1902 to 1903,[12] Chesnut gave lectures[13] and raised funds for her work. "I do not feel that I am spiritual enough to be a missionary," she told a friend during this visit.[14] In October 1905, she and three other Americans, and one child, were killed by a mob stirred to violence by her removal of a ceremonial structure.[15][16][17]

Memorials

[edit]

In 1907, a brass plaque naming Chesnut as one of the five "Missionary Martyrs" was installed at the Presbyterian Foreign Mission Board headquarters in New York City.[5][18] Her story was presented (and continues to be presented)[19][20] as an example of Christian sacrifice in church educational materials.[21]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Guangqiu Xu (2017). American Doctors in Canton: Modernization in China, 1835-1935. Taylor & Francis. p. 32. ISBN 9781351532778.
  2. ^ a b James Stuart Dickson, "Where Our Graduates Go" The Assembly Herald (April 1906): 204-205.
  3. ^ "Iowa Girl in China" The Courier (June 20, 1900): 1. via Newspapers.comOpen access icon
  4. ^ "The Roll Call of the Martyrs" New York Observer and Chronicle (November 9, 1905): 605. via ProQuest
  5. ^ a b c Robert Elliott Speer, Servants of the King (Board of Foreign Missions 1909): 91-113.
  6. ^ John F. Piper, Robert E. Speer: Prophet of the American Church (Geneva Press 2000): 231-232. ISBN 9780664501327
  7. ^ "Chicago Woman Slain in China" Inter Ocean (November 2, 1905): 3. via Newspapers.comOpen access icon
  8. ^ Guangqiu Xu, American Doctors in Canton: Modernization in China, 1835-1935 (Routledge 2017). ISBN 9781351532778
  9. ^ G. Thompson Brown, "Eleanor Chestnut" Biographical Dictionary of Chinese Christianity (online edition).
  10. ^ Roxann Prazniak, Of Camel Kings and Other Things: Rural Rebels Against Modernity in Late Imperial China (Rowman & Littlefield 1999): 181. ISBN 9780847690077
  11. ^ Nina D. Gage, "Stages of Nursing in China" American Journal of Nursing (November 1919): 119.
  12. ^ "Back after First Furlough" Woman's Work for Woman (January 1904): 39-40.
  13. ^ "A Coming Lecture" Altoona Tribune (October 8, 1902): 4. via Newspapers.comOpen access icon
  14. ^ E. S. Strong, "Our Martyred Dead" The Institute Tie (April 1906): 257-258.
  15. ^ Guangqiu Xu (2017). American Doctors in Canton: Modernization in China, 1835-1935. Taylor & Francis. p. 32. ISBN 9781351532778.
  16. ^ Arthur J. Brown, "The Story of Lien-chou Martyrdom" The Missionary Review of the World (February 1906): 87-94.
  17. ^ 張璐 (2021). 晚清與教案:從晚清廣東省連州教案探究清教案發生原因 (PDF). Education University of Hong Kong (Thesis).
  18. ^ "A memorial to the Martyrs of Lien-Chou, China" Woman's Work (August 1907): 175-176.
  19. ^ Susan Verstraete, "'With Skilled Kind Fingers that Did Not Tremble': The Story of Dr. Eleanor Chesnut" Bulletin Inserts (Christian Communicators Worldwide 2012).
  20. ^ G. Scott Cady and Christopher L. Webber, A Year with American Saints (Church Publishing Inc. 2006): 32-34. ISBN 9780898697988
  21. ^ Helen Barrett Montgomery, Western Women in Eastern Lands: An Outline Study of Fifty Years of Woman's Work in Foreign Missions (Macmillan 1910): 196-200.
[edit]