Scope and Contents
The Yale-China Association Records are the primary source for documenting the history of the Yale-China Association's activities in mainland China (1901-1951), Hong Kong (1951 to the present), and the United States (1901 to the present). In general, the records are of three main types: administrative and policy records produced by the Association's home office in New Haven; correspondence and memoranda written by Association staff members while serving in China; and administrative files and correspondence produced by the Association's office at New Asia College in Hong Kong. The bulk of the records created by the various components of Yale-China during the mainland period of its history (Yali Union Middle School, The Yale-in-China College of Arts and Sciences, and the Hsiang-Ya hospital, medical school, and nursing school) were apparently destroyed during the Second World War. The loss of this material is to some extent compensated by the extensive policy and planning records present in Series I and II, and especially by the staff correspondence from the field which richly documents the day-to-day activities at the Association's facilities in Changsha.
The Yale-China Association Records are arranged in seventeen series and subsequent accessions:
Series I, MINUTES, ANNUAL REPORTS, REPORTS TO THE TRUSTEES, contains the offical policy records and field reports of the Yale-China Association's governing bodies and executive officers:
- Minutes of the Executive Committee 1901-
- Minutes of the Board of Trustees 1921-1973
- Minutes of the Yali Governing Board 1909-1937
- Minutes of the Monthly College Faculty Meetings 1917-1929
- Minutes of the Executive Committe of the Yale-in-China Mission 1932-1935
- Minutes of the Executive Committee of Hua Chung College 1938-1941
- Minutes of the Executive Committee of Hsiang-Ya 1944
- Minutes of the Executive Committee of Yale Middle School 1933-1935
- Minutes of the Special New Asia College Committee 1954-1957
- Minutes of the Yale-China Association Annual Meetings 1902-1971
- Yale-China Association Annual Reports 1909-1976
- Reports to the Executive Committee and Board of Trustees 1903-1973
- Reports of the Trustee's Representatives 1929-1972
- Reports of the Executive Secretary to the Trustees 1926-1958
- Reports of the Executive Director to the Trustees 1966-1973
Series II, NEW HAVEN OFFICE SUBJECT FILES, is the central administrative file compiled by home office staff members from 1901 to 1975. The series contains correspondence, memoranda, and reports which document policy implementation and program administration; the relations of the Yale-China Association with other missionary groups and philanthropic organizations; and the activities of special committees, programs, and projects. Series II also includes correspondence with non-Yale-China Association personnel and samples of routine housekeeping records.
Series III, STAFF CORRESPONDENCE 1900-1974, contains the correspondence of Yale-China Association personnel: bachelors, regular appointees, trustees and officers, New Haven office staff, former Chinese students, and Chinese students on scholarships in the United States. The materials, arranged alphabetically by name of correspondent, consist of both personal and official correspondence and printed material, such as newspaper clippings, relating to the various staff members. The series is one of the richest in the collection. Virtually every aspect of Yale-China's work is touched upon, from its foundation to the construction of New Asia College. Subjects most frequently discussed are: finances and fund raising, property purchases, building plans, educational policies, personnel problems, staff appointments, and individual's reactions to the political and social conditions confronted in China.
Series IV, CABLES AND RADIOGRAMS, contains copies of messages sent to and from Association staff members in the field and the New Haven home office between 1904-1951. Subjects discussed include: routine administrative matters, financial conditions and transfer of funds, land purchases and negotiations, staffing and equipment needs, evacuation orders from the U.S. State Department, policies to follow during periods of student strikes and civil disorders, and relocation plans during World War II. The materials in Series IV are filed chronologically.
Series V, DIARIES AND THE BACHELOR LOG, contains accounts by Yale-China staff members of their day-to day activities while serving in mainland China and Hong Kong. The only diary present is Morris Sanders' "China Journal 1921-23". The diary is a 400 page typescript which describes Sanders' trip to China, his activities as a surgeon at Hsiang-Ya, and several walking tours in the Chinese countryside. The "Bachelor Log" is a compendium of reports by Yale-China Bachelors (teaching fellows) describing their weekly activities at New Asia College from 1958-1972.
Series VI, FINANCIAL, REAL ESTATE, AND ARCHITECTURAL RECORDS, is divided into ten sections:
- Account Books 1902-1971
- Budgets 1909-1968
- Treasurer's Reports 1902-1939
- Financial Statements and Audit Reports 1905-1972
- Fund Raising Campaigns
- Donor Correspondence
- Donors and Contributors by City
- Miscellaneous Financial Files
- New Asia College Financial Records
- Real Estate and Architectural Records
Real Estate and Architectural Records includes correspondence regarding land purchases and property rights, files of the New Asia College Building Committee war damage claims, site plans and blueprints for the Yali Campus and New Asia College and photostats of Changsha property deeds.
Series VII, NEW ASIA COLLEGE OFFICE FILES, contains the administrative files compiled by the Yale-China Association office at New Asia College between 1954-1972. The materials include: routine administrative and housekeeping records; New Asia College council minutes 1963-1972; general correspondence; correspondence with the New Haven office and board of trustees; correspondence with the Yale-China Association executive director; and memoranda and correspondence relating to Yale Bachelors. The files are arranged alphabetically.
Series VIII, SCRAPBOOKS, ARTICLES, AND CLIPPING FILES, contains printed matter regarding Association activities and staff. The series is divided into three sections. Section 1, Scrapbooks, contains newspaper clippings, articles, and publicity materials relating to virtually all of the phases of the Yale-China Association's history. Other topics include Changsha's history, the Sino-Japanese War, and Chinese politics. Section 2, Articles 1900-1959, and Section 3, Newspaper Clippings 1900-195, contain published material covering all phases of the Association's activities.
A grant from the National Historical Publications and Records Commission (NHPRC) allowed appraisal and preservation of all the photographic material in Series IX-X, and XVII.
Series IX, PHOTOGRAPHS, is divided into two sections: 1). Yale-in-China at Changsha, and 2). New Asia College. In both sections photographs are organized alphabetically by subject. All the photographs fall into one of the following board subject categories: campus scenes, physical plant, medical work, students and student life, classroom scenes, faculty and staff, Chinese life, city scenes, and landscapes. There are numerous photographs of high technical quality and historical value. Those which are especially noteworthy include photographs of the inner city Yale Mission Hospital, Chinese revolutionary soldiers treated in the hospital, the campus site outside Changsha before clearing, panorama of Changsha, the old powder magazine used as a hospital during the Civil War, harbor and river scenes, and the Yale-China staff looking at a plan of the campus with the architect Henry Killam Murphy. [An index to photographs of the bachelors, officers, and staff of Yali and Hsaing-Ya during the Changsha era (1901-1951) is available.]
Series X, SLIDES AND NEGATIVES is organized into four sections according to form: 1) Lantern Slides (955), 2) Glass Negatives (229), 3) 35 mm. Slides (558), and 4) 35 mm. Negatives Made From Broken Lantern Slides and From Frames of Motion Picture Film (271). Copy prints from broken lantern slides, glass negatives, and motion picture film have been interfiled into Series IX by subject. The material in Series X falls into one of the following broad subject categories: Hsiang-Ya and Yali staff, physical plant, student life, and medical work, Chinese life, Chinese officials, city scenes, foreign travel, landscapes, Yale-China celebrations, and New Asia College.
Series XII, AUDIO MATERIALS, contains five tape recordings and one phonograph record. Subjects include a Yale-in-China fund raising compaign speech by Henry R. Luce (1947); a speech by the Governor of Hong Kong at the laying of the New Asia College foundation stone (1956); a speech by Kingman Brewster (1965); the December 1966 meeting of the Yale-in-China Association's Trustees; Charles Long's briefing of Sidney Lovett on the people and situation at New Asia College (1973).
Series XIII, YALE-CHINA ASSOCIATION HISTORIES AND PAPERS, contains copies of student papers written on various aspects of the Association's history. Also included are copies of two Association publications: "The Graphic Story of Yale-in-China" (Yale-in-China Occasional Bulletin No. 4., 1920) and "The Story of Yale-in-China" (publicity pamphlet, 1945).
Series XIV, PUBLICATIONS AND PUBLICITY MATERIALS, is divided into three sections: 1) English Language Publications, 2) Chinese Language Publication, 3) Publicity Materials, English Language Publications is composed primarily of Yale-China Association, Yali, Hsiang-Ya, and student publications. Materials in this section include student newspapers, class histories, textbooks, curriculum catalogs, college bulletins, the Yale-China Association Newsletter, and Yali Quarterly.
Chinese Language Publications includes textbooks, nationalist pamphlets and broadsides, student newspapers, and strike literature.
Publicity Materials contains samples of brochures, pamphlets, form letters, and posters used in fund raising campaigns and for explaining the Association's programs.
Series XV, STUDENT ART WORK, contains drawings, paintings, and cartoons by Yali students. Materials include: health care posters, cartoons relating to student life, anti-Japanese cartoons, and miscellaneous landscape drawings.
Series XVI, MEMORABILIA, contains materials used by the Yale-China Association for display purposed. Included in this series are such items as scrolls, banners, flags, and posters.
Series XVII, MOTION PICTURE FILMS, contains original 16 mm. films taken by members of the Yale-China Association staff between 1932 and 1970. In general, the films vary in quality. Most are in deteriorating condition. After appraisal, 16 mm. prints and negatives were made of seventeen films to aid research. Additional preservation resulted in the creation of preservation masters, duplicating masters, and use copies of several of the films. Individual Yali and Hsiang-Ya staff members and important scenes have been highlighted by copying individual frames of motion picture film. These 5 x 7" prints are interfiled into Series IX by subject. The 35 mm. negatives for these prints are filed at the end of Series X. Motion picture film subjects include Hsiang-Ya, Yali Union Middle School, Hua Chung College, trips through the Chinese countryside, student life, faculty and staff, and New Asia College.
Accession 2005-A-019. Bound collection of newsletters related to Yali Middle School, circa 1985
Accession 2009-A-198. Yale-China Association records, 1878-2008
Dates
- 1878-2008
Creator
Conditions Governing Access
Access to the materials is partially restricted. See Collection Contents for details.
Original audiovisual materials, as well as preservation and duplicating masters, may not be played. Researchers must consult use copies, or if none exist must pay for a use copy, which is retained by the repository. Researchers wishing to obtain an additional copy for their personal use should consult Copying Services information on the Manuscripts and Archives web site.
Original born digital files, as well as preservation masters, may not be accessed due to their fragility. Researchers must consult use copies, or if none exist request that they be made. Born digital files cannot be accessed remotely. System requirements include a Manuscripts and Archives computer and file viewing software.
Conditions Governing Use
Copyright to the official records of the Yale-China Association is retained by the Association. Copyright status for other collection materials is unknown. Transmission or reproduction of materials protected by U.S. Copyright Law (Title 17, U.S.C.) beyond that allowed by fair use requires the written permission of the copyright owners. Works not in the public domain cannot be commercially exploited without permission of the copyright owners. Responsibility for any use rests exclusively with the user.
Arrangement
The records are arranged in seventeen series and subsequent accessions: I. Minutes, annual reports, reports to the trustees, 1901-1976. II. New Haven office subject files, 1901-1975. III. Staff correspondence, 1900-1975. IV. Cables and radiograms, 1904-1951. V. Diaries and the bachelor log, 1921-1972. VI. Financial, real estate, and architectural records, 1901-1975. VII. New Asia College office files, 1954-1972. VIII. Scrapbooks, articles, and clipping files, 1900-1964. IX. Photographs, 1901-1976. X. Slides and negatives, 1900-1974. XI. [not used]. XII. Audio materials, 1947-1973. XIII. Histories and papers, 1920-1965. XIV. Publications and publicity materials, 1904-1974. XV. Student art work, 1930-1945. XVI. Memorabilia, 1901-1974. XVII. Motion pictures films, 1930-1971.
Extent
263.8 Linear Feet
Language of Materials
English
Catalog Record
A record for this collection is available in Orbis, the Yale University Library catalog
Persistent URL
Abstract
The records document the activities of the Yale-China Association in mainland China (1901-1951), Hong Kong (1951-present), and the United States (1901-present). They consist of administrative and policy files produced by the home office in New Haven, correspondence and memoranda written by staff members while serving in China, and administrative files and correspondence produced by the New Asia office in Hong Kong.
Biographical / Historical
The Yale-China Association is a non-profit educational organization concerned with promoting understanding and goodwill between the American and Chinese peoples. Though affiliated with Yale University, it is an independent organization with its own board of trustees and funding sources.
The Association's educational activities are both national and international in scope. At present Yale-China's overseas activities are confined to Hong Kong where, since 1954, the Association has worked closely with New Asia College, a component of the Chinese University. The Yale-China Association maintains a representative of its board of trustees in Hong Kong to supervise the Association's educational work and to participate in university activities. Current programs of the Association include the Yale Teaching Fellowships, which annually send two Yale graduates to the Chinese University on two-year teaching appointments, and the Overseas Chinese Fellowships, which each year bring two graduates of New Asia College to the United States for two years of advanced degree work and a professor from the Chinese University to conduct research and seminars in the United States. In addition, the Association provides scholarships for New Asia College students and financial assistance to both New Asia College and the Chinese University for special projects.
In the United States, the Association's activities include the recruiting of students and scholars for the International Asian Studies Program, the production of a film series on Chinese history and culture for use in the classroom, and a variety of programs and lectures aimed at increasing the American people's understanding of China.
History
Plans for a Yale Mission in China were first formulated in 1901 by a small group of Yale students and faculty. The original intention was to develop and maintain a non-denominational Christian institution of higher learning. In the following year, the Yale Foreign Missionary Society was organized, and its first representative, Lawrence Thurston, was sent to China to establish contact with existing missionary groups and to seek a site on which to locate the mission. In 1903, as a result of Thurston's efforts, the First Conference of Protestant Missions of Hunan extended an invitation to the Yale group to settle in Changsha and to assume responsibility for the higher education of the province. During 1905, following a preliminary site survey, Brownell Gage, Warren Seabury, and Edward Hume, the first representatives of the Yale Foreign Missionary Society, took up residence in Changsha, Since it was not possible to open a college until prospective students had received the necessary preparation, a collegiate school - Yali Middle School - was opened in 1906. Gage was chosen as chairman of the school's governing board, and Seabury was appointed dean.
To help alleviate the teaching load at Yali Middle School, the Yali Bachelor or teaching fellow program was instituted. Under this program, selected Yale graduates spent two years teaching at Yali. For six years during the Sino-Japanese and Second World Wars, Yali was located on a refugee campus at Yuanling, Hunan. By the mid-1940s, enrollment at the school averaged as many as 500 boys.
In 1914, the College of Arts and Sciences was started with graduates from the middle school. Degrees granted by the College were recognized by the Hunan Provincial Government, the National Government of China, and the state of Connecticut. In 1927 the National Government of China, under Chiang Kai-shek's leadership, came into existence, and during the transition period all Americans withdrew from Hunan. The following year the Association came to the conclusion that college-level education in Hunan could be most practically carried on by means of a cooperative effort with other missionary groups. Following this plan, the School of Science of Yale-in-China College became part of Central China (Hua Chung) College. During World War II, Hua Chung's campus was located in western Yunnan.
In 1905, immediately after his arrival in Changsha, Dr. Edward Hume began a dispensary, and in 1908 a hospital was opened under his direction. When Dr. F.C. Yen joined the hospital's staff in 1910, Yale-in-China became the first institution in China to employ western-educated Chinese as full members of the permanent faculty on equal terms with Americans. In 1914, agreement was reached with the Hunan government to co-operate in sponsoring medical education in the form of a new hospital and medical school. The Yale-in-China College of Nursing, begun by Nina Gage in 1910, was also placed under the direction of the cooperative Hunan-Yale (Hsiang-Ya) Board. In 1916, the first students entered the new medical school.
During World War II, Hsiang-Ya Hospital continued to service the local community as well as military personnel. In 1939, as the Japanese Army approached Changsha, three branch hospitals were established. The main hospital was able to continue in Changsha until 1944.
Because of the military threat, the Medical College was moved to Kweiyang in 1938. Two years later, it was designated a national medical college by the Chinese Ministry of Education and began to receive funds from the Nationalist Government. The 1945 bombing of Kweiyang forced the school's evacuation to Chungking.
Planning for the reconstruction of Yali and Hsiang-Ya was begun immediately after the war. However, rebuilding had just begun when the political situation deteriorated and fighting broke out between the forces of Chiang Kai-shek and Mao Tse-Tung. In November 1948, most of the Yale-in-China staff remaining in Changsha were evacuated. Dwight Rugh, the last representative of Yale-in-China on the mainland, crossed the border into Hong Kong in May 1951. Both Yali and Hsiang-Ya continued to function under the People's Republic. Yali was renamed Hunan Private Liberation Middle School and Hsiang-Ya's facilities were doubled, so that by 1962 it had an enrollment of nearly 5,000 students.
For further information on the history of the Yale-China Association, see Yale in China, the Mainland 1901-51, by Reuben Holden, New Haven, 1964; The Yale-China Association: A Centennail History by Nancy E. Chapman with Jessica C. Plumb, New Haven, 2001.
A note on changes in name: the Yale-China Association was incorporated in 1903 as the Yale Foreign Missionary Society. In 1934, the name was changed to the Yale-in-China Association and in 1975 to the Yale-China Association.
General note
Forms part of Yale Record Group 37 (YRG 37), Records of associations, institutes, centers, and organizations affiliated with Yale University.
Photograph Index
Name | Box | Folder |
---|---|---|
Achilles, Paul S. | 154 | 2, 3, 4 |
157 | 36, 42 | |
158 | 46 | |
Afonsky, Dima | 157 | 42 |
159 | 68 | |
160 | 69 | |
161 | 85 | |
167 | 133 | |
Anthony, B. Kenneth | 154 | 4 |
157 | 42 | |
158 | 47 | |
165 | 119 | |
Arnold, Lauren | 154 | 3, 4 |
161 | 85 | |
163 | 104, 105 | |
Atwater, Reginald M. | 157 | 38, 39 |
158 | 50 | |
160 | 71, 74, 75 | |
Barton, Maude | 157 | 38, 39 |
160 | 79 | |
Beach, Harlan P. | 157 | 37 |
158 | 54 | |
161 | 85 | |
162 | 101 | |
163 | 105 | |
165 | 117 | |
Beehy, Nellie V. | 160 | 81 |
Bender, Harold B. | 157 | 44 |
Bingham, Woodbridge | 154 | 2, 4 |
157 | 36 | |
165 | 117 | |
Bixler, Elizabeth S. | 163 | 104 |
Branch, J.R. Bromwell | 154 | 2 |
157 | 36, 38, 39, | |
Brinkley, Sterling B. | 160 | 71, 74 |
163 | 105 | |
Brown, Mrs. Samuel Robbins | 161 | 85 |
Brundage, Helen R. | 157 | 38, 39 |
160 | 75, 79, 81 | |
Calhoun, Edward T.D. | 154 | 3 |
168 | 137 | |
Cannnann, Schuyler V. | 154 | 3 |
167 | 127 | |
Campbell, Charles S., Jr. | 154 | 2, 3, 4 |
157 | 36, 42 | |
Carter, Gertrude P. | 167 | 127, 128 |
160 | 80, 81, 82 | |
Chai, L.K. | 157 | 40 |
Chang, Fu-Liang | 154 | 2 |
157 | 36-40, 42, 43 | |
158 | 46, 49, 52, 54 | |
163 | 105 | |
165 | 117, 119 | |
Chang, Harry C. | 157 | 36, 38, 39, 41-43 |
159 | 68 | |
160 | 69, 77 | |
167 | 133 | |
168 | 137 | |
Chao han-hsin | 157 | 42, 43 |
Chase, A. Sabin | 154 | 2, 4 |
Chatfield, Charles B. | 157 | 38, 40 |
Chatfield, Minotte M. | 154 | 2, 3 |
166 | 127, 128 | |
Cheng, James F. W. | 157 | 42 |
Cheng, L.H. | 157 | 40 |
Chiang, Dr. | 160 | 69 |
Chiang Kai-Shek | 161 | 86 |
Cho, Paul | 157 | 42 |
Chow, T.S. | 157 | 40 |
Chu, C.C. | 157 | 40, |
Chu, H.P. | 157 | 38, 39 |
160 | 70, 74 | |
Clarke, Robert J. | 154 | 2-4 |
157 | 42 | |
160 | 69 | |
167 | 130 | |
Clement, Stuart | 154 | 3, 4 |
163 | 105 | |
Comstock, Francis B. | 154 | 4 |
Cooper, William Rhys | 154 | 4 |
157 | 38-40 | |
Corwin, Orrin M. | 154 | 4 |
157 | 36 | |
Cox, John H. | 154 | 3 |
167 | 127 | |
Crawford, Albert S. | 157 | 37, 44 |
158 | 54 | |
165 | 117 | |
Davidson, Douglas Treat | 157 | 41, 44 |
158 | 46, 52, 54 | |
160 | 69 | |
165 | 117, 119, 120 | |
Dayton, Arthur Bliss | 157 | 38, 39 |
160 | 69, 71, 74, 75, 79 | |
163 | 104, 105 | |
165 | 117 | |
Dixon, Ross I. | 154 | 2, 3 |
155 | 21 | |
157 | 41 | |
167 | 134, 136 | |
Dowd, Rachel A. | 157 | 41 |
161 | 85 | |
163 | 105 | |
Downs, Chester A. | 157 | 44 |
Dunham, Harry J. | 157 | 37, 44 |
158 | 46, 54 | |
165 | 117 | |
Eddy, David Brewer | 161 | 85 |
163 | 105 | |
165 | 113 | |
Elliot, James A. | 154 | 3, 4 |
167 | 133 | |
Embree, William Dean | 163 | 104 |
Eubank, Mrs. A.R. Bliss | 157 | 38, 39 |
160 | 75, 79, 81 | |
Farley, Hugh D. | 154 | 3 |
157 | 36, 42 | |
Farnam, Henry W. | 157 | 36 |
158 | 52 | |
Farnam, Louise W. [See: Wilson, Louise Farnam ] | ||
Fisken, A. Donald | 154 | 4 |
Foote, Ray P. | 154 | 2, 4 |
165 | 117 | |
Foster, John H. | 157 | 36, 38, 39 |
160 | 71, 74, 75 | |
Frary, Donald P. | 157 | 44 |
Frost, Malcolm | 154 | 4 |
157 | 36 | |
165 | 117 | |
Fulton, Robert Brank | 154 | 2, 3 |
157 | 36, 41, 42, 44 | |
158 | 46, 50 | |
159 | 66 | |
160 | 69 | |
163 | 105 | |
167 | 127, 128, 135, 136 | |
Gabriel, Ralph H. | 163 | 104 |
Gage, Brownell | 157 | 36, 38-40, 42, 44 |
158 | 46, 47, 50, 55 | |
161 | 85 | |
162 | 101, 102 | |
163 | 105 | |
165 | 113, 117, 120 | |
Gage, Nina | 157 | 37-39, 41, 42 |
158 | 46, 49 | |
160 | 69, 72, 75, 79-81 | |
165 | 117, 119, 120 | |
Galbraith, Dorothy | 157 | 42 |
Gates, Frederick Lamont | 156 | 29 |
158 | 46 | |
Gilbert, Lewis L. | 157 | 44 |
165 | 117 | |
Gould, Lyttelton | 154 | 3, 4 |
Graves, Nelson M. | 154 | 4 |
Gray, James | 154 | 2, 4 |
Greene, Lois | 160 | 69, 71 |
166 | 125 | |
Greene, Phillips | 154 | 2 |
157 | 36, 41, 42, 44 | |
158 | 46, 50, 51 | |
160 | 69, 71 | |
166 | 124 | |
167 | 129, 134 | |
168 | 137 | |
Greene, Ruth | 157 | 36, 42 |
158 | 49, 50 | |
Grosvenor, w. C. | 157 | 38, 39 |
160 | 74, 75, 79 | |
Grumman, S. Ellsworth | 154 | 2-4 |
157 | 36 | |
158 | 46, 47 | |
161 | 85 | |
163 | 105 | |
Gulick, Edward | 154 | 2, 3 |
Hail, William J. | 154 | 2 |
157 | 36-42, 44 | |
158 | 46, 47, 49, 52, 54, 55 | |
162 | 101, 102 | |
165 | 117 | |
Hamlin, Paul | 154 | 2, 4 |
158 | 49 | |
Harvey, Edwin D. | 157 | 36-42, 44 |
158 | 46, 47, 49, 54, 55 | |
165 | 117, 120 | |
Hashagen, Jane M. | 157 | 38, 39 |
160 | 75, 79 | |
Helfrich, Dorothy Lloyd | 160 | 81 |
Hinkhouse, P.M. | 154 | 2 |
157 | 37 | |
Ho, Jackson | 157 | 42 |
Ho, M.F. | 157 | 40 |
Holden, Reuben A. | 163 | 104 |
Hopkins, Arthur H. | 154 | 2, 3 |
167 | 133 | |
Hoyt, Mr. | 162 | 102 |
Hsiao, Y.T. | 158 | 48 |
160 | 69 | |
165 | 119 | |
167 | 135, 136 | |
Huang, K.C. | 157 | 40 |
Huestis, Jane Selby | 157 | 38, 39, 44 |
158 | 50 | |
160 | 75 | |
Hume, Edward H. | 165 | 117, 121 |
155 | 20 | |
156 | 28 | |
157 | 36, 37, 41, 42 | |
158 | 46, 47, 52, 54 | |
159 | 58, 67 | |
160 | 69, 71, 72 | |
161 | 85 | |
162 | 101, 102 | |
163 | 105 | |
165 | 117, 119, 120 | |
167 | 134 | |
168 | 137, 139 | |
Hume, Lotta | 157 | 36, 37, 41, 42 |
158 | 49, 50 | |
161 | 85 | |
162 | 102 | |
Hutchins, Francis S. | 157 | 36, 42, 44 |
158 | 46, 47, 51 | |
161 | 85 | |
164 | 112 | |
165 | 117 | |
166 | 124 | |
167 | 127, 128, 130 | |
Hutchinson, Mary Edna | 157 | 42 |
160 | 80, 81, 84 | |
Isleib, Horace F. | 163 | 104 |
Jones, Miss L. G. | 157 | 38, 39 |
160 | 79 | |
Kao, Mr. | 157 | 42 |
162 | 101 | |
Kau, Edward Y. | 157 | 38, 39 |
160 | 74 | |
Kavoogbian, Victoria A. | 157 | 42 |
160 | 80 | |
166 | 125, 126 | |
Keeney, Joseph S. | 154 | 4 |
165 | 120 | |
Keller, Charles | 154 | 2 |
157 | 41, 44 | |
158 | 46 | |
165 | 117 | |
Knight, E.V. | 154 | 3, 4 |
157 | 36 | |
Kwei, Paul C.T. | 157 | 36, 38-40, 43 |
158 | 46-48 | |
159 | 58 | |
160 | 79 | |
161 | 85 | |
163 | 105 | |
165 | 117 | |
166 | 125 | |
167 | 127 | |
Lao, Chi-Chiang | 154 | 2 |
157 | 36, 40-43 | |
158 | 47, 48, 51, 55, 56 | |
163 | 105, 110 | |
166 | 124 | |
167 | 127, 129, 130, 133, | |
168 | 137 | |
LaTourette, Kenneth | 154 | 3, 4 |
158 | 46 | |
161 | 85 | |
163 | 104~ 105 | |
Leavens, Dickson H. | 154 | 2 |
155 | 22 | |
157 | 36-42 | |
158 | 45-47, 50, 54, 55 | |
160 | 75 | |
161 | 85 | |
163 | 105 | |
165 | 121 | |
166 | 124 | |
Leavens, Mrs. Dickson H. | 157 | 37, 38, 40 |
158 | 50 | |
Lee, Louise | 166 | 125, 126 |
Lewis, Clarice W. | 157 | 38, 39 |
158 | 45 | |
Lewis, Jane N. | 158 | 45 |
Li, C.N. | 157 | 40 |
Li, Peter | 157 | 42 |
Li, S.Y. | 157 | 38, 39 |
160 | 70, 74 | |
Li, Tsing-Liang | 157 | 38, 39 |
160 | 70, 72, 74, 79 | |
Li, Y.L. | 157 | 40 |
Lien, T.C. | 160 | 70 |
Little, Sherman C. | 158 | 45, 46 |
Liu, T.M. | 157 | 42 |
160 | 82 | |
Lobenstine, Edwin C. | 163 | 104 |
London, Felix | 167 | 133 |
Longhurst, Grace M. | 160 | 81 |
Lucas, Russell H. | 154 | 4 |
165 | 117 | |
Luquer, Lee | 154 | 4 |
154 | 2 | |
McCabe, Donald C. | 154 | 3, 4 |
McGown, David J. | 154 | 2, 3 |
157 | 42 | |
MacLean, Burton A. | 163 | 105 |
Maddren, Russell Flint | 157 | 38, 39 |
160 | 71, 74 | |
Mali, Henry J. | 154 | 4 |
165 | 120 | |
Manice, Edward A. | 154 | 2, 3 |
156 | 27 | |
157 | 42 | |
158 | 47 | |
161 | 87 | |
168 | 137 | |
Menzel, Southard | 154 | 4 |
165 | 117 | |
Mitchell, Edith | 160 | 80 |
Morland, J. Kenneth | 167 | 136 |
Morse, Oliver C. | 154 | 2-4 |
156 | 26 | |
157 | 36 | |
158 | 46 | |
Muir, Margaret | 158 | 45 |
Murphy, Henry Killam | 157 | 41 |
Nangle, Benjamin C. | 154 | 5 |
Neville, W.S. Thacker | 165 | 20 |
Niu, Mr. | 157 | 42 |
162 | 101 | |
Norelius, Jesse P. | 160 | 80-83 |
165 | 119 | |
167 | 127 | |
Olsen, Albert W. | 154 | 3, 5 |
Pang, M. C. | 157 | 40 |
Penfield, Charlotte Gilman | 158 | 45 |
Penfield, Paul | 157 | 41 |
165 | 117 | |
Pettus, Maude M. | 157 | 41, 42 |
158 | 50 | |
160 | 69, 80 | |
161 | 92 | |
167 | 133 | |
Pettus, William Winston | 157 | 42 |
159 | 68 | |
160 | 69, 71, 77 | |
161 | 85 | |
167 | 133, 135, 136 | |
Pitkin, Horace Tracy | 161 | 85 |
Platt, Robert | 154 | 5 |
Poole, Drusilla R. | 157 | 42 |
160 | 69, 80, 82 | |
168 | 137 | |
Powell, Ralph W. | 157 | 36, 41, 42 |
158 | 45, 46 | |
165 | 117 | |
Powers, Beatrice Farnsworth | 160 | 80 |
Pu, Hwang | 156 | 25 |
157 | 36, 41, 42 | |
158 | 46-48, 55, 56 | |
165 | 119 | |
166 | 124 | |
167 | 127, 128 | |
168 | 137 | |
Rand, Oscar L. | 154 | 3, 5 |
167 | 127 | |
Reed, Alfred C. | 158 | 45 |
Robb, J. Donald | 154 | 5 |
Rockefeller, Godfrey S. | 154 | 5 |
Rockwood, Charles P. | 154 | 2, 3 |
157 | 42 | |
Rogers, Burton B. | 154 | 2, 3, 5 |
157 | 36, 41, 42 | |
163 | 110 | |
165 | 119 | |
166 | 124 | |
167 | 127, 128, 130 | |
Rollins, Henry B. | 160 | 71 |
Rose, Kenneth | 154 | 2, 5 |
Rudin, Harry R. | 154 | 2, 3, 5 |
157 | 41 | |
158 | 49 | |
161 | 85 | |
163 | 104, 105 | |
Rugh, Dwight | 154 | 2 |
157 | 36, 41, 42 | |
158 | 47, 49, 51, 55, 56 | |
161 | 85 | |
163 | 110 | |
167 | 127-130, 136 | |
168 | 137 | |
Runnalls, John | 154 | 2, 3 |
157 | 42 | |
158 | 51 | |
167 | 127, 128 | |
Rutherford, Miss S.C. [See: Woodward, Shirley Rutherford ] | ||
Sallmon, William H. | 157 | 36, 41 |
158 | 47 | |
Sanders, Morris B. | 157 | 38, 39 |
160 | 71, 74 | |
Sanford, Neil | 154 | 2, 5 |
165 | 117 | |
Sassen, Augusta A. | 158 | 45 |
Scherer, Francis Schlosser | 154 | 2, 3 |
157 | 41, 42 | |
158 | 55 | |
159 | 66 | |
160 | 69, 80-82 | |
161 | 87 | |
167 | 135 | |
Scherer, James A. | 154 | 2, 3 |
156 | 26 | |
157 | 36, 42 | |
158 | 55 | |
160 | 69 | |
161 | 87 | |
168 | 137, 138 | |
Schlosser, Francis [See: Scherer, Francis Schlosser ] | ||
Schoyer, B. Preston | 154 | 2, 3, 5 |
157 | 36, 42 | |
159 | 66 | |
167 | 127, 128, 131 | |
Scotten, Robert | 154 | 5 |
Seabury, Warren B. | 162 | 101, 102 |
Seitz, Robert W. | 154 | 2, 5 |
Selby, Jane [See: Huestis, Jane Selby ] | ||
Shen, M.S. | ||
Shen, S.J. | 157 | 37 |
Sheng, James | 157 | 42, 43 |
158 | 46, 47 | |
167 | 136 | |
Shibley, Gerald S. | 154 | 2 |
160 | 71 | |
Shove, John n. | 154 | 3, 5 |
Shuai, Mr. | 157 | 43 |
Smith, Dwight C. | 154 | 5 |
157 | 38-40 | |
160 | 75 | |
Smith, Harriet H. | 157 | 38, 39 |
160 | 79, 81 | |
Smith, Harold V. | 154 | 2 |
157 | 36-41 | |
158 | 45-47, 54 | |
165 | 117, 126 | |
Smith, Harold W. | 154 | 5 |
Smith, Robert A. | 167 | 133 |
Smith, Sylvester | 154 | 2, 5 |
157 | 37 | |
Speiden, John G.F. | 154 | 5 |
157 | 38-40 | |
Springer, Paul L. | 154 | 3 |
157 | 42 | |
Stokes, Anson P. | 158 | 46 |
161 | 85 | |
163 | 105 | |
Strunk, Elvira M. | 157 | 38-40 |
158 | 45 | |
160 | 79 | |
Sun Yat-sen | 161 | 86 |
Sweet, Sidney E. Tan, J.I. | 154 167 157 | 2, 3 127, 128, 40 |
T.l~ang ,. -Mr. | 157 | 43 |
160 | 69 | |
Tang, C.F. | 157 | 38, 39 |
160 | 70, 74 | |
Tewksbury, M. Gardiner | 163 | 105 |
Thomas, Arthur M. | 157 | 38-40 |
158 | 45 | |
Thurston, J. Lawrence | 158 | 45 |
165 | 113 | |
Tooker, Marjorie [See: Whittlesey, Marjorie] | ||
Tooker Towle, Marian R. | 154 | 2, 3 |
157 | 42, 47 | |
158 | 51 | |
159 | 61 | |
161 | 84 | |
168 | 137 | |
Ts' ai, Mr. | 157 | 42 |
162 | 101 | |
Tsao, H. C. | 157 | 38, 39 |
158 | 46 | |
Tso, F. | 160 157 | 70, 74 40 |
Vennurn, Thomas | 154 | 5 |
157 | 36 | |
Vickrey, Charles | 165 | 113 |
Vernon Vorys, John | 154 | 2, 5 |
Vreeland, Harold | 163 | 105 |
Walke, Stephen C. | 154 | 3 |
167 | 127 | |
Walker, C. Lester | 154 | 2, 5 |
157 | 36 | |
158 | 46 | |
165 | 117 | |
Walters, Ota G. | 160 | 71 |
Walworth, Arthur C. | 154 | 5 |
163 | 105 | |
165 | 117 | |
168 | 139 | |
Wan, Mr. | 157 | 43 |
Wang, Mr. | 157 | 43 |
Wang, K.Y. | 157 | 42 |
160 | 69 | |
Wang, Tai-yuan | 160 | 80 |
Warfield, Marguerite D. | 157 | 37 |
160 | 81 | |
165 | 120 | |
Wei, Francis C.M. | 157 | 43 |
158 | 48 | |
159 | 58 | |
167 | 127, 133 | |
Weigle, Luther | 157 | 41 |
159 | 58 | |
163 | 104, 105 | |
Weigle, Richard D. | 154 | 2, 3 |
157 | 36, 41 | |
161 | 85 | |
163 | 105 | |
166 | 126 | |
167 | 127 | |
Wheeler, W. Reginald | 161 | 85 |
163 | 105 | |
167 | 132 | |
Whittlesey, Marjorie Tooker | 154 | 2, 3 |
157 | 42 | |
158 | 49 | |
160 | 69, 80, 81 | |
161 | 87 | |
167 | 129 | |
Whittlesey, Steven B. | 154 | 2, 3 |
161 | 87 | |
168 | 137 | |
Wiggin, Lewis M. | 163 | 105 |
Wilder, Amos Parker | 161 | 85 |
Williams, A.C. | 161 | 85 |
165 | 113 | |
Williams, Frederick Wells | 158 | 46 |
161 | 85 | |
Williams, James W. | 154 | 5 |
157 | 6, 37, 41, 42 | |
158 | 54 | |
165 | 117 | |
Wilson, Louis Farnam | 157 | 36, 38, 39, 42 |
159 | 67 | |
160 | 69, 71, 74, 75, 79, 80 | |
165 | 117, 119 | |
167 | 134 | |
Wilson, Stanley | 157 | 42 |
158 | 45 | |
Woodward, Shirley C. Rutherford | 157 | 38, 39 |
Woodward, Stanley | 154 | 5 |
157 | 38-40 | |
Worley, Ethel Koons | 160 | 80, 81 |
165 | 119 | |
Wu, King-lui | 157 | 43 |
Yen, Fu-chen | 157 | 36-39, 41 |
158 | 46, 54 | |
160 | 70, 74, 75 | |
165 | 117, 119 | |
Ying, Kai-shih | 154 | 2 |
156 | 25 | |
157 | 36, 41-43 | |
158 | 47, 48, 51, 55 | |
161 | 85 | |
163 | 105, 110 | |
167 | 127, 130, 131, 133, 136 | |
Yuan, S.S. | 157 | 40 |
Zee, Z.Z. | 160 | 70 |
Processing Information
Yale University records are arranged and described at the accession level by the creating office. The University Archives creates collection level descriptive records, but typically does no further arrangement and description at the accession level.
- American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions
- American Bureau for Medical Advancement in China
- Angell, James Rowland, 1869-1949
- Arnold, Lauren
- Beach, Harlan P. (Harlan Page), 1854-1933
- Beeby, Nell V., 1896-1957
- Beijing (China)
- Bingham, Woodbridge
- Bliss, Charles Franklin, 1858-1947
- Brewster, Kingman, Jr., 1919-1988
- Changsha (Hunan Sheng, China)
- Chiang, Kai-shek, 1887-1975
- Chiang, May-ling Soong, 1897-2003
- China -- Description and travel
- China -- History -- 20th Century
- China -- Social conditions
- China -- Social life and customs
- Chinese Student Christian Association in North America
- Chinese University of Hong Kong
- Christian Medical Council for Overseas Work
- Clise, James William, 1900-1961
- Coe, John Leslie, 1902-
- Coffin, Henry Sloane, 1877-1954
- Communism -- China
- Coolidge, Calvin, 1872-1933
- Crary, Stephen Trowbridge
- Dayton, Arthur Bliss, 1889-
- Diaries
- Farnum, Louise
- Ford Foundation
- Foreign Missions Conference of North America
- Freeland, Herbert H.
- Fulton, Robert Brank
- Gabriel, Ralph Henry, 1890-1987
- Gage, Brownell, 1874-
- Guo li Xiang Ya yi xue yuan. Hsiang-Ya Hospital (Changsha, China)
- Hadley, Arthur Twining, 1856-1930
- Hankou (Wuhan, China)
- Harkness, Edward Stephen, 1874-1940
- Holden, Reuben A. (Reuben Andrus), 1918-
- Hong Kong (China)
- Hua zhong shi fan xue yuan
- Hume, Edward H. (Edward Hicks), 1876-1957
- Hutchins, Francis S. (Francis Stephenson), 1902-
- Kitchen, Wilmer J.
- Kuliang (China)
- Kwei, Paul C. T.
- Latourette, Kenneth Scott, 1884-1968
- Leavens, Dickson H.
- Li, Choh-Ming, 1912-
- Light, Timothy
- Lobenstine, E. C. (Edwin Carlyle), 1872-1958
- Long, Charles H., 1926-
- Loram, C. T. (Charles Templeman), 1879-1940
- Lovett, Sidney, 1890-1979
- Luce, Henry Robinson, 1898-1967
- Lyford, Oliver S.
- Missionaries
- Missions -- China
- Morland, J. Kenneth (John Kenneth)
- Motion pictures (visual works)
- Nanjing (Jiangsu Sheng, China)
- National Council of the Churches of Christ in the United States of America
- Paxton, John Hall, 1899-1952
- Photographs
- Rattenbury, Harold B. (Harold Burgoyne)
- Reed, Edward Bliss, 1872-1940
- Religio-Scientific Institute (Camden, N.J.)
- Rockefeller Foundation. China Medical Board
- Rockwood, Charles P., 1917-1970
- Rudin, Harry R. (Harry Rudolph), 1898-
- Sallmon, William H., 1866-1938
- Schoyer, Preston
- Scrapbooks
- Seabury, Warren Bartlett, 1877-1907
- Shanghai (China)
- Slides (photographs)
- Smith, Robert Ashton, 1914-
- Soong, T. T.
- Stokes, Anson Phelps, 1874-1958
- Taiwan
- Thurston, Lawrence
- Tighe, Laurence G., 1894-1954
- Tilson, John Q. (John Quillin), 1866-1958
- Torrey, Elizabeth B.
- Tucker, Luther, 1802-1873
- United Board for Christian Higher Education in Asia
- Vaill, George D.
- Videotapes
- Walker, Williston, 1860-1922
- Walworth, Arthur, 1903-2005
- Ward, Baldwin H.
- Wei, Zhuomin, 1888-1976
- Weigle, Luther A. (Luther Allan), 1880-1976
- Weigle, Richard Daniel, 1912-
- Welch, Pierce N.
- Wheeler, W. Reginald (William Reginald), 1889-1963
- Wiggin, Frederick Holme, 1882-1963
- Wiggin, Lewis Merriam
- Wilder, Amos Parker, 1862-
- Willard, William R., 1908-
- Williams, Frederick Wells, 1857-1928
- Wilson, Stanley Kidder, 1879-1944
- World War -- 1939-1945 -- China
- Wright, Henry B. (Henry Burt), 1877-1923
- Xin Ya shu yuan (Kowloon, China)
- Yale University -- Students
- Yale-China Association
- Yali Middle School
- Yanjing da xue
- Ying, Kai
- Yuanling (China)
- Yung, Wing, 1828-1912
- Zee, T. M. Arthur, 1903-
- Zhang, Fuliang, 1889-
- Zhang, Xiaoqian
- Title
- Guide to the Yale-China Association Records
- Status
- Under Revision
- Author
- compiled by staff of Manuscripts and Archives
- Date
- September 1998
- Description rules
- Finding Aid Created In Accordance With Manuscripts And Archives Processing Manual
- Language of description note
- Finding aid written in English.
Part of the Manuscripts and Archives Repository
Yale University Library
P.O. Box 208240
New Haven CT 06520-8240 US
(203) 432-1735
(203) 432-7441 (Fax)
beinecke.library@yale.edu
Location
Sterling Memorial Library
Room 147
120 High Street
New Haven, CT 06511