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Can Women Be Missionaries? Envisioning Female Agency in the Early Nineteenth-Century British Empire

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  21 December 2012

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Research Article
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Copyright © North American Conference of British Studies 2006

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References

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11 The respective dates at which the major English missionary societies made a formal decision to directly recruit women were as follows: Wesleyan Methodist Missionary Society in 1858, Baptist Missionary Society in 1866, London Missionary Society in 1875, and Church Missionary Society in 1887. In Scotland the United Presbyterian Church made the move in 1881. For specific societies, see The Women's Auxilary of the Wesleyan Methodist Missionary Society, The Story of the Women's Auxiliary, 1858–1922 (London, 1923)Google Scholar; Stanley, Brian, The History of the Baptist Missionary Society, 1792–1992 (Edinburgh, 1992), 228–32Google Scholar; Lovett, Richard, The History of the London Missionary Society, 1795–1895 (London, 1899), 714–16Google Scholar; Is It Nothing to You? A Record of the Work among Women in Connection with the London Missionary Society (London, 1899)Google Scholar; Macdonald, Lesley A. Orr, A Unique and Glorious Mission: Women and Presbyterianism in Scotland, 1830–1930 (Edinburgh, 2000), 115Google Scholar. For the Church Missionary Society and a general overview of the developments, see Maughan, Steven S., “Regions Beyond and the National Church: Domestic Support for the Foreign Missions of the Church of England in the High Imperial Age, 1870–1914” (PhD thesis, Harvard University, 1995), 259327Google Scholar.

12 Founding constitution of the Baptist Missionary Society as quoted in Stanley, History of the Baptist Missionary Society, 233.

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16 Stock, History of the Church Missionary Society, 124–25.

17 For a summary of these early developments, see Midgley, Clare, “Female Emancipation in an Imperial Frame: English Women and the Campaign against Sati (Widow Burning) in India, 1813–30,” Women's History Review 9, no. 1 (2000): 95121CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

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19 Noel (1799–1873) was a clergyman in the Church of England until 1848, when he became a Baptist minister. He was an influential reformist Whig who opposed the Corn Laws and led pan-evangelical initiatives to evangelize the urban poor. See Carter, Grayson's entry on Noel in the Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (Oxford, 2004)Google Scholar.

20 “Appeal,” in Society for Promoting Female Education in China, India, and the East (London, n.d.), 912, 13Google Scholar; History of the Society for Promoting Female Education in the East (London, 1847)Google Scholar; The Twenty-Fourth Annual Report of the Society for Promoting Female Education in the East (London, 1858), 1936, 16Google Scholar. For a brief overview of the activities of the society, see Donaldson, Margaret, “The Cultivation of the Heart and the Moulding of the Will: The Missionary Contribution of the Society for Promoting Female Education in China, India, and the East,” in Women in the Church, ed. Shiels, W. J. and Wood, Diana (Oxford, 1990), 429–42Google Scholar. The minutes and other records of the FES are preserved in the Church Missionary Society archive at the University of Birmingham (available on microfilm from Adam Matthew publishers).

21 This breakaway group was called the Female Society of the Free Church of Scotland for Promoting Christian Education of the Females in India. Swan, Annie S., Seed Time and Harvest: The Story of the Hundred Years’ Work of the Women's Foreign Mission of the Church of Scotland (London, 1937)Google Scholar; Eighth Annual Report of the Scottish Ladies’ Association for the Advancement of Female Education in India, under the Superintendence of the General Assembly's Committee on Foreign Missions (Edinburgh, 1846)Google Scholar; Rev.Duff, Alexander, More Fruits from India (Edinburgh, ca. 1848)Google Scholar; The Eastern Females’ Friend, n.s., 3 (July 1857): 34.

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23 Chapman, Priscilla, Hindoo Female Education (London, 1839)Google Scholar.

24 History of the Society for Promoting Female Education in the East; prefatory note to a bound volume of The Eastern Females’ Friend, n.s., 1–19 (1857–61).

25 Peterson, “Feeling and Claims of Little People.”

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28 Elbourne, Elizabeth, Blood Ground: Colonialism, Mission, and the Contest for Christianity in the Cape Colony and Britain, 1799–1853 (Montreal, 2002), 113–15Google Scholar. For a fascinating account of one African Caribbean woman's missionary work in the mid-eighteenth century, see Sensbach, Jon F., Rebecca's Revival: Creating Black Christianity in the Atlantic World (Cambridge, MA, 2005)Google Scholar.

29 Judson, Ann H., An Account of the American Baptist Mission to the Burman Empire, 2nd ed. (London, 1827)Google Scholar; Knowles, James D., Memoir of Mrs. Ann H. Judson, Wife of the Reverend Adoniram Judson, Missionary to Burmah, 9th ed. (London, 1838), 34, 35Google Scholar.

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31 Rev.Fairchild, A. G., comp., Memoir of Mrs. Louisa A. Lowrie, of the Northern India Mission: With Introductory Notices by the Reverend E. P. Swift, the Reverend W. H. Pearce, and the Reverend A. Reed, DD. Reprinted from the Second American Edition (London, 1838), 1, 4–5Google Scholar.

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37 Rev.Middleditch, T., The Youthful Female Missionary: A Memoir of Mary Ann Hutchins, Wife of the Reverend John Hutchins, Baptist Missionary, Savanna-la-Mar, Jamaica; And Daughter of the Reverend T. Middleditch, of Ipswich; Compiled Chiefly from Her Own Correspondence, 2nd ed. (London, 1840), 63, 69–72Google Scholar. See also Hall, “Missionary Stories,” 205–54.

38 Wilson, John, A Memoir of Mrs. Margaret Wilson of the Scottish Mission, Bombay, 3rd ed. (Edinburgh, 1840)Google Scholar.

39 Memoirs of Female Labourers in the Missionary Cause (Bath, 1839), 2526Google Scholar. Catherine Hall discusses a rather similar account relating to a woman who married a missionary to Jamaica—see Hall, “Missionary Stories,” 223.

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43 The third was Miss Smith, one of the early agents of the FES in Bombay, and to her biographical entry Thompson appended some general information on the society, together with a list of the single women it had sent out to India and elsewhere.

44 Thompson, Memoirs, xxvi.

45 Brontë, Jane Eyre, 434.

46 Luke, Early Years, 116.

47 Brontë, Jane Eyre, 477.

48 Luke, Early Years, 85, 108, 114–23.

49 Thompson, Memoirs, xxv–xxvi.

50 Entry for Mrs. Jemima Luke, Dictionary of National Biography Supplement, 1901–1911, vol. 2; Luke, Early Years, 148–50.

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54 Amanda Vickery has suggested that such prescriptive tracts can be read not as evidence of the constriction of women's lives but as a defensive reaction against women's public activities: Vickery, Amanda, “From Golden Age to Separate Spheres? A Review of the Categories and Chronology of English Women's History,” Historical Journal 36, no. 2 (1993): 383414CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

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59 Mani, Lata, Contentious Traditions: The Debate on Sati in Colonial India (Berkeley, 1998)Google Scholar.

60 Midgley, “Female Emancipation in an Imperial Frame.”

61 “Appeal.” The text of this appeal was also published as app. B to the History of the Society for Promoting Female Education, where its author is named as the Reverend Baptist W. Noel (see 266–75).

62 Thompson, Memoirs, xv, lxxviii.

63 British and Foreign School Society, “Appeal in Behalf of Native Females,” Missionary Register, 1820, 434.

64 “Appeal,” 9.

65 Ibid., 13.

66 Report of the Glasgow Association for Promoting Female Education in the East (Glasgow, 1840), 7Google Scholar.

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70 Noel, Baptist W., Duty of Christians towards the Female Children of India and the East (London, 1836), 43Google Scholar.

71 Kenzle and Walker, Women Preachers and Prophets, xix.

72 See the entry on Tonna by Lenard, Mary in the Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (Oxford, 2004)Google Scholar.

73 , C.E., “China, India, and the East,” Christian Lady's Magazine 3 (1835): 540–42Google Scholar, quote on 542.

74 Lydia, , “China, India, and the East,” Christian Lady's Magazine 6 (1836): 498502Google Scholar.

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76 Ibid., 242.

77 , J.S., letter to the editor, Christian Lady's Magazine 7 (1837): 540–43Google Scholar.

78 Thompson, Memoirs, ix; History of the Society for Promoting Female Education in the East, 1; Female Agency among the Heathen, as Recorded in the History and Correspondence of the Society for Promoting Female Education in the East” (London, 1850)Google Scholar; The Female Missionary Intelligencer and Record of the Proceedings of the Society for the Promotion of Female Education in China, Africa, and the East (1854), see esp. 1:108, 186, 188.

79 The Female Missionary Intelligencer 2 (1855), 4950Google Scholar.

80 The English Woman's Journal, the earliest English feminist journal linked to the Langham Place Circle, which began publication in 1858, makes no reference to the work of British Protestant missionary women (although it does include information on Christian educational work by a Catholic woman in the French colony of Algeria).

81 For the classic discussion of early “imperial feminism,” see Burton, Antoinette, Burdens of History: British Feminists, Indian Women, and Imperial Culture, 1865–1915 (Chapel Hill, NC, 1994)Google Scholar.

82 Morgan, Women, Religion, and Feminism in Britain; deVries, “Rediscovering Christianity after the Postmodern Turn.”