Women's Missionary Society of the Pacific Coast
The Women's Missionary Society of the Pacific Coast of the Methodist Episcopal Church was founded on October 29, 1870 by Methodist Rev. Otis T. Gibson,[1] with eleven women he recruited in August 1870, for the purpose of working among the slave girls in Chinatown, San Francisco, California.[2] By the end of 1870, Rev. Gibson had erected the building of the "Chinese Mission Institute".[3] In October 1871, the first woman, Jin Ho, was rescued from the bay where she had attempted suicide. She then worked in a Christian family and in two years married a Christian Chinese. In 1873 a school was opened with Miss L. S. Templeton as teacher. The school mainly taught English and other necessary skills to Chinese and Japanese women and girls who had been rescued from slavery or prostitution in San Francisco Chinatown.[1][2]
The "Oriental Home and School", as the home was sometimes called, was run by the Women's Missionary Society of the Pacific Coast, but it was misplaced in the Methodist Episcopal Church organization. In 1893, after formal recognition of its work by the Women's Home Missionary Society, it was incorporated into the larger Women's Home Missionary Society. Together they worked to rescue and educate slave girls. In all about 500 women and girls had been helped in one way or another, as of 1901. That same year, a handsome two-story concrete building with 22 rooms for the "Oriental Home for Women and Girls" at 912 Washington Street in San Francisco's Chinatown was dedicated by the Women's Home Missionary Society.[2] Unfortunately, this building, along with most of San Francisco Chinatown, was destroyed by the 1906 earthquake and fire.
"This work [among slave girls] ought to have the endorsement of every right-thinking person, whether black, white, brown or yellow." -- Ho Yow, the Imperial Consul General to the United States, at the 1901 dedication.[2]
After the great quake and fire, Julia Morgan designed the replacement residence, a new three-story brick building with accommodations for 60 to 70 girls -- orphaned, rescued or abandoned. It was built at 940 Washington Street in San Francisco Chinatown and was dedicated by the Women's Home Missionary Society in 1912.[4] Meanwhile, the Chinese Methodist Church was rebuilt in 1911 on the corner of Washington and Stockton Streets at 920 Washington Street.[5] Later in the 1940s, the three-story brick building at 940 Washington Street, designed by Julia Morgan for the "Oriental Home", was renamed the Gum Moon Women's Residence.[6]
References
[edit]- ^ a b Gibson, Otis (1877). The Chinese in America: Chapter IX. Missionary Report among the Chinese Women in California. Cincinnati: Hitchcock and Walden. p. 202-222.
- ^ a b c d "METHODIST ORIENTAL HOME IS DEDICATED BY THE BISHOP: historical facts". cdnc.ucr.edu. San Francisco Call, Volume 87, Number 48, 18 July 1901. Retrieved 22 October 2022.
- ^ "Chinese Mission Institute". cdnc.ucr.edu. Daily Alta California, Volume 22, Number 7550, 22 November 1870. Retrieved 22 October 2022.
The building of the Chinese Mission Institute of the Methodist Episcopal Church, under the management of the Rev. O. Gibson, is ... located on Washington street, between Powell and Stockton. The building, which is a three-story frame, is plain, substantial, and ample for the purposes for which it is intended. This institution, springing up quietly and unostentatiously in this city, in spite of the strong and bitter prejudices against the Chinese, created by certain political demagogues, is a credit to our city, to civilization, and to the church under whose auspices it is being reared.
- ^ "ORIENTAL HOME'S NEW BUILDING TO BE OPENED". cdnc.ucr.edu. San Francisco Call, Volume 111, Number 57, 26 January 1912. Retrieved 22 October 2022.
- ^ "150TH ANNIVERSARY (2018)". Chinese United Methodist Church of San Francisco. Retrieved 22 October 2022.
In 1868, Reverend Dr. Otis Gibson and his wife, Eliza, founded the Church with the mission to protect the Chinese from the violence of racial prejudice. They tried to not only guide the Chinese people spiritually but also to teach them English. In 1906, the great earthquake destroyed the Church building. In 1911, after five years of displacement, the Church was rebuilt at the corner of Washington and Stockton Streets.
- ^ "Our History 我們的歷史". gummoon.org. Gum Moon Women's Residence. Retrieved 22 October 2022.