Papers of Rev Alfred Evans

Plan for Shih Chu'an [missionary] subdistricts in China and letters written from Yunnan and Hong Kong by Evans to Leslie and Mildred Pacey.


Order number: MMS/Special Series/Biographical/China/Box 1409
Date(s) of creation: c1936-[19]63
Level: Sub-Sub-Sub-Series
Format: Archive           
Main author: Evans; Alfred (1879-1967); ordained missionary

collection SOAS Archive
id MMS.17.02.09.21.04
recordtype archive
scb_item_location Archive & Special Collections
item_location Archive & Special Collections
scb_loan_type Reference only
scb_order_with MMS/Special Series/Biographical/China/Box 1409
callnumber MMS/17/02/09/21/04
callnumber_txt MMS/17/02/09/21/04
callnumber-sort MMS/17/02/09/21/04
prefix_number 04
title Papers of Rev Alfred Evans
scb_date_creation c1936-[19]63
scb_level Sub-Sub-Sub-Series
level_sort 7/Collection/Sub-Collection/Sub-Sub-Collection/Sub-Sub-Sub-Collection/Series/Sub-Series/Sub-Sub-Series/File
scb_extent 6 items
author Evans; Alfred (1879-1967); ordained missionary
author_facet Evans; Alfred (1879-1967); ordained missionary
authorStr Evans; Alfred (1879-1967); ordained missionary
author_letter Evans; Alfred (1879-1967); ordained missionary
format Archive
scb_admin_history Alfred Evans was born in Holdenhurst, near Bournemouth, Dorset in 1879, and was educated at Bournemouth Technical College. He spent the latter part of his childhood in Southampton and whilst worshipping at St Mary's Road Bible Christian Church he became aware of their missionary work in China and met his future wife, Bessie Alice Bull (1876-1941). After finishing his training for the ministry at Shebbear College, Devon, in 1903 he spent two years as a minister in St Columb, Cornwall, and then was sent to work as a Bible Christian missionary in Yunnan, China. He arrived in the spring of 1906 and married Bessie Bull (who had been an evangelist in China since 1903) in Yunnan-fu [Kunming] on 11 January 1908. The three main achievements of his service in Yunnan was encouraging and supporting the significant numbers of Kopu [Go-p'u] Chinese to convert to Methodism, the growth of the Methodist Church in Kunming, Yunnan, throughout the 1930s and his work as chairman of the district. His wife Bessie died in 1941 of typhus and he became a supernumerary in 1943. He remained in the area and was viewed as an elder statesman by the Methodist community (amongst whom he was affectionately known as 'Uncle Alf') until forced to leave his home in China after the Communist takeover in 1951. He relocated to Hong Kong where he continued to evangelise to both the Chinese and English Methodist communities. He died in Hong Kong on 4 February 1967.
description Plan for Shih Chu'an [missionary] subdistricts in China and letters written from Yunnan and Hong Kong by Evans to Leslie and Mildred Pacey.
scb_access_status Open
scb_copyright Copyright vested with Trustees for Methodist Church Purposes and estate of Alfred Evans
scb_use_restrictions For permission to publish, please contact Archives & Special Collections, SOAS Library in the first instance
language English
language_search English
scb_scripts_material Latin
hierarchy_top_id_raw MMS
hierarchy_sequence MMS.0017.0002.0009.0021.0004