Women's Missionary Association: Malaya/Singapore

Malaya - minutes and correspondence, building plans


Date(s) of creation: 1923 - 1957
Level: Sub-collection
Format: Archive           

collection SOAS Archive
id PCE.WMA.06
recordtype archive
scb_item_location Archive & Special Collections
item_location Archive & Special Collections
scb_loan_type Reference only
callnumber PCE/WMA/06
callnumber_txt PCE/WMA/06
callnumber-sort PCE/WMA/06
prefix_number 06
title Women's Missionary Association: Malaya/Singapore
scb_date_creation 1923 - 1957
scb_level Sub-collection
level_sort 7/Collection/Sub-Collection/Sub-Sub-Collection/Sub-Sub-Sub-Collection/Series/Sub-Series/Sub-Sub-Series/File
format Archive
scb_admin_history The first two WMA missionaries arrived in 1887 and 1888. A boarding school for girls was opened and work among Chinese women carried out. However, this work lasted only a few years and no other WMA missionary was appointed until 1927 when Margaret Dryburgh was transferred from Swatow. She took over the running of the Choon Goan school in a suburb of Singapore. Under her it rapidly developed and became eligible for government funding as a recognised secondary school. Dryburgh eventually became head of a girls' English school, known as Kuo Chuan School. Further WMA missionaries arrived in 1941, having been evacuated from Formosa. In 1942, following the evacuation from Singapore, four WMA missionaries, including Margaret Dryburgh, were interned. Three of them died in captivity. After the war, a new school for girls was formed in memory of Dryburgh while Kuo Chuan School was re-opened in 1946.
description Malaya - minutes and correspondence, building plans
scb_access_status Open
language English
language_search English
hierarchy_top_id_raw PCE
hierarchy_sequence PCE.00WMA.0006