Skip to main content Skip to search results

Showing Collections: 1–3 of 3

Filtered By

  • Repository: Yale Divinity Library X
  • Language: English X
  • Subject: Missions X
  • Names: Presbyterian Church in the U.S.A X

Filter Results

Additional filters

Subject
Missionaries 1
Missions -- China 1
Missions -- India 1
Missions -- Syria 1
Missions -- Thailand 1

James Payne Alter Papers

 Collection
Call Number: RG 84
Abstract: The papers document Alter's lifelong involvement with the Christian church in India, his affiliation with Yale University, his activities in student Christian organizations, and his ongoing interest in issues of peace and social concern. James Payne Alter was born in India in 1919, son of Presbyterian missionaries. He attended Yale College and Yale Divinity School. He was appointed as a Presbyterian missionary to India in 1945. He taught at Ewing Christian College in Allahabad, served as...
Dates: 1817-1984

Henry Hale Bucher, Sr. and Louise Scott Bucher Papers

 Collection
Call Number: RG 249
Abstract: This collection documents the life and work of the Rev. Henry Hale Bucher, Sr. and his wife Louise Catron Scott Bucher, who served as Presbyterian missionaries in China and the Philippines, and as fraternal workers in Thailand from 1929 to 1972. The bulk of the collection consists of correspondence from the Buchers to their families and their children. Writings of the Buchers, biographical documentation, collected material, photographs, and audio materials document their missionary work as...
Dates: 1920-2012

Henry Harris Jessup Papers

 Collection
Call Number: RG 117
Abstract:

Correspondence, journals, diaries, writings, photographs, and collected material document the missionary work of Henry Harris Jessup and his wife Theodosia Davenport Jessup in Syria. Henry Harris Jessup (1832-1910) was a missionary in Syria from 1856 to 1910, serving under the American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions and Presbyterian Mission Board . He was one of the founders of the Syrian Protestant College, later known as the American University of Beirut.

Dates: 1851-1912