John Richard Wolfe

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John Richard Wolfe
Wolfe, about 1904
Born1832
Died2 December 1915
Fuzhou, Fujian, China
NationalityIrish
EducationChurch Missionary Society College, Islington
OccupationMissionary
Spouse
Mary Ann Maclehose
(m. 1864; died 1913)
Children6
ParentRichard Wolfe & Susan Croston

John Richard Wolfe (1832-1915) was an Irish missionary serving with the Church Missionary Society in Fuzhou, China from 1862 to 1915.

Biography[edit]

Wolfe was born in 1832 near Skibbereen, County Cork, Ireland, which at that time was part of Great Britain.[citation needed]

He entered the Church Missionary Society College, Islington, London in 1857.[citation needed] In 1861 he was ordained a deacon at St Paul's Cathedral and in December of that year he sailed for Hong Kong from where he was assigned as a missionary minister to Fuzhou, Fujian.[citation needed] He was ordained a priest at St John's Cathedral, Hong Kong, in 1863.[citation needed]

Wolfe spent the rest of his life in Fuzhou until his death in 1915. He is described as "the chief instrument in the remarkable ingathering in the Fuh-kien Province."[1] He was made Archdeacon of Fuzhou in 1887 and Vice-President of the CMS in 1910. He was the first and only Vice-President not to be a Bishop.[2]

Wolfe translated a number of works into the local dialect including the Book of Common Prayer, several catechisms, the Gospel of St Matthew, and the Book of Joshua. He was responsible for the building of a number of churches and schools in Fuzhou and other centres across Fukien.[3]

In 1864 Wolfe married Mary Ann Maclehose in Hong Kong. She predeceased him in 1913. Of their family of three boys and three girls, the girls Minnie, Annie and Amy all became missionaries[4] and served in Fuzhou. His son Charles received medical training and worked in hospitals in the city.[citation needed]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Register of missionaries (clerical, lay and female) and native clergy from 1804 to 1904 (Printed for private circulation ed.). London: Church Missionary Society. 1905.
  2. ^ Stock, Eugene (1904). The Story of the Fuh-Kien mission of the Church Missionary Society (4th ed.). London: Church Missionary Society.
  3. ^ Wolfe, J. R. Annual Letters and other correspondence. Archives of the Church Missionary Society, Special Collections, University of Birmingham.
  4. ^ a b Slater, Frances (2018). "The Wolfe Sisters of Foochow, China". In Wai-Ching Angela Wong; Patricia P. K. Chiu (eds.). Christian Women in Chinese Society. University of Hong Kong Press. pp. 157–181. ISBN 978-988-8455-92-8.

Further reading[edit]

  • J. R. Wolfe, Annual Letters and other correspondence in the Archives of the Church Missionary Society, Cadbury Research Library: Special Collections, University of Birmingham.