Samuel Isett Woodbridge

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Born(1856-10-16)October 16, 1856
DiedJuly 23, 1926(1926-07-23) (aged 69)
Shanghai, China
Resting placeShanghai, China
Rev. Samuel Isett Woodbridge, Sr.
Born(1856-10-16)October 16, 1856
DiedJuly 23, 1926(1926-07-23) (aged 69)
Shanghai, China
Resting placeShanghai, China
EducationRutgers A.B. 1876, Columbia Theological Seminary 1880, Princeton Theological Seminary 1882, Westminster College (Missouri) D.D. 1910
OccupationsPresbyterian missionary, author, translator, Magazine editor
Known forMission work in China
Spouse(s)Jeanie Wilson Woodrow, Dr. Mary Newell
RelativesRev. John Woodbridge IV

Rev. Samuel Isett Woodbridge, Sr. (1856–1926) was an American Presbyterian missionary to China. He authored several books on the experience, and also translated into English various works of Chinese literature.

Woodbridge was born in Henderson, Henderson County, Kentucky on October 16, 1856[1] to Rev. Jahleel Woodbridge and Louise Caroline Ligon.

He graduated from Rutgers College in absentia with a Bachelor of Arts in 1876, later studying at Columbia Theological Seminary from 1879 to 1880.[2] On April 8, 1880, he was admitted upon Examination to the membership of the First Presbyterian Church, Columbia, South Carolina. He entered studies that year at Princeton Theological Seminary where he remained until 1882, and was ordained a foreign evangelist on October 7 in Walterboro, South Carolina, by the Presbytery of Charleston.[3][4] In 1910, he received a Doctor of Divinity from Westminster College in Fulton, Missouri.[5]

Missionary work

Following his ordination as a foreign evangelist in 1882, he left for China, where he served as a missionary of the Presbyterian Church in the U.S. for the remainder of his life. Upon his arrival, he worked in Chenkiang for twenty years until 1902, and then in Shanghai until his death in 1926. In Shanghai, he became the founder and editor of the Shanghai Christian Intelligencer.

Books and magazines

Author

Fifty Years in China

Translator

China's Only Hope, by the Viceroy Chang Ching Tung, Revel & Co., New York

Editor

Shanghai Christian Intelligencer, also called the Chinese Christian Intelligencer, a magazine with both English and Chinese editions

Family

Death

References

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