Yale University Library

Overview

Repository: Yale University Divinity School Library
409 Prospect Street
New Haven, CT 06520
Email: divinity.library@yale.edu
Phone: (203) 432-5301
Fax: (203) 432-3906
Call Number: Record Group No. 227
Creator: Taylor, Paul Vivian
Title: Paul and Frieda Taylor Family Papers
Dates: 1921-1999
Bulk Dates: 1924-1950
Physical Description: Total archival boxes 6; total linear footage 2.5'
Language(s): In English.
Summary: Correspondence, writings, and collected material document the life and work of educational missionaries Paul and Frieda Taylor and their family, who served at Huachung University in central China. From 1924 to 1927 Paul V. Taylor taught philosophy and English at Huping College, Yochow [now Yueyang], Hunan province. After a period in the U.S., Taylor served as professor and Dean of the School of Education and later Dean of the Faculty at Huachung University (Central China College) in Wuchang between 1929 and 1950. Frieda Taylor was a musician who taught at Huachung and was mother to the couple's three children; the family was often separated due to health reasons and political unrest.
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Administrative Information

Provenance

Gift of Jane Taylor Slabaugh, 2010

Information about Access

This collection is open for research.

Cite As

Paul and Frieda Taylor Family Papers, Record Group No. 227, Special Collections, Yale Divinity School Library.

Biography

Paul Vivian Taylor

1892 Sep 30 PVT was born in Reamstown, PA, son of Rev. and Mrs. Harry M. and Amelia Taylor
1914 B.A. from Muhlenberg College
1914-1917, 1927 Graduate student in Education at University of Pennsylvania
1914-1918 Taught Greek and Chemistry at Schuylkill Seminar (Albright College); met and married Frieda Fuehrer
1917 Ordained in the Evangelical Church, Allentown, PA
1918-1921 Taught mathematics at high schools in PA
1920s Pastor at Pennsylvania Evangelical and Reformed churches, including Lancaster
1924-1927 Sent to China a missionary of the Evangelical and Reformed Church. Taught philosophy and English at Huping College, Yochow, China
1929 Ph.D. from Hartford Seminary; Dissertation: "A Philosophy of Values in Christian Education"
1929-1950 Taught Philosophy of Education, Psychology at Huachung University (Central China College), Wuchang; Dean of School of Education (1929-1932), Dean of Faculty (1930-1950)
1936-1937 On furlough in the U.S.; family remained in U.S. when PVT returned to China.
1938-1944 Son Edouard, a graduate of Franklin and Marshall College, worked with his father at Huachung and taught at an Evangelical and Reformed mission school in Yuanling. Edouard spent 1945 working in India before returning to the U.S.
1938-1946 Due to war conditions in China, Huachung University moved to Kweilin, PVT led the college on its trek of 1500 miles and traveled to Hanoi and Burma for supplies. After furlough in the U.S. spent time in India and served as chaplain to U.S. forces and in relief work, before the University resumed operation in Wuchang in 1946.
1942 Doctor of Divinity degree received from Franklin and Marshall College, Lancaster, PA
1950 After spending six months in China following the Communist takeover, returned to the U.S.
1951-1962 Pastor at Zion Church, Frostburg, MD
1974 Died

Frieda Fuehrer Taylor

1895 FFT was born in Hazelton, PA
1917 Graduated from the music department of Schuykill Seminary, Reading, PA; met and married PVT
1924 Taylors left for China with their two young children, Eduoard and Jane
1927 Political unrest in China caused their return to Hartford, CT where PVT studied and their third child, Nancy, was born.
1929 Returned to China and headed the music department at Huachung University; performed in many concerts for the college and community.
1930s After their furlough, FFT remained in the U.S. due to the health of their daughter Nancy and war restrictions
1948 Returned to China; became seriously ill in 1949
1950 Returned to the U.S.
1957 Divorced from Paul V. Taylor and later married Ralph Alexander.
1967 Nov 25 Died in Wyncote, PA

Description of the Papers

This collection provides valuable documentation of the development and operations of Huachung University (Central China College) during a tumultuous time in China. Paul V. Taylor's work as Dean of the Faculty carried responsibility for the administration of internal affairs of the college, including the organization and direction of the curricula of its three schools, Arts, Science, and Education. According to a note left by Taylor, the curricula he worked out with Huachung President Francis C. M. Wei were adopted as standards for the whole of China.

Paul V. Taylor played an important role in the life of Huachung University. In 1922 it was proposed that a "Central China University" be organized, possibly located in Wuchang. The schools to be joined in this proposed university were the British Methodists' Wesley College in Wuchang, the London Missionary Society's Griffith John School in Hankow, the Reformed Church in America's Lakeside College in Yochow, the Yale-in-China, or Yali, institution in Changsha, and the American Episcopal Boone University in Wuchang. Due to conflicting opinions about an appropriate site for the union institution and a great deal of political unrest and upheaval in Central China, it was several years before a stable Central China (or Huachung) University actually came into being. Huachung operated from 1924 to 1927 but then was closed for two years because of student unrest and political events. In 1929, the school reconstituted itself on the western part of the Boone compound in Wuchang. During 1937 many people were moving through Wuhan, headed west in advance of the Japanese occupation. The school managed to complete the 1937 academic year, despite some bombings of Wuhan but by June 1938 it was evident that Huachung woul be forced to relocate. Equipment, books, and office records were packed up and shipped by river to Hengyang, and then by train and truck to Kweilin, where Huachung opened its academic year in September 1938. Kweilin was increasingly the target of Japanese bombing however, so Huachung had to move again, first to Kunming, and finally to Hsichow. Hsichow, a small country village twelve miles north of Tali on the Erh Hai Lake, was the home of the wealthy Yen and Tung families. A group of three temples outside the village became Huachung's campus from 1939 to 1946. When Huachung returned to Wuchang in 1946, it found many of its buildings in need of rehabilitation. Plans again were made to expand the campus and the decision of the American Episcopal Mission to erect a new plant for its Boone School outside the city meant that there would be more room on the original campus. Just as Huachung seemed to have cause for optimism, political upheaval hit again, with the Communist occupation of Wuhan in May 1949. The last Western faculty members left Huachung two years later, in June 1951. Additional records related to Huachung University can be found in YDSL Record Group No. 11, Archives of the United Board for Christian Higher Education in Asia.

Most of the early family correspondence is from Frieda Taylor to her family in the U.S. From 1937, letters are primarily from Paul to Frieda, who remained in the U.S. after their furlough. The collection is of interest for the light it shines on the dynamics of missionary family life, especially under the disrupted political situation in China. Frieda was an accomplished musician and served as head of the music department at Huachang for a time, but was separated from her husband due to health and war conditions for many years.

Some materials related to the Kuling American School and Kuling American School Association that were received with this collection have been transferred to the Kuling American School archives in YDSL Record Group No. 209. The Taylor children attended Kuling American School.