1844 — 1918
Pioneer missionary; Deputy Director of the CIM for more than three decades; longest-serving member of the CIM at the time of his death.
1843 — 1907
Faithful member of the early CIM team in China; head of the Chinese children’s home and school; devoted caregiver for Hudson Taylor’s children; “executive secretary” of the CIM in London while Taylor was in China; tireless nurse to Hudson Taylor and his children in times of illness; leader of the Girls' Department of the Chefoo School.
— 1898
The first of the Hmu tribe, a subgroup of the Miao, to follow Christ. Evangelist and preacher.
1882 — 1933
An expert in Mongolian languages and tireless servant for the Gospel in China.
1906 — 2008
American medical missionary, who served in Xinjiang and Gansu for 20 years; President of the Borden Memorial Hospital, Lanzhou, Gansu.
1906 — 1934
Missionary with the China Inland Mission (CIM), who served in Yingzhou City, Yingshang, and Jingde, Anhui Province until her death at Miaoshou at the age of 28.
1863 — 1900
Missionaries to China who were among the 46 missionaries and their children slaughtered in Taiyuan on 9 July 1900 in the Boxer Rebellion.
1835 — 1889
The first missionary to Wenzhou.
1929 — 2009
Great-grandson of J. Hudson Taylor; founder of China Evangelical Seminary, Taiwan; General Director of the Overseas Missionary Fellowship; founder of Medical Services International.
1832 — 1905
Founder and director of the China Inland Mission. Served in China, Europe, and Australia.
1843 — 1904
Evangelist and teacher among Chinese women. Second wife of J. Hudson Taylor and mother of two children by him. Pioneer woman missionary.
1837 — 1870
Pioneer missionary of the China Inland Mission, wife of Hudson Taylor and trainer of women missionary recruits.