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Albion College Archives: Exhibits
International Week Poster 2001  

Albion's China Connection: Judson Dwight Collins and Methodist Missionaries in China

Co-sponsored by Albion College International Week and the Dr. Wayne Fleenor Memorial Fund, Michigan Area Historical Society, United Methodist Church.

Contents
Judson Dwight Collins
Chinese Views of Western Missionaries
Archival Sources on Missionaries in China
Chinese and American Methodist Women

 

Judson Dwight Collins

Judson Dwight Collins Image
"Engage me a place before the mast,
and my own strong arm will pull me to
and support me while there."


Chronology of Collins' Life
Collins at Albion
Mission to China
Monument to Collins
Judson Dwight Collins: Before the Mast
Judson Collins Camp
Collins' Grave Site
Collins' Homestead
Sources on Collins

Chronology of Collins' Life
February 12, 1823 Judson Dwight Collins born in New York
August 6, 1845 Collins is one of 11 students in the first class to graduate from the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor.
1845-1847 Instructor at the Wesleyan Seminary at Albion (now Albion College)
April 15, 1847 Sets sail from New York for Fuzhou, China, on the Heber.
August 1847 Arrives in China, docking at the mouth of the Min River, then travels up river to Fuzhou.
February 1848 Opens his first school for boys in Fuzhou, with an enrollment of eight.
January 1849 Opens second school in Fuzhou with an enrollment of 17.
February 1849 Struck with serious fever.
April 3, 1849 Methodist Board of Missions orders Collins to leave China because of his rapidly declining health.
May 13, 1852 Judson Dwight Collins dies at age 29 at his parents' home in Michigan.

Collins at Albion
In 1846, Collins set off on horseback to Albion, then a small town on the western Michigan frontier, where he took a teaching position at the Wesleyan Seminary, later known as Albion College. There he taught courses in Latin, Greek, chemistry, botany, and rhetoric, served as Sunday school teacher for the Methodist Church, and conducted research into anatomy and Hebrew.

Mission to China
Collins became captivated by with China while a student at the University of Michigan, and reportedly read every available book on China from the university's library.

Convinced that he had a calling to be a missionary to China, he tirelessly lobbied the Methodist Church's Board of Missions to send him to that country. Although he was initially told that there were no funds for such a mission, Collins persevered. In the spring of 1847, the mission board informed the 24-year-old Collins that he would head the first Methodist mission to China, along with the physician Dr. Rev. Moses C. White.

Collins was endowed with youthful zeal, but missionary work in China presented formidable obstacles. This was the first Methodist mission aimed at a non-English speaking population, and the linguistic and cultural barriers were immense. No dictionary of the Fuzhou dialect existed, for example, and the early missionaries also struggled to translate the Bible into Chinese.

In the aftermath of the Opium War, anti-foreign feeling ran high in China. Unable to find a landlord that would rent property to them inside the Fuzhou city limits, Collins and White had to settle for a building in a distant suburb. There Collins struggled to learn Chinese from a native tutor, who feared that he would be harassed for associating with a foreigner. According to Collins, his teacher had to pay hush money to local officials who would otherwise have prohibited him from teaching the foreign missionary.

Image of Fuzhou

The city of Fuzhou, ca. 1870 (From Stock, The Story of the Fuh-kien Mission, p. 12.)

Collins left Fuzhou without having converted a single Chinese. Nevertheless, his relatively short and illness-plagued sojourn in China did lay the groundwork for later teams of Methodists. Like Adoniram Judson, the legendary missionary to Burma after whom he was named, Judson Dwight Collins continues to be remembered as a missionary pioneer.

Monument to Collins

From the 1850s through the 1880s, Albion's quadrangle was graced by a stone monument inscribed with the names of Collins, Principal Charles F. Stockwell, and President Clark T. Hinman. Upon the north side of the square obelisk was inscribed, "In memory of Judson D. Collins, A.M., First Missionary of the Methodist Episcopal Church to the Empire of China. Died May 25th, 1852. 'Go ye into the world and preach the Gospel to every creature.' - Christ -" (Fennimore, Keith J. The Albion Sesquicentennial History: 1835-1985. Albion, MI: Albion College, 1985, p.107.) In the 1858 Trustees Report, it was noted that "The monument recently erected to the memory of Dr. Hinman, Professor Stockwell, and Rev. Judson D. Collins, is highly ornamental to the grounds and honorably commemorates the virtues of the dead and the beneficence by whose liberality it was erected."

Monument to Collins Monument to Collins - Close up

The memorial column appears in the center of this picture of the college from the 1870s. It was later removed in 1885, apparently for aesthetic reasons, sold to a down-town monument firm. (Pleiad, Vol.XXIII, No.9, February 13, 1908, p.100) In a letter from Alumni Secretary, W.B. Buck in 1934, he states that it was the impression of an alumnus he spoke to that "the shaft was removed because it suggested a cemetery rather than a campus." The tablet with the names of Stockwell, Collins and Hinman was transferred to a wall in South Hall (then the chapel), but where it is today remains a mystery.

In his 1852 address to the University of Michigan's Union Missionary Society of Inquiry, the Rev. C.T. Hinman praised Collins' missionary spirit, calling him "a martyr for China and for man." He also exhorted his listeners to follow Collins' example: "Let us imitate our departed brother. The SAVIOR commands us. His Church entreats us. The voices of pagan millions call us. And now that our brother has fallen, who will fill the void in the broken ranks? Who?"

Judson Collins: Before the Mast, a play by Matthew A. Vance
On April 10, 1947, the Methodist Church celebrated the 100th anniversary of Collins' voyage to China with a statewide rally and other commemorative events in Ann Arbor. The festivities included this play dramatizing Collins' life, performed by the Adrian College Players.

Judson Collins Camp
During the centenary celebrations, funds were also raised to endow the Judson Collins Camp, which the Methodist Church ultimately established in Onsted, Michigan. This is a view of the camp dormitories:

Judson Collins Camp

Photo courtesy of Wilbur T. Scrivnor.

Collins' Grave Site

The church site today. Behind the stone memorial is a sign directing visitors to Collins' nearby gravesite. The gravesite itself has been designated United Methodist Historic Site #62.

Collins Gravesite

Photo courtesy of Wilbur T. Scrivnor.

Collins' Homestead

The Collins' homestead in Lyndon Township, Michigan, as it looks today:

Collins' Homestead

Photo courtesy of Wilbur T. Scrivnor.

Sources
  • Scrivnor, Wilbur T. Judson Dwight Collins. MI: Scrivco Press.
  • Brunger, Ronald A., ed. (1985, November) "The Collins Family: The First Notable Family in Michigan Methodism," The Detroit Conference Historical Messenger, Vol.XIII, No.5, pp.3-5.
  • Brunger, Ronald A., ed. (1987, May) "Judson Collins - 140th Anniversary," The Detroit Conference Historical Messenger, Vol.XV, No.3, p.1-2.
  • "Collins, Judson." College History Files, Albion College Archives.
  • Scott, Clifton W. (1934, December 13) "Judson Collins - Sainted Hero," Michigan Christian Advocate, p.10.
  • "Monument (Collins)." College History Files, Albion College Archives.
  • Fennimore, Keith J. The Albion College Sesquicentennial History, 1835-1985. Albion, MI: Albion College, 1985, pp.105-107.
  • Pilcher, Elijah H. Protestantism in Michigan. Detroit: R.D.S. Taylor and Co., 1878.
  • Journal of Rev. Judson D. Collins, August 7, 1845-May 5, 1849, Bentley Historical Library, University of Michigan.
 

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