Monday, November 26, 2018

Julia Brown Mateer

Penny Richards: /* Career */


[[File:JuliaBrownMateer1912.jpg|thumb|Julia Brown Mateer, from a 1912 publication.]]
[[File:Julia brown mateer after arrival in china.jpg|thumb|Julia Brown Mateer after arrival in China]]
'''Julia Brown Mateer''' (born about 1840 — February 18, 1898) was an American teacher, school matron, and Presbyterian missionary in China, working there with her husband [[Calvin Wilson Mateer]] for thirty-four years.

==Early life==
Julia Brown was born on her family's farm in [[Delaware, Ohio]], the daughter of Robert Brown and Hannah Cunningham Brown. Her father was a cabinetmaker. She was educated in [[Granville, Ohio]].<ref name="Life">Robert McCheyne Mateer, [https://ift.tt/2RmrjE0 ''Character Building in China: The Life Story of Julia Brown Mateer''] (New York: Fleming H. Revell, 1912).</ref>

==Career==
Julia Brown taught school in [[Mt. Gilead, Ohio]] as a young woman. Soon after marrying, she and her new husband sailed from New York, as Presbyterian missionaries to Shantung in China. They joined the missionaries at [[Dengzhou|Tengchow]] in early 1864. Both Mateers learned to speak and write Mandarin for their work, and compiled a manual for other missionaries learning the language. They began and ran a boys' boarding school, which grew into the first Christian college in China, into [[Cheeloo University]], and eventually into [[Shandong University]].<ref>[https://ift.tt/2PTczA5 "Calvin Wilson Mateer"] ''Biographical Dictionary of Chinese Christianity''.</ref> She taught younger children, tended to student health, ran study groups, and was especially interested to teach music.<ref>Hong-yu Gong, "Protestant Missionaries and School Music Education in Late Qing China: The Case of Julia B. Mateer" ''Chime'' 18-19(2010): 101-134.</ref> "The school had been Julia's idea, and for ten years, or up to 1873, she did almost all the work of running it," according to one later historian's assessment.<ref>Irwin T. Hyatt Jr., [https://ift.tt/2Rmrkb2 "The Missionary as Entrepreneur: Calvin Mateer in Shantung"] ''Journal of Presbyterian History'' 49(4)(Winter 1971): 303-327; quote on page 309.</ref> "More are ready to preach the Gospel than are willing to settle down to the persistent, steady, hard pull of educational work," she explained of the educational emphasis of their mission. Her sister Margaret Brown Capp came to teach with her for a few years, before opening a girls' school of her own.<ref name="Life" />

The Mateers took their first furlough in 1880. By then, their school had grown to employ a faculty of Chinese educators, and they spent their furlough raising funds for the school to grow further. Julia Mateer only had one more furlough, in 1892-1893,<ref>[https://ift.tt/2PTcBrH "A Lady's Address"] ''Harrisburg Telegraph'' (November 9, 1892): 4. via [[Newspapers.com]]</ref> this time to raise funds and talk about her work at the college in Tenghchow.<ref>[https://ift.tt/2Rmr2Ru Untitled news item], ''Council Grove Republican'' (September 13, 1895): 5. via [[Newspapers.com]]</ref> She traveled by donkey to visit pupils, former pupils, and Chinese Christian communities. She hosted new missionaries to the region in her home, often for months, providing practical training and advice.<ref name="Life" />

==Personal life==
Julia Brown married Rev. Calvin W. Mateer in 1862. She died in China in 1898, after a long illness.<ref name="Life" />

==References==


==External links==
*
* [https://ift.tt/2PTg3lW An 1880 photograph of the Mateers] with other members of Calvin Mateer's family, from a private collection.




[[Category:births]]
[[Category:1898 deaths]]
[[Category:American Presbyterian missionaries]]
[[Category:People from Delaware, Ohio]]


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