Abstract

The Korean mission of the Presbyterian Church of Canada, influenced by the success of the social gospel model, built hospitals and dispensaries in Korea on their arrival in 1898. Medical work and evangelization were the primary missions of the physicians sent to Korea. Arriving in 1901, Dr. Kate McMillan had a hard time balancing evangelical and medical work, as well as work with the bible-work, women’s city work, fellow missionaries, and training Korean aides enough for them to go to medical school. While most of the female missionaries’ focus were on girls’ and women’s activities, McMillan treated both men and women, evidenced by a letter requesting for the mission to send male physicians as “male patients have diseases which a lady should not be asked to treat.” Dr. Florence Murray arrived in Korea in 1921, a year before McMillan’s death in 1922. Murray was pulled into the medical work in Ham Heung rather suddenly, as she was in Seoul learning Korean before McMillan’s death. She doubted McMillan’s expertise and was horrified of how unsanitary the conditions were. Due to funding shortages, the hospital started charging their patients. The patients blamed the new physician for this. Gender dynamics of the mission resulted in the “women’s work for women” approach. This gave them an advantage and focus on a certain demographic instead of spreading themselves thin. The rise of the social gospel model created more roles for women, as was the case for McMillan and Murray.

Highlights

  • Korea was largely dependent on China until their independence was proclaimed in 1894

  • Dr Grierson’s contemporary, Dr Kate McMillan, as well as her successor, Dr Florence Murray were two female physicians who devoted their medical expertise in the Korean mission

  • In 1901, the Eastern arm of the Women’s Foreign Missionary Society (WFMS) sent out Dr Kate McMillan to Ham Heung

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Summary

Introduction

Korea was largely dependent on China until their independence was proclaimed in 1894. Compassion and Service: The Roles of Two Female Missionary-Physicians in the Korean Mission of the Presbyterian Church of Canada (1898-1969) Dr Grierson’s contemporary, Dr Kate McMillan, as well as her successor, Dr Florence Murray were two female physicians who devoted their medical expertise in the Korean mission. McMillan saw medical work as a great opportunity “to bring salvation to Macdonald, Minister of the Gospel and Doctor of Medicine: The Canadian Presbyterian Medical Mission to Korea, 1898–1923 (MA Thesis., Queen’s University, 2000).

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