Your search within this document for 'association' resulted in five matching pages.
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“...OVERVIEW OF THE CHEFOO MAGAZINE The Chefoo Magazine was established in 1908 as the official organ of the Chefoo School's Association. The Chefoo School had been founded in 1881 by the China Inland Mission, and the alumni association was established in January 1908. At the end of their first year they produced their first magazine as a means of communicating with their membership, potentially in the UK, North America, Australia, New Zealand, Shanghai, and anywhere else in the world where former students were located. Although the Association still exists (2019), the last magazine was published in 2018. This was a remarkable 110-year run, especially when considering that the School in China was closed in the early months of 1951 when Westerners were forced to leave China. Throughout much of the history of the Association, it was dominated by alumni from Great Britain. This is not surprising given that for its entire time in China it was a British school. However, soon after it was formed...”
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“...suspects that this caused a bit of a row; the school issue was not repeated. That school magazine is included in this digitized collection, as is one name The Magnate (twice, October 1926 and October 1927, produced by the Boys School), and The Chefusian that came out from 1928 to at lease 1939. A separate short essay giving an overview of magazines produced by the School, is included in this digitized collection. Sources There are two sources for this digitized collection: the Chefoo Schools Association archival collections at the School of Oriental and African Studies at the University of London (SOAS), and at Wheaton College in Illinois, USA. Both collections are strategically connected to collections of the ClM/OMF. Thanks must be extended to the late Norman Cliff in the UK for establishing the SOAS collection, based at that time on the UK CSA collection. Thankyous are also extended to the archives staff at SOAS who have always been very helpful. Likewise, at Wheaton. This collection was...”
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“...1991-2002 Dorothy (Cox) Chadborn 1948-1951 2003-2018 Ian Grant 1946-1950 Association Archival Collections 1. The most extensive collection is at SOAS at the University of London. This originated from the CSA UK Branch collection. 2. The CSA North America Branch collection is at the Billy Graham Archives at Wheaton College, Wheaton, IL. 3. OMF International in Singapore has a collection of Chefoo School documents, although it is skimpy for the China period. This is remarkable given that the school originated in China and was in operation there for 70 years. Where did all those documents go? No doubt it had much to do with the sudden internment of the school following Pearl Harbor in late 1941, and the school at Kuling that was evacuated quickly a decade later. 4. A museum collection of the Chefoo School was established at the Yantai Municipal Museum in March 2018, in partnership with the Chefoo Schools Association. Li Xin, a private citizen from Shanghai who attended school in Yantai in...”
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“...Chicago, and Ivyland north of Philadelphia) and one in Melbourne, Australia. Since there were too few children in New Zealand, a foster home system was established. In the UK, the land that invented boarding schools (perhaps), a hostel was established where children spent vacations and holidays, but from there they were sent to various boarding schools in the country. Although there were exceptions, few post-China alumni have been interested in joining the Chefoo Schools Association. For the most part they have seen this Association as the domain of the China alumni, with whom they have not felt much affinity. This is not surprising given the contrasts between the China and post-China experiences. First, in China, other than a brief experiment early in the twentieth century when an exclusively prep school was operated in Kuling (it closed following a fire that destroyed the building), all Chefoo School students attended school in the same location, whether at Chefoo, Weihsien and Kiating/Kalimpong...”
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“...magazine was delayed for several months, for a very good reason. Perhaps the crowning event in the history of the Chefoo School in China, and of the alumni association, was the invitation in 2016 to establish a permanent exhibit of the Chefoo School at the large Yantai (Chefoo) Municipal Museum. I had been instrumental in gathering many documents, photos, and artifacts from CSA members world-wide, then organizing and cataloguing them before shipping them to the Museum. This event was formally launched on March 28, 2018 and I was invited to attend and give a speech on behalf of the Association. Several other Chefusians were also able to attend, and we were given a very warm welcome over several days by City and Museum leaders. This event was of course the theme of the last Chefoo Magazine. Ian Grant Director, Chefoo Schools Association Summer 2019 6 | P a g e...”