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George Heber Jones

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Hangul
  
조원시

Hangul
  
존스

Hanja
  
趙元時

Revised Romanization
  
Jonseu


Revised Romanization
  
Jo Won-si

Name
  
George Jones

McCune–Reischauer
  
Cho Wonshi

Died
  
May 11, 1919

George Heber Jones

조선을 사랑한 선교사 7 George Heber Jones 존스


George Heber Jones (14 August 1867 – 11 May 1919) was an American Christian missionary in Korea. Jones, who grew up in Utica, New York, is notable as the first Protestant missionary in Korea who took an academic approach to the research of Korean religions. He arrived in Korea in 1887 as a Methodist minister; while there, he not only made major contributions to the spread of Christianity in Korea, but also founded three academic journals: The Korean Repository, The Korean Review, and Shinhak Wolbo (Theology Monthly). He also played a significant role in encouraging Korean immigration to Hawaii; of the first ship of Korean migrant laborers bound for Hawaii to work on sugar plantations there, which departed on 22 December 1902, more than half came from his church in Incheon. In July 1907, he was the subject of a murder attempt; Yale University professor George Trumbull Ladd attributed the attack to opinions Jones had expressed in an article he wrote about the suppression of a Korean riot, in which he praised the Japanese police. In general, Jones had a high opinion of Koreans but not of the conditions in Korean society; in particular, he wrote high praise for Korean migrants in Hawaii, attributing their success in their adopted land to their liberation from "the oppressive weight of past tradition, language, [and] association". He died in Miami, Florida on 11 May 1919 after a long illness; his funeral was held in Leonia, New Jersey four days later.

Contents

Works

  • Korea: The Land, People, and Customs (1907)
  • The Korean Repository, Volume 2 (1895)
  • References

    George Heber Jones Wikipedia