Josephine C. Lawney Explained

Josephine C. Lawney
Birth Name:Josephine Carrier Lawney
Birth Date:April 29, 1881
Birth Place:Chicago, Illinois
Death Date:February 27, 1962
Death Place:New York

Josephine Carrier Lawney (April 29, 1881 – February 27, 1962) was an American physician, college administrator, and Baptist medical missionary in China. She was dean of the Women's Christian Medical College in Shanghai.

Early life

Josephine Carrier Lawney was born in Chicago and raised in Readsboro, Vermont, the daughter of Josephine Rosella Carrier Laughna and James E. Laughna. Both parents were born in New England. (The names Laughna and Lawney were pronounced similarly; Josephine and her sister Letty Jane used the latter spelling.) Her mother died when Josephine was fifteen years old, and the Lawney girls were raised by relatives named Crosier. She worked at a chair factory in Vermont to support herself and her college education.[1] She earned her medical degree at the Woman's Medical College of Pennsylvania in 1916.[2]

Career

Lawney worked at the Pittsburgh Tuberculosis Hospital after medical school.[3] [4] She was commissioned by the Woman's American Baptist Foreign Mission Society as a missionary in 1919, and assigned to the Margaret Williamson Hospital and the Women's Christian Medical College in Shanghai from 1919 to 1943. She became a professor and dean of the medical school. She learned to speak Mandarin,[5] and studied tuberculosis, beri-beri, and anemia in China.[6] In 1925, she attended a conference at Johns Hopkins University on "America's Relations with China."[7] After celebrating her fiftieth birthday in Shanghai, she took a study furlough in the United States from 1931 to 1933.[8] [9]

During war with Japan, she treated refugees in a camp near Shanghai. When the United States entered World War II, Lawney was interned as an enemy alien from 1941 to 1943, and worked as a physician in the prison camp. She returned to the United States in 1943, and spoke about her internment experience, while also studying at Columbia University.[10] From 1946 to 1948, she was back in China to establish a medical service, until missionaries were no long allowed.

Back in the United States, from 1948[11] to her retirement in 1955, she worked at the Associated Missions Medical Office, and helped to found a Baptist church on Long Island.

Personal life

Lawney was a close friend of Margaret Treat Doane, the daughter of hymn writer William Howard Doane.[12] In 1948, her hometown church in Readsboro, Vermont, dedicated a plaque honoring her missionary work.[13] Lawney died in 1962, aged 80 years, at a hospital in New York City, after several months of illness. Her grave is in Heartwellville, Vermont.

Notes and References

  1. News: Dr. Lawney Said Seriously Ill in N. Y. Hospital. October 2, 1961. The North Adams Transcript. November 15, 2019. 13. Newspapers.com.
  2. News: Dr. Josephine Lawney, 80, Dies; Ex-Medical Missionary in China. March 1, 1962. The New York Times. 31. ProQuest.
  3. News: Thirty Women to Study the Orient. November 3, 1919. Los Angeles Herald. November 15, 2019. 12. California Digital Newspaper Collection.
  4. News: Y. W. C. A. First Aid Class. December 28, 1917. The Gazette Times. Pittsburgh. November 15, 2019. 14. Newspapers.com.
  5. February 1922. Gleanings from Atlantic District Letters. Missions: American Baptist International Magazine. 13. 116. Grose. Howard Benjamin.
  6. Book: Shavit, David. The United States in Asia: A Historical Dictionary. 1990. Greenwood Publishing Group. 9780313267888. 297–298. en.
  7. November 1925. The Baltimore Conference. Life and Labor Bulletin. 3. 4.
  8. News: Readsboro Native on Way from China. September 5, 1931. The North Adams Transcript. November 15, 2019. 10. Newspapers.com.
  9. News: China Described by Missionary. May 24, 1933. The Bennington Evening Banner. November 15, 2019. 3. Newspapers.com.
  10. News: Dr. Lawney Speaks. September 26, 1944. The North Adams Transcript. November 15, 2019. 9. Newspapers.com.
  11. News: Dr. Lawney Guest in Santa Cruz. July 22, 1948. Santa Cruz Sentinel-News. November 15, 2019. 3. Newspapers.com.
  12. Web site: Our Church. Church-in-the-Garden. en-US. 2019-11-15.
  13. News: Readsboro Baptist Church Rededicated by Parishioners. April 19, 1948. The North Adams Transcript. November 15, 2019. 12. Newspapers.com.