"Christmas service at Church of the Triumphant Way, Hsiakwan, Nanking" and festivities following; Chinese clergy and their families; "Sports Day at Tao Sheng School, 1930";"Annual Easter Service at Church Cemetery near Nanking, 1929"; "Neighborhood children play in mission grounds... 1928 and 1929"; "Morning chapel, Tao Sheng School... Bishop Graves' visit for confirmation, 1931"
"Kusatsu, the Famous Hot Sulphur Springs of Japan..."; Church, dispensary, home of missionary Miss Cornwall-Legh, leper village and leprosy patients, children playing, "church band" that plays music in streets with deacon preaching to non-Christians
Scenes at University of Nanking in 1928 following takeover of Nankjing by Chinese Nationalist troops; destruction of faculty residences; Miss Moffett, Treasurer of Presbyterian Mission in Nanking who was wounded by soldiers; Presbyterian and Quaker Mission buildings damaged by soldiers, St. Paul's Church occupied by Kuomingtang as their political headquarters
This collection includes correspondence, writings, photographs, films, and other documentation of the life and work of John Gillespie Magee, his son John Gillespie Magee, Jr. and other family members. The Rev. John G. Magee (1884-1953), a graduate of Yale University, served as a missionary to China under the Episcopal Church for twenty-eight years. John G. Magee witnessed the Japanese invasion of Nanking (Nanjing) in December of 1937 and the subsequent Nanking Massacre. At great risk to his own well-being and safety, Magee filmed and photographed atrocities perpetrated by the Japanese soldiers against the citizens of Nanking, He was later able to smuggle these films out of Nanking, providing evidence and witness to the war crimes that had taken place. This collection also includes the papers of John G. Magee, Jr. (1922-1941), eldest son of John G. and Faith Magee. John G. Magee, Jr. wrote the well-known poem "High Flight" prior to his death at the age of nineteen while on active service in the Royal Canadian Air Force during World War II. The papers regarding John G. Magee, Jr. document his life through his writings, photographs, and correspondence.