Guide to the Lautenschlager Family Papers
Open for research.
Roy S. Lautenschlager (1889-1978) was born in 1889 in Kitchener, Ontario. He was converted at a United Brethren Church in 1906 and graduated from one of their affiliated colleges, Huntington College, in Indiana in 1920. He received his MA from the University of Michigan in 1921. He met Grace Miller (1889-?) while at Huntington College and they were married on September 8, 1920.
Mr. and Mrs. Lautenschlager applied for PCUSA missionary service in 1921. They were appointed for service in China in 1922 and were assigned to the Hangchow Christian College where Mr. Lautenschlager taught English, History, Economics and Bible. When they returned from furlough in 1928 they found Hangchow under the Nationalist Government, and the college under nationalist administration. They were stationed in Soochow until 1929, where they taught at Vincent Miller Academy. In 1929, they returned to Hangchow College where Roy was appointed head of the newly developed Political Science and History Department.
When the Sino-Japanese War reached the Hangchow area in 1937, the college was closed and later reopened in Shanghai. Roy left his wife and two daughters (Virginia May and Mary Frances) in Shanghai and returned to Hangchow where he engaged in relief work. As conditions worsened, Grace and her daughters returned to the United States. Roy was interned by the Japanese in Shanghai from November 1942 until December 1943. When it was possible to return to Hangchow, the Lautenschlager's worked in rehabilitating devastated camps and reorganizing Hangchow Christian College. The Communist government put increasing restrictions on the Christian work at Hangchow College, forcing the Lautenschlagers to return to the United States in 1951. They retired in 1954.
This collection primarily consists of letters from Roy and Grace to family members in the United States. These letters are mostly personal in nature, but they also give insight into local traditions and life at Hangchow Christian College. There are letters in the collection written to Grace by Juivan Usang Ly, the President of Hangchow University after the Communist took over. It was not safe for him to maintain contact with former associates, so they used aliases ("Auntie" and "Nephew").
There are notations on much of the correspondence (underlining and numbering), apparently made by Roy Lautenschlager. There are also several letter fragments (found in the correspondence for years 1922-1924). These fragments were left where they were originally found, assuming that Roy Lautenschlager had tried to put them back into chronological order.
SERIES I: CORRESPONDENCE, 1922-1954
SERIES II: STATION AND PERSONAL REPORTS, 1940-1950
SERIES III: MISCELLANY, 1927-1952
Collection processed and finding aid prepared: 1988 Susan W. Miller, Processing Archivist
Box | Folder | Description | |
1 | 1 | Finding Aid to Record Group 235 | |
SERIES I: CORRESPONDENCE, 1922-1954 | |||
1 | 2 | 1922-1929 | |
1 | 3 | 1936-1939 | |
1 | 4 | 1941-1948 | |
1 | 5 | 1949-1954 | |
SERIES II: STATION AND PERSONAL REPORTS, 1940-1950 | |||
1 | 6 | 1940-1950 | |
SERIES III: MISCELLANY, 1927-1952 | |||
1 | 7 | 1927-1952 [Includes identification, clippings, and notes] |