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  1. Died. 31 July 1904. ( 1904-08-01) (aged 60) Les Chevalleyres, Switzerland. Jane Elizabeth "Jennie" Faulding Taylor (6 October 1843 – 31 July 1904), was a British Protestant missionary to China with the China Inland Mission. She pioneered the work of single women missionaries in China and eventually married the founder of the ...

  2. Jane Elizabeth "Jennie" Faulding Taylor (6 de outubro de 1843 – 31 de julho de 1904) foi uma missionária protestante britânica na China com a Missão Para o Interior da China. Ela foi pioneira no trabalho de missionárias solteiras na China e acabou se casando com o fundador da missão, James Hudson Taylor, após a morte de sua ...

  3. Pioneer woman missionary. Leader of CIM famine relief work in Shanxi 1877-1878. Founder of orphanages. Indispensable helper to her husband as wife, mother, administrative assistant, fellow missionary, editor of China’s Millions, mother-figure to hundreds of members of the CIM, and exemplary Christian.

  4. Hudson Taylor married Jennie Faulding in 1871. Back in England, Taylor was married to Jane Elizabeth Faulding who had been a fellow missionary since 1866. Hudson and "Jennie" returned to China in late 1872 aboard the MM Tigre.

  5. 8 de abr. de 2020 · The following year, Taylor married Jennie Faulding, a fellow missionary. The two left for the mission field again in October of 1872, leaving their children in England for safety and to be raised by the mission secretary Emily Blatchley.

  6. Thirteen years after the mission’s founding, Hudson Taylor’s second wife, Jennie Faulding, in 1878, led the first group of female CIM missionaries to an inland area—famine-stricken Shanxi. Her expedition made it acceptable for single women to penetrate into hitherto unreached areas.

  7. 27 de set. de 2022 · Sep 27, 2022. Jennie Faulding Taylor and Her Team of Brave Women. In 1875, a serious drought in the north of China gave way to a dreadful four-year famine, with millions of deaths and a huge migration of people. Most casualties were in the province of Shanxi (an estimated 5.5 million deaths in four years).