Here are the letters of Dr. Harry Lee Canright, China missionary, as they appeared in The Medical Missionary, Vol. XXIII, No. 1, January 1914, a publication of the American Medical Missionary Association (115 Washington Ave., N. Battle Creek, Michigan).
I am not going to take the time now to transcribe the text. Instead, I have 5 snapshots of the letters.
Here is snapshot 1. Click on the image and it will become larger and more readable.
Here is snapshot 2. It has a photo of the rear of the hospital at Chengtu.
Here is snapshot 3.
Here is snapshot 4. It has a photo of the front of the hospital.
Here is snapshot 5. The Canright letter is just the one paragraph at the top left.
Here is a snapshot of the publication cover page.
Notice the subscription in 1914 was 50 cents a year for a monthly periodical mailed to your home. That is about the cost of a single stamp today. A postage stamp back then was 2 cents. Here is webpage showing the increasing cost of a 1st class stamp. This is one measure of inflation:
http://www.johnstonsarchive.net/other/postage.html
Robert Canright
PS: there are a number of Robert Canrights. We are all related.
Sunday, January 28, 2018
Remembering Drueke Company Chess Sets
Today I was thinking about how I learned chess by using a compact peg set from the Drueke Company (pronounced droo-key). Here is a photo of my set. I bought it in a Piggly Wiggly store on Canal Street in New Orleans. What a surprise to find a nice chess set in a grocery store, but then Mr. Drueke was a salesman.
The chess set has a lid with a hinge and latch. There are groves deep enough to store the captured pieces. The set is 6" x 4.5" x 1.5". The 6" dimension is the distance between the two players. The 1.5" dimension is with the set closed. I used my peg set mostly to study chess in conjunction with chess books. Here is a photo of a Drueke peg set off the internet.
I also use a magnetic set to study chess because the pieces are bigger, yet the set is still small enough to use for study. Here is a photo of the magnetic set:
You can still buy this fine magnetic set!
https://www.chesshouse.com/products/8-drueke-gift-magnetic-chess-set
Finally, I will mention the "Player's Choice" tournament chess set. It is plastic, but very handsome and heavily weighted. It is a pleasure to play with the "Player's Choice". Here is a photo from the internet:
I found a nice video describing Drueke chess sets at this website:
http://blog.chesshouse.com/drueke-chess-games/
Here is a PDF of a very nice 12 page long history of the Drueke Company:
http://www.peterspioneers.com/druekepohlarticle.pdf
Drueke was a positive influence in my life.
Robert
The chess set has a lid with a hinge and latch. There are groves deep enough to store the captured pieces. The set is 6" x 4.5" x 1.5". The 6" dimension is the distance between the two players. The 1.5" dimension is with the set closed. I used my peg set mostly to study chess in conjunction with chess books. Here is a photo of a Drueke peg set off the internet.
I also use a magnetic set to study chess because the pieces are bigger, yet the set is still small enough to use for study. Here is a photo of the magnetic set:
You can still buy this fine magnetic set!
https://www.chesshouse.com/products/8-drueke-gift-magnetic-chess-set
Finally, I will mention the "Player's Choice" tournament chess set. It is plastic, but very handsome and heavily weighted. It is a pleasure to play with the "Player's Choice". Here is a photo from the internet:
I found a nice video describing Drueke chess sets at this website:
http://blog.chesshouse.com/drueke-chess-games/
Here is a PDF of a very nice 12 page long history of the Drueke Company:
http://www.peterspioneers.com/druekepohlarticle.pdf
Drueke was a positive influence in my life.
Robert
Sunday, January 21, 2018
Dr. Harry Canright, China Missionary
Dr. Harry Lee Canright, born 26 Oct 1864, died 29 May 1959, was a missionary to China. He wrote a book titled Steps to the Kingdom. I found this text in The Michigan Alumnus, Volume 45 (1938/1939):
Harry Lee Canright, 1889 m, A.M. (Hon.) 1921, was the only child whose parents gave up their farm in the sacrifice to aid in his education. Years later their son handed them the money to buy back their home. For thirty years a medical missionary in China, he had been mad a prisoner during the Cheng Tu Riots and the money was his indemnity paid by the Chinese government. That time he saw the work o several years destroyed in a few hours but he saved his Bible and his medical diploma and retreated to Japan until the trouble was over. It was only one of scores of exciting experiences in the land where Dr. Canright says he and his wife spent "the heart of a lifetime." When they returned to Cheng Tu he developed a modern hospital. There he treated an average of 125 patients a day for long years and gave a million treatments during this period. Then he accepted an appointment to teach at the West China Union University. He was there for five years and when he returned to the United States was Dean of the Medical Faculty and was teaching anatomy, physiology, hygiene, obstetrics and "a few minor subjects," all in Chinese. During each of his furloughs Dr. Canright had taken postgraduate work at Michigan studying anatomy. This was the year the University gave him his honorary degree. Dr. Canright had intended to return to China. Instead he traveled for the Missionary Society for seven years, giving lectures, and after that he taught medical subjects for six years in Chicago. Now retired, he spends his winters in Florida and his summers in Michigan.
Here is a photo from 1914 of Dr. Harry Lee Canright, M.D.
Here is a photo from 1938 of Dr. Harry Lee Canright, M.D.
What an inspiration. I hope to publish more about him on another day.
Robert
Harry Lee Canright, 1889 m, A.M. (Hon.) 1921, was the only child whose parents gave up their farm in the sacrifice to aid in his education. Years later their son handed them the money to buy back their home. For thirty years a medical missionary in China, he had been mad a prisoner during the Cheng Tu Riots and the money was his indemnity paid by the Chinese government. That time he saw the work o several years destroyed in a few hours but he saved his Bible and his medical diploma and retreated to Japan until the trouble was over. It was only one of scores of exciting experiences in the land where Dr. Canright says he and his wife spent "the heart of a lifetime." When they returned to Cheng Tu he developed a modern hospital. There he treated an average of 125 patients a day for long years and gave a million treatments during this period. Then he accepted an appointment to teach at the West China Union University. He was there for five years and when he returned to the United States was Dean of the Medical Faculty and was teaching anatomy, physiology, hygiene, obstetrics and "a few minor subjects," all in Chinese. During each of his furloughs Dr. Canright had taken postgraduate work at Michigan studying anatomy. This was the year the University gave him his honorary degree. Dr. Canright had intended to return to China. Instead he traveled for the Missionary Society for seven years, giving lectures, and after that he taught medical subjects for six years in Chicago. Now retired, he spends his winters in Florida and his summers in Michigan.
Here is a photo from 1914 of Dr. Harry Lee Canright, M.D.
Here is a photo from 1938 of Dr. Harry Lee Canright, M.D.
What an inspiration. I hope to publish more about him on another day.
Robert
Monday, January 1, 2018
Hegel in Winds of War
The historical novel Winds of War by Herman Wouk has a character named General von Roon. The general is used to portray the German mentality of Nazi Germany. In chapter 44, Barbarossa, the general makes some comments about Hegel. I am going to recount the general's words about Hegel because I think Hegel is where the German Enlightenment went off the rails. Each nation had its own manifestation of the Enlightenment. There was an English Enlightenment, a Scottish Enlightenment, a French Enlightenment, and a German Enlightenment. Each had slightly different traits. But if we want to consider all factions as one conglomerate Enlightenment, it is my contention that the Enlightenment had a high point with the American Constitution and the Federalist Papers and a low point with Nietzsche and Marx. I believe the Enlightenment became unstable with Jean-Jacques Rousseau, it went off the road with Hegel, it crashed with Marx and Engels, and then Nietzsche blew it up. Marx and Engels were students of Hegel.
The fictional character General von Roon said this on pages 601 and 602 (ISBN 0316955000).
Hitler's world view was Hegelian. Nations, empires, cultures, all have their season in history, the great Hegel taught us. They come, and they go. Not one is permanent, but in each age one dominates and gives the theme. In this succession of world dominions, we recognize the evolving will of the God of history, the World Spirit. God therefore expresses and reveals himself in the will of those world-historical individuals like Caesar, Alexander, and Napoleon, who led their states to world empire. Conventional morality cannot apply to the deeds of such men, for it is they who create the new modes and themes of morality in each age.
This Hegelian world view is, of course, at the other pole from the petit bourgeois morality which expects great nations to behave like well-brought-up young ladies in a finishing school and would hold a mighty armed people no different, in the rules applicable to its content, than some pale shoe clerk.
We could call this contempt for conventional morality Nietzschean. Although Friedrich Nietzsche did not study under Hegel, he did read Hegel. The enlightenment had a bright side and a dark side. Alexander Hamilton and James Madison are in the bright side of the Enlightenment. We need to recognize that Hitler, Marx, Lenin, and Stalin are the dark side of the Enlightenment, and Hegel was the starting point for Marx.
With General von Roon, Herman Wouk gave a voice to the worst of Hegel's legacy.
Robert
The fictional character General von Roon said this on pages 601 and 602 (ISBN 0316955000).
Hitler's world view was Hegelian. Nations, empires, cultures, all have their season in history, the great Hegel taught us. They come, and they go. Not one is permanent, but in each age one dominates and gives the theme. In this succession of world dominions, we recognize the evolving will of the God of history, the World Spirit. God therefore expresses and reveals himself in the will of those world-historical individuals like Caesar, Alexander, and Napoleon, who led their states to world empire. Conventional morality cannot apply to the deeds of such men, for it is they who create the new modes and themes of morality in each age.
This Hegelian world view is, of course, at the other pole from the petit bourgeois morality which expects great nations to behave like well-brought-up young ladies in a finishing school and would hold a mighty armed people no different, in the rules applicable to its content, than some pale shoe clerk.
We could call this contempt for conventional morality Nietzschean. Although Friedrich Nietzsche did not study under Hegel, he did read Hegel. The enlightenment had a bright side and a dark side. Alexander Hamilton and James Madison are in the bright side of the Enlightenment. We need to recognize that Hitler, Marx, Lenin, and Stalin are the dark side of the Enlightenment, and Hegel was the starting point for Marx.
With General von Roon, Herman Wouk gave a voice to the worst of Hegel's legacy.
Robert
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)