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Mary Elizabeth Claiborne

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Mary Elizabeth Claiborne

Birth
Brownsville, Haywood County, Tennessee, USA
Death
13 Dec 1968 (aged 90)
Nashville, Davidson County, Tennessee, USA
Burial
Nashville, Davidson County, Tennessee, USA Add to Map
Memorial ID
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Mary Elizabeth Claiborne- Missionary to China - was born 1878 to Elizabeth Adelaide Taylor and John Alexander Claiborne at the "Carter Place" in Haywood County just north of Brownsville. The Claibornes had temporarily moved from Arlington, Shelby County Tennessee to be close to family in Haywood County, due to hard times and mother Adelaide's deteriorating health. Elizabeth was the child "chosen" by Adelaide to carry on the Missionary work Adelaide could no longer do. Elizabeth attended a private school in Memphis and taught in Shelby County public schools until 1903,when she entered Scarritt Bible and Training School.

After graduation, she was accepted by the Woman's Foreign Missionary Society of the Methodist Episcopal Church South. She spent twenty years teaching in the science department of the McIntyire School at Shanghai. She advanced her studies with courses at Tsing-hwa College in Peking and the Medical School at Shanghai, and conducted research in botany with Chinese Wilson and dean McGregor. In 1925 she was appointed to the Nge Kar Ang School in Soochow, China. The Peking Riots spread and with the massacre of the Nan-King missionaries, she returned home.

After a year of deputation work with the Women's Missionary Council, she was appointed to the Board of Missions of the General Division. From 1930 until late 1940's she was also a professional Landscape Architect in Nashville, and wrote the book "A Manual of Gardening", while continuing her missionary work. In 1939 she became a staff member of the Women's Division of the Board of Missions and Church Missionary Council in New York City.

She retired to Millersburg, Kentucky - then as age and health limited her - to a retirement home in Nashville. Just before her death, she had decided to plant a garden on the grounds and fell, becoming bedridden. She died unmarried 1968 and is buried in the Scarritt College plot, Graceland, of Woodlawn Memorial Cemetery in Nashville.
Mary Elizabeth Claiborne- Missionary to China - was born 1878 to Elizabeth Adelaide Taylor and John Alexander Claiborne at the "Carter Place" in Haywood County just north of Brownsville. The Claibornes had temporarily moved from Arlington, Shelby County Tennessee to be close to family in Haywood County, due to hard times and mother Adelaide's deteriorating health. Elizabeth was the child "chosen" by Adelaide to carry on the Missionary work Adelaide could no longer do. Elizabeth attended a private school in Memphis and taught in Shelby County public schools until 1903,when she entered Scarritt Bible and Training School.

After graduation, she was accepted by the Woman's Foreign Missionary Society of the Methodist Episcopal Church South. She spent twenty years teaching in the science department of the McIntyire School at Shanghai. She advanced her studies with courses at Tsing-hwa College in Peking and the Medical School at Shanghai, and conducted research in botany with Chinese Wilson and dean McGregor. In 1925 she was appointed to the Nge Kar Ang School in Soochow, China. The Peking Riots spread and with the massacre of the Nan-King missionaries, she returned home.

After a year of deputation work with the Women's Missionary Council, she was appointed to the Board of Missions of the General Division. From 1930 until late 1940's she was also a professional Landscape Architect in Nashville, and wrote the book "A Manual of Gardening", while continuing her missionary work. In 1939 she became a staff member of the Women's Division of the Board of Missions and Church Missionary Council in New York City.

She retired to Millersburg, Kentucky - then as age and health limited her - to a retirement home in Nashville. Just before her death, she had decided to plant a garden on the grounds and fell, becoming bedridden. She died unmarried 1968 and is buried in the Scarritt College plot, Graceland, of Woodlawn Memorial Cemetery in Nashville.


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