Access is granted in accordance with the
Protocols for the University Archives and Records Center.
PROVENANCE
Gift of Martha M. Howard, daughter of Josiah C. McCracken, which was
conveyed at several times from 1993 to 1995.
ARRANGEMENT
The collection is arranged in the order of papers generated by Josiah
C. McCracken; oversized material related to McCracken; and papers created
by or related to his children.
BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH
Josiah C. McCracken was born in a pious religious family in Tennessee
in 1874. His father was a scholar minister. After moving west homesteading
to Kansas, the family helped build a local church. Josiah joined the
United Presbyterian church when he was eight years old. In addition
to the inheritance of a profound faith in Christianity, young McCracken
acquired through the family's homesteading experience such qualities
typical of American frontiers--a strong physique, manly demeanor, endurance
of hardships, and the spirit of enterprise.
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McCracken's outstanding athletic abilities led to his admission to
the University of Pennsylvania in 1896. At Penn, he was elected president
of his class for four years, and served as president of the Christian
Association for three years. In the latter capacity, he initiated a
number of welfare projects such as Boys' Camp and University Settlement,
which benefited many less fortunate families in the area for decades
following his tenure. McCracken's goal for the Christian Association
was to make it a moral but lively character-building institution run
by students for students. After his graduation from the University of
Pennsylvania School of Medicine in 1901, McCracken served as secretary
of the Y.M.C.A. of Columbia University for two years.
Parallel to his contribution as a student leader, McCracken enjoyed
a brilliant record as a star athlete at Penn. He played on the varsity
football team all four years and earned the status of All-American.
With his all-round athletic competence, McCracken was selected as a
member of the United States Olympic Team in 1900; he competed in the
events of shotput and hammer throw in Paris that year. All these merits
and accomplishments made him one of the most popular students that the
University of Pennsylvania ever graduated.
In early 1906, the Christian Association of the University of Pennsylvania,
which was interested in taking over the medical department of the Canton
Christian College in southern China, sent McCracken to Canton for a
field study. After spending seven months in China, McCracken concluded
that the medical work at the Canton Christian College was worth undertaking.
Based on his report, the Christian Association accepted the proposal
from the College in Canton to establish a Christian medical school of
the highest order. The Association appointed McCracken to head its China
mission. In February 1907, McCracken, with his new bride Helen Newpher
McCracken, travelled to Canton to start what turned out to be a forty-year-long
medical missionary career in China. When the proposed medical department
of the Canton Christian College was renamed "The University Medical
School in Canton, China," McCracken was made its president, and
he served in that position for seven years from 1907-1913.
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In late 1913, the Christian Association terminated its affiliation
with the Canton Christian College and accepted the invitation from St.
John's University, Shanghai, for a joint medical program. In the fall
of 1914, McCracken transferred to Shanghai as dean of St. John's Medical
School. His deanship continued from 1914 to 1942, interrupted for only
a short period due to the revolution in China in the late twenties.
Under his administration, the School grew remarkably in both its faculty
and student body and became one of the best medical schools in China.
McCracken also served as chief surgeon of St. Luke's Hospital--the
main teaching hospital for the Medical School. The Hospital treated
over 80,000 out-patients each year. Though often overworked, McCracken
enjoyed the hospital work. When war broke out between China and Japan
in 1937, he helped build St. Luke's Hospital No. 2, also known as American
Refugee Hospital. His China mission, however, was cut short by the Pacific
War in World War II. Shortly after Pearl Harbor, the Japanese occupation
troops located Americans and British subjects working in Shanghai and
deported them to their home countries. McCracken and his family left
Shanghai for the United States in late June 1942.
After the end of World War II, McCracken came back to Shanghai in 1946
and served as dean of St. John's Medical School for another year. His
contribution to the School, however, did not end with his retirement
from the deanship. He continued to play an important role in raising
funds in his home country for the School. He assisted St. John's graduates
in their entry to advanced medical programs in American schools, among
them the Penn Medical School. He also recruited talented Chinese medical
graduates to join the faculty of St. John's Medical School. After the
Communist government took over St. John's University in 1952, all relations
between St. John's and its sponsoring church or missionary organizations
in this country were broken. McCracken, however, kept close contact
with graduates of St. John's Medical School living in this country and
rendered them valuable advice and help.
McCracken died at his apartment in Philadelphia in 1962.
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SCOPE AND CONTENT
The collection, though small in volume, represents two important aspects
of Josiah C. McCracken's rich and splendid life--his brilliant achievement
as an all-round star athlete at Penn and his life-long devotion to the
development of medine in China. News clippings and letters from his
friends on his 65th birthday document the success of his China experience
while eight photos of Penn Track Team portray his glory as the best
and most popular athletic figure on campus when he studied at Penn.
The collection also includes family photos taken in China or America
during different periods of time and three folders about his children,
one of which concerns their planning for the publication of a biography
of their father.
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