Background
Metcalf was born in Warstone Lane, Birmingham, 3 March 1879, the third son of four brothers, born to Samuel and Emma Metcalf.
Metcalf was born in Warstone Lane, Birmingham, 3 March 1879, the third son of four brothers, born to Samuel and Emma Metcalf.
He was converted in his late teens through the ministry of Revd Doctor Luke Wiseman, a biographer of Charles Wesley. He trained as a tailor and had his own bespoke tailor’s shop in Oxford. Metcalf joined the Inland Mission in 1906, arriving in Shanghai on 23 October.
After a period of language study he travelled on foot, boat and horseback the length of to Yunnan Province where he joined Arthur G. Nicholls of Sapushan and Gladstone Porteous of Sayingpan, working with a number of minority tribes in the province.
The men adapted the Miao script developed by Samuel Pollard to translate portions of the Bible. Metcalf finally settled in Taku (Taogu) with the Eastern Lisu, establishing a church and Bible College.
Elizabeth was born on 19 January 1891 and arrived in on 28 November 1917. The couple had two children, Ruth (b 24 June 1924, d 18 January 2010), and Stephen (b 23 October 1927, d 7 June 2014), both of whom became missionaries with OMF International, Ruth Metcalf to Thailand, Stephen Metcalf to Japan.
In 1951 the Metcalfs were forced to leave with the exodus of missionaries following the Communist victory over the Nationalist government.
Metcalf did not live to know of the hardships of the Cultural Revolution which included the death in 1973 of his convert Pastor Wang Zhiming, whose statue is among those of the Ten 20th Century Martyrs on the West Gate of Westminster Abbey. Metcalf had recently completed his Eastern Lisu New Testament and carried his hand-written copy out to Hong Kong. A second copy was left with the Eastern Lisu Church.
This copy was lost in the subsequent suppression of the church by the Communist government.
Metcalf’s copy was published, but copies sent to Yunnan Province were never received. In 1999 Ruth Metcalf carried her father’s copy to Yunnan and presented it to the Religious Affairs Bureau in Wuding.
More recently this copy was used in the preparation and publishing of a modern version of the New Testament in Eastern Lisu (lpo), a dialect of the Lisu language, with the help of the Hong Kong Bible Society. On retirement Eddie and Elizabeth settled in George Edgar Metcalf died in Melbourne on 15 January 1956.
Elizabeth Mary (Donnelly) Metcalf died in Melbourne on 25 August 1966.