Background
Herbert Taylor was four when his father founded the China Inland Mission.
Herbert Taylor was four when his father founded the China Inland Mission.
He served there for over 50 years – the last three as one of the prisoners of the Japanese at the Weifang internment camp during World World War II along with Eric Liddell and 1500 others During the four-month-long voyage the ship was nearly wrecked by two typhoons. On arrival in China, the family adopted Chinese clothing and food and set off to find a place to establish a mission cente in Zhejiang.
On the way, Herbert almost drowned when he fell overboard into the Grand Canal of China during their travels.
Another scare happened shortly afterward when he was bitten by a dog on the face. When he was six the family was nearly killed by a rioting mob during the Yangzhou riot in 1868.
His mother died in China soon after they arrived home. Like his father, he enrolled in the Royal London Hospital medical college.
After marrying a fellow missionary, Jeanie Gray, they endured tumultuous years in China, including the Boxer Rebellion, the fall of the Qing dynasty, the Warlord era, and the Second Sino-Japanese War (1937).
In 1930 the China Inland Mission published “Ren Ch"engineering-Yüan, A Tamarisk Garden Blessed with Rain. Or the Autobiography of Pastor Ren. Translated and edited by Herbert Hudson Taylor & Marshall Broomhall.”
At the age of 80 he was interned by the Japanese at the Weihsien or Weifang concentration camp after Japan had entered the war in 1941.
Everyone at Weifang were liberated in 1945 by American paratroopers.
Descendants of Herbert Hudson Taylor continued his full-time ministry today in the communities in Hong Kong and Taiwan. Another of Herbert Taylor’s grandchildren is Mary Previte who served in the New Jersey General Assembly representing the 6th legislative district from 1998 to 2006.