Stanley Peregine Smith was a British Protestant Christian missionary to China.
Background
Stanley Smith was the son of Henry Smith Fellow of the Royal College of Surgeons., and his wife Alice Underwood, of 13 John Street, Berkeley Square, London. He was born again in one of D. L. Moody’s revivals and helped found the Cambridge Christian Union, forerunner of many student Christian organizations.
Education
He was educated at Repton and Trinity College, Cambridge.
Career
Stanley Smith was one of the Cambridge Seven, students from Cambridge University, who in 1885 decided to become missionaries in China. He was a Cambridge Blue having rowed as stroke for Cambridge in the 1882 Boat Race. Following his conversion and call to mission, Smith had a soapbox in Hyde Park where he preached “not the milk and water of religion but the cream of the gospel.” Stanley Smith with another of the Cambridge Seven, the brilliant young cricketer C. T. Studd started his ministry in Shan-Si Province, in northern China.
He was an excellent linguist and was said to be as fluent in his preaching in Chinese as he was in English.
In November 1899 the Stanley Smith family sailed from China arriving in Plymouth on 16 December, so they were not in China at the time of the Boxer Rebellion. Shortly before the First World War Stanley Smith left the China Inland Mission after some disagreements on doctrine, but continued to have good relationships with the mission.
He continued in China and opened his own work in East Shanxi. Although in the latter years he often faced trials and disappointments, he continued with his teaching and preaching (and writing up his diary) until the night before he died, on 31 January 1931 in Tse-Chow.