Life of Rev. Arthur Evans Moule (1836-1918)

Missionary & Archdeacon of Mid China

Compiled by Michael Russell OPC for Fordington ©2007

Arthur Evans Moule was born at Fordington vicarage on 10th April 1836, the sixth of eight sons of Henry Moule (1801-1880) and his wife Mary Mullett Evans. He was baptised by his father in St George’s church on 26 May 1836.

As with his brothers he was educated at home by his father, along with other paying pupils that he tutored for entry to University. But unlike his brothers he was not sent to Cambridge, he went instead to a college in Malta, where he gained valuable experience. He then went onto the Church Missionary Society (CMS) college based in Islington where his appetite for Missionary work, which had been inspired by his elder brother, deepened.

Marriage to Eliza Agnes BERNAU - 1861


Whilst at the College he met other missionaries and their families and on 21st March 1861 at Erith in Kent he married  to Eliza Agnes Bernau (1842- 1925) who was the daughter of a German CMS Missionery, John Henry Bernau and his wife (who had the impressive name of Maria Von Der Ohe Pasche). Eliza was known as Agnes and she was born at Bartica by the Essequibo river in British Guiana, about 1842. Her father, ordained in St Pauls as deacon in 1833 and priest the following year, had taken charge of the mission in 1836. He had laboured zealously for 18 years and raised his family there. In 1847 he published a book on his studies of the “manners, customs and superstitious rites of the aboriginies” who were the local indian tribes that inhabited the region. He returned to England in 1855 when the mission closed. On the 8th April when the 1861 Census was taken in England they were living at the Parsonage of All Saints church Belvedere of which her father was by then vicar. He had married them 18 days earlier.
China and the Taiping Rebellion

His elder brother George Evans Moule (1828-1912) had already gone out to Ningpo in China as a Missionary in 1857 and in 1861 he decided to join him. He and his new wife arrived at the Chekiang Mission in August in the midst of the Taiping Rebellion.

 

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The City of Ningpo fell into the hands of the Taipings on December 8th and a few days later they all had to leave.  In 1862 the Taipings were driven back by the Imperialists assisted by a Captain Roderick Dew commanding a small British flotilla. Arthur later published an account of his experiences during this time entitled “Personal recollections of the Taiping Rebellion 1861 - 1863” which was published in Shanghai in 1884. After things settled down he and his wife had 9 children:-
    (1) Arthur John Henry Moule (1862-1930) born 23rd Sep 1862 Ningpo China 1863; became a C.M.S. Missionary to China 1889-1909; Married Jan 1st 1903 at St Mary Magdalene Church Belfast by her father to Annie Henrietta Riddle (1880-1970); Died Brantwood Grove Road Broadwater Worthing Sussex 9th Oct 1930 aged 68 buried at St Nicholas Church Abbotsbury Dorset

    (2) Walter Stephen Moule (1864-1949) born 1st Sep 1864 Ningpo China; University Cambridge B.A. 1886; M.A. 1908. Ord. deacon (London, for Colonies) 1887; priest (Mid-China), 1889. Vice-Principal of the C.M.S. Training College, Ningpo, 1888-98; Principal, 1898-1918; President, 1918-25. Archdeacon in Chekiang, 1910-25. Vicar. of Abbotsbury, Dorset, 1925-42. Married, Nov. 15, 1894, Agnes L. Wright. At Winterbourne, Whitchurch, Dorset, in 1948. Died Aug. 25, 1949. 

    (3) Agnes Maria Moule (1867-1945) born in Ningpo China 1867; Spinster died 8 Apr 1945 at Fairmile House Christchurch Hants Left an estate of £190 to her brother George Herbert

    (4) William Augustus Handley Moule (1870-1946) born in Ningpo China 1870; Married 12th Jun 1901 at St Mary Magdalene Church Belfast to Jemima (Mima) Riddle sister to Annie Henrietta Riddle . For 36 years Headmaster C.M.S. School Shanghai Died at Brighton 16th Aug 1946

    (5) Charlotte Augusta Moule (1873-1948) born in Ningpo China 1873; Civil Marriage to William Henry Bernau in the district of Hamstead London 2nd qtr 1895. Lived 57 York Rd Woking but ashes buried Egloshayle Cornwall 13th May 1848 aged 76

    (6) Horace Frederick Moule (1874-1967) born 8 July 1874 in Ningpo China; Worked for the British & Foreign Bible Society in 1911; Married Phyllis Edith Kindersley from Christchurch Hampshire Apr 1921 who died in 1949. Died 15 Feb 1967 Milldown House Blandford Forum leaving an estate of £7,784

    (7) George Herbert Moule (1876-1949) born in Hangchow China 1877: Scholar of Clare College Cambridge. B.A. 1898; M.A. 19145; Ordained a deacon 1900 and a priest the following year Sarum Curate of Wareham 1900-1902; C.M.S. Missionary at Kumamoto 1902-1905; Taketa 1905-1908; Hakata 1908-1911; Curate of Damerham 1914-1916; Vicar 1916-1922; Chaplain to the Bishop of Tokyo from 1930. Married 22nd June 1900 at St Michaels church Charlton London to a Missionary, Edith Mary Bernau the 31 year old daughter of Henry Augustus Bernau George Herbert Moule was buried at St Georges Church in Fordington on 21st Nov 1949 aged 76

    (8) Ernest Charles Hugh Moule (1878-1965) born in Hangchow China on 27th Nov 1878; Aged 12 he was already a pupil at St Michael's the Church Missionary House at Limpsfield in Godstone Surrey. This was not a children's home for children in need in the traditional sense but a home to which Christian missionaries working abroad could send their children. The home, set up by the Church Missionary Society, enabled the children of missionaries to get an education in England which was considered important to the Society. Ernest married during 3rd qtr of 1913 at Royston Hertfordshire to Josephine Adelaide Woods (1881-1954). In 1920-1922 he was living in Melcombe Regis but by 1939 he was the Principal of St Michael's School Limsfield. Ernest died at Newton Cottage Tichmarsh Kettering Northamptonshire 12th Dec 1965 leaving an estate of £41,348

    (9) Mary Evans Moule (1880-1961) born on 19th Aug 1880 at Belvedere in Kent. Like some of her brothers she became a teacher and aged 20 in 1901 was still a student at Scale House a training College for women in Ambleside Westmoreland. She remained a spinster living at 22 Florence Road in Bournemouth on 29th Sep 1939. She died during the 4th qtr 1961 at Bournemouth.
Arthur served continuously as a Missionary between 1861 and 1896 and was concerned with the three great cities of Ningpo 1861/1869 and 1871/1876; Hangchow 1876/1879, and Shanghai 1882/1894. He participated in the General Missioary Conference in Shanghai in 1877 delivering a paper  “ The Relation of Christian Missions to Foreign Residents”. As a part of his ministry in Shanghai he he introduced expatriates to the work of the Chinese Missions and showed them how it contributed towards “Christianising, civilising and education in western Knowledge”

Return to England

Arthur made three trips back to England that I know of. The first was in 1869 when he visited Fordington and the family picture was taken on the Vicarage Lawn on the 5th August. He almost certainly stayed on well into 1870. Ten years later his brother was made Bishop of Mid China in St Pauls Catherdral, and Arthur seems to have come to England the following year, as he was awarded the Lambeth Bachelor of Divinity Degree by Archbishop Tait and and made Archdeacon in 1881. On his return to China he was to reside in Shanghai and act as secretary to the Mid China Mission there.

On the 4th April 1881, he, his wife and 6 children were all staying with his father-in-law at the parsonage in Belveder where he was still Vicar. They brought with them a 56 year old nurse to help look after the children, called Su Lois who had been born in Ningpo so that must have been quite an adventure for her.

The third occasion he travelled back to England was in 1891 when they stayed at 38 George Lane in Lewisham.

Ill Health

In 1896 ill health forced him to resign and he returned to England leaving behind a congregation of 180 members with 5 schools and seven Chinese teachers. He became Vicar of Redisham and then Compton Valence in Dorset which is only about 8 miles from Fordington. It was however a great joy to him when he could get back to his beloved China to work which he did in 1902. He came home on furlough in 1908 and was then persuaded to accept the rectory at Burwarton, in Shropshire. He consented with reluctance but only on condition that he might pay one more visit to China before taking charge of the Parish. This visit he paid in the autumn of 1909 returning to England at the end of 1910 with the expressed determination to go back to China if required at any time up to the age of 90

During his long stay in China he was intimately connected with every branch of missionary work, evangelistic, pastoral, educational and church organisation. His pen was never inactive and he wrote both in English and Chinese. He was a frequent contributor of poems to the North China News and the magazines and periodicals at home. Chinese hymnology owes much to him. He was one of the earliest champions of the anti-opium movement and gained a prize in the very early days from the Anti-Opium Society for an essay he wrote upon the subject. Above all however he delighted in preaching, whether this was in the chapel, along the roadside, on a boat or steamer or by systematically visiting village by village.

On 21st March 1911 Arthur and Agnes celebrated their Golden Wedding anniversary, placing a short entry to that effect in the Times Newspaper. The following year he became Rector of Burweston with Cleobury and the Archbishop of Canterbury awarded him the higher distinction of Doctor of Divinity in recognition of his distinguished work as a scholar and missionary. Arthur died at Damerham Vicarage near Fordingbridge on 26th August 1918 leaving a modest estate of £410. 9s to his widow. Eliza Agnes Moule died in 1925.

 

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Arthur Moule’s Golden Wedding Anniversary

Publications
In Chinese he published tracts, sermons, a commentary on the Thirty-nine Articles, "A Letter to the Scholars of China," etc., and in English:

  • Four Hundred Millions Chapters on China and the Chinese(London 1871)
  • The Opium Question - A review of the opium policy of great Britain (London 1877)
  • The use of opium and its bearing on the spread of Christianity (Shanghai 1877)
  • Chinese Stories (1880)
  • Personal Recollections of the Taiping Rebellion 1861 - 1863(Shanghai 1877)
  • The Glorious Land (1891)
  • The story of the Cheh-kiang Mission of the CMC(1891)
  • New China and Old; Personal recollections (London 1891; third edition, 1902)
  • Young China (1908)
  • Half a Century in China (1911)
  • The Chinese People: A Handbook on China (London 1914)

 

Three of his sons engaged in Missionary work in China and one in Japan, one of his sons succeeding him as Archdeacon in Mid China.

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