"E2024-G158"의 두 판 사이의 차이
(→The People of Chejung Hospital) |
(→Story Map) |
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| 9번째 줄: | 9번째 줄: | ||
==Story Map== | ==Story Map== | ||
| + | *[[S2024-G027| Compassionate Hearts: Medicine, Care, and Social Service]] | ||
| + | ** [[E2024-G158|The People of Jejung Hospital]] | ||
| + | ** [[E2024-G178|The Mother of Gwangju: Jo A-ra]] | ||
| + | ** [[E2024-G181|Minister Choe Heung-jong and His Devotion to Leprosy Patients]] | ||
| + | ** [[E2024-G182|Bak Sun-i and Her Devotion To Orphans]] | ||
| + | ** [[E2024-G183|Environmental Activist Bak Seon-hong and Mudeungsan Mountain]] | ||
[[분류:Story]] [[분류:이야기 조각]] [[분류:린지]] | [[분류:Story]] [[분류:이야기 조각]] [[분류:린지]] | ||
2025년 10월 11일 (토) 14:07 기준 최신판
The People of Jejung Hospital
Narrative
Jejung Hospital was founded in 1905 by Joseph Wynne Nolan (1850-?). When it was first founded, treatment was conducted out of the house of Eugene Bell (1868-1925), until land was donated by Choi Heung-jong (1880-1966) to build the Ellen Lavine Graham Hospiral and Dispensary, which was named after Ellen Lavine Graham. The second director of the hospital was Robert M. Wilson (1880-1963). The esteemed missionary nurse Elisabeth J. Shepping (1880-1934) also worked as a nurse at the hospital. Later directors or doctors of the hospital included Ronald B. Dietrick (1927-2015), Dick H. Nieusma Jr. (1930-2018), and Louis Christian Brand (1894-1938), who, together with Schepping, are all buried in the Yangnim-dong Missionary Cemetery. The staff of Chejung Hospital also participated in the March First Independence Movement in 1919 during the Japanese colonial period (1910-1945). Over time, the hospital eventually became today’s Kwangju Christian Hospital. On the hospital’s first floor, there is the Jejung History Museum, which commemorates the hospital’s origins.
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