Horace Newton Allen
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This article is about the Protestant missionary. For the 1919 Brooklyn Robins baseball player, see Horace Allen (baseball).
Horace Newton Allen
2nd United States Minister to Korea
In office
October 1, 1901 – June 9, 1905
President William McKinley
Theodore Roosevelt
Preceded by Himself (as Consul)
Succeeded by Edwin Vernon Morgan
United States Consul General to Korea
In office
September 13, 1897 – October 1, 1901
President William McKinley
Preceded by John Mahelm Berry Sill
Succeeded by Himself (as Minister)
Personal details
Born April 23, 1858
Delaware, Ohio
Died December 11, 1932 (aged 74)
Toledo, Ohio
Political party Republican
Spouse(s) Frances Ann
Children 2
Education Ohio Wesleyan University (B.S.)
Miami Medical School
Profession Physician, diplomat
Horace Newton Allen (April 23, 1858 – December 11, 1932) was a missionary, physician, and American ambassador to Korea. He was the first Protestant missionary in Korea, arriving there on September 15, 1884.[1]
After treating Min Young-ik, a royal relative injured during the Gapsin Coup, Allen became close to the king of Joseon, Gojong. At his suggestion, Gojong founded the first western hospital, Chejungwon (now known as Severance Hospital). Allen was in charge of the core function of the hospital. A year after the establishment of the hospital, Allen started a medical school, which was the first formal medical education in Korea.[2]
Due to Allen's relationship with the emperor and other officials, Allen became part of the United States Legation to Korea. He was appointed as secretary in 1890 and was promoted to US minister and consul general in 1897. However, Allen was recalled in 1905, over disagreements with the United States government regarding the Taft-Katsura Agreement.[2]
Contents
1Biography
2Legacy and honors
3Publication
4Popular culture
5References
6External links
Biography[edit source]
Horace Newton Allen was born in Delaware, Ohio on April 23, 1858. He received his Bachelor of Science at Ohio Wesleyan University in 1881. He studied medicine at the Miami Medical School in Cincinnati, Ohio, graduating in 1883.
Allen was appointed a medical missionary and sent to China by the Board of Foreign Missions of the Northern Presbyterian Church and arrived in Shanghai on October 11, 1883. After a while, he decided to serve in Korea, which had just opened its doors to the western world. After obtaining the mission board's permission, he went to Korea on September 20, 1884 to explore. As government law prohibited foreign religion at the time, he was appointed medical officer of the United States Legation to Korea in Seoul, thus hiding his true identity. He went back to Shanghai to bring back his wife Francis "Fannie" and their son, Harry to Korea on October 26.
On December 4, 1884 the Gapsin Coup, a coup d'état staged with the help of the Japanese army by a handful of elite progressive officials,.took place, The progressive government collapsed in 3 days as the Chinese army entered Seoul and defeated the Japanese army. This event started with the assassination attempt on the life of the queens nephew, Min Young Ik, who was hosting a banquet to celebrate the opening of the nation's first postal office with dignitaries including foreign diplomats and he was inflicted with 7 severe sword wounds. Dr. Allen was summoned and treated Min's near mortal wounds, applying western medical methods against the objection of 14 of the court's medicine men. It is noted that wounds soon became infected and Dr. Allen treated the infected wounds with "baked mud" to absorb pus and wash away with water and it took 3 months before Dr. Allen's treatment on him was completed.[3]
Upon hearing the wide spread rumor that a foreigner with bushy red beard revived a dead prince, many people flocked to his house. He seized this opportunity to serve Korean people and submitted to the Foreign Ministry "A proposal of founding a hospital for the government of His Majesty in Seoul Corea" with an introductory letter by J. C. Foulk, charge de' affair of the U.S. Legation. The king Gojong granted his proposal readily and a western hospital named Gwang hye Won (廣惠院, House of Extended Grace) was opened in a traditional Korean estate on April 10, 1885. The name quickly was changed to Chejungwon 제중원 the House of Universal Helpfulness. The hospital had 5 separate in-patient rooms, eye treatment room for extraction of cataracts, vaccination room for smallpox, etc. A year later, Dr. Allen, John William Heron and Horace Underwood opened a medical school "Medical and Scientific School of Royal Corean Hospital and admitted 16 medical students.[3] The adjoining school building had a large class room, a chemistry lab and 2 dormitory rooms.
It is noteworthy that since September 1894 the Board of Foreign Mission started to operate the nation's first western hospital and medical school in Korea and in September 1904 Chejungwon built a new ultra modern brick building outside the South Gate with help from Louis Severance, a philanthropist in Cleveland Ohio, moving patients from "the old to new buildings" on September 23. The invitation to the dedication of the building read "the New Chejungwon/Severance Hospital". For a while after the transition the popular daily newspaper Donga Ilbo called the new hospital "New Chejungwon" and government official document also referred the new hospital as Shin Chejungwon (New Chejungwon). The newly renamed Severance Hospital was the direct descendant of Chejungwon.[4]
The Severance Hospital and Medical school on June 5, 1962 moved to a new location in Sinchon after building a huge medical complex which included the Eighth U.S. Army Memorial Chest Hospital as an integral part and a separate unit ($400,000 worth of building material and $70,000 for medical equipment as American Forces Aids to Korea Program 1955). This institution now is called Yonsei Health System, part of Yonsei University after union with Yonsei University on Jan 5, 1957.[5]
Allen's post Chejungwon activities related to Korea are; King Gojong of Korea asked Allen to help open the Korea Legation in United States of America and Allen led a 12-man delegation to Washington D. C. in November 1887 and established the Korean Legation in January 1888 when Minister Park J. Y presented appointment letter to President Cleveland. Allen helped operate the Korean Legation and carried out diplomatic activities (his position was "foreign secretary" "참찬관" ).
Upon his return from America he started working in July, 1890 as Secretary at the United States Legation in Seoul and left 15 years later in June 1905 as the Envoy Extraordinaire and the Minister Plenipotential before his successor Morgan closed the United States legation in November 1905.
Allen was decorated 3 times by King Gojong and the last one, the highest Tae Guk Order was donated to Yonsei Health System in 2015 by his great granddaughter Lydia Allen.
He died in Toledo, Ohio on December 11, 1932. He was buried in Woodlawn Cemetery in Toledo. Allen and his wife, Francis Ann "Fannie", had two sons, Horace Ethan "Harry" who in turn had 3 sons and Maurice who left no children. There are 5 surviving great grandchildren.
Dr. Allen's contribution to Korea:[6] 1. Introduction of western medicine to Korea. 2. Opening the door to the proselytization of Christianity to Korea 3. Industrialization of Korea; arranging building a railroad system, trolley, electric company, etc. by American companies. 4. Faithful supporter of King Gojong and Korea.
Legacy and honors[edit source]
Gojong awarded him the highest decoration, Taeguk.
Publication[edit source]
Allen's writings introduced Korean literature to the English-speaking world. His publications include:
Korean Tales, (1889)
A Chronological Index of the Foreign Relations of Korea from the Beginning of the Christian Era to the Twentieth Century, (1901)
Supplement, (1903)
Things Korean, (Seoul, 1908)
Popular culture[edit source]
Portrayed by Sean Richard in the 2010 SBS TV series Jejungwon.
Portrayed by Lorne Oliver in the 2018 tvN and Netflix TV series Mr. Sunshine.
References[edit source]
- ^ Kang, Wi Jo (2016-09-13). "The Legacy of Horace Newton Allen". International Bulletin of Missionary Research. 20 (3): 125–128. doi:10.1177/239693939602000308. S2CID 171878262.
- ^ Jump up to:a b Yeo, In-Sok; Yoon, Do Heum (2017). "Allen (Horace N. Allen, 安連, 1858–1932)". Yonsei Medical Journal. 58 (4): 685–688. doi:10.3349/ymj.2017.58.4.685. ISSN 0513-5796. PMC 5447096. PMID 28540978.
- ^ Jump up to:a b Allen's Diary
- ^ letter by Dr. Jesse Hurst and 이하영 서신 규장각
- ^ documents from letters to Dr. Ernest Weiss from U. S. Eighth Army
- ^ Allen, Horace Newton (1908). Things Korean: A Collection of Sketches and Anecdotes, Missionary and Diplomatic. F. H. Revell Company.
- Today in History – April 23 at chi.lcms.org
- Horace Newton Allen (1908), Things Korean: A Collection of Sketches and Anecdotes, Missionary and Diplomatic
- Horace Newton Allen (1889), Korean Tales: Being a Collection of Stories Translated from the Korean Folk Lore
- Horace Newton Allen (1901), A Chronological Index: Some of the Chief Events in the Foreign Intercourse of Korea
- The first Presbyterian missionaries in Korea
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Categories:
1858 births
1932 deaths
People from Delaware, Ohio
American Presbyterian missionaries
Presbyterian missionaries in Korea
Ambassadors of the United States to Korea
19th-century American physicians
American political writers
American male non-fiction writers
Christian medical missionaries
Ohio Wesleyan University alumni