Author | Carbonneau, Robert E.Passionists. Archives. China Collection |
Place | --- |
Publisher | --- |
Collection | Passionist China Collection |
Edition | |
Language | English, Chinese |
Type | Digital archives |
Series | |
Shelf | Digital Archives |
Call Number | PCC |
Description | dig.files [56 linear ft. : documents, mss., reports, photographs, etc] |
Note | N.B. The Passionist China Collection (PCC) is now permanently housed at the Ricci Institute, following a digitization project under the direction of the PCC Archivist, Fr. Robert Carbonneau, C.P. As per agreement, the Ricci Institute is an official repository and retains a digital copy of the archives and indexes which may be consulted on-site by interested scholars. All rights are maintained by the Passionists and permission is required before publication. The Passionist China Collection (PCC) is an area subset of the Archives Collection, Records of the Congregation of the Passion, St. Paul of the Cross Province. The Roman Catholic Diocese of Yuanling 沅陵 (Latin: Iuen-Iuimensis; Apostolic Prefecture of Chenzhou 辰州 from the Vicariate Apostolic of Changde 常德 (March 13, 1925); V.A. Chenzhou 辰州 (May 28, 1934); renamed V.A. Yuanling 沅陵 (Dec.10, 1934); Diocese of Yuanling 沅陵 (April 11, 1946). See Passionist Historical Archives page
Primary evangelization occurred in the Diocese of Yuanling 沅陵 in West Hunan under the leadership of Passionist Bishop Cuthbert O'Gara with secondary locations in Hankou and Peiping (Beijing). Also serving in the Yuanling Diocese were the Sisters of Charity of Convent Station, New Jersey; the Sisters of St. Joseph, Baden, Pennsylvania; the Grey Nuns of Ontario, Canada; the Sisters of Charity (Hungary); and the Sisters of Notre Dame (Kalocsa, Hungary). The Collection consists of: 2. Mission Administrative Records (1921-1980) 8.8 linear feet. Contains documentation on financial and business operations, Hunan baptismal records, telegrams, property deeds, annual reports, press releases, public relations pamphlets, and visitation reports. A small portion of this collection describes the post-1956 period. 3. Sources on individual missionaries. 16 linear feet. Most notable is the handwritten diary of Father Cormac Shanahan’s 1944 trip to Yan'an to interview Mao Zedong, and material on the imprisonment of Bishop O'Gara (1951-1953) and Fathers Justin Garvey and Marcellus White (1953-1955). China coverage found in the The Sign Magazine (1922-1955). Documentation on women religious. 2 linear feet. 4. Black and white photos from 1921-1950s offers a view of the Hunan mission and the Yangzi River Valley. 13 linear feet. Archival specialist: Fr. Robert Carbonneau, C.P. |