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Helen Roseveare

4/3/2016

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I just recently discovered this missionary ... listen to her testimony in these four videos from YouTube.  I guarantee you have never heard anything like it.

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Dr. Ida Scudder and The Three Knocks

5/30/2015

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As mentioned in the last post, Ida Scudder headed to Vellore, India where her parents were in need of her help.  As she sat one evening working on some letters, three different local men, at different times, came to her door.  All three men requested her assistance for a young wife who was having severe difficulties in childbirth.  One was a Brahmin, one was a Muslim, and the other was a high-caste Hindu.

Ida offered to get her father, because her medical training was not complete and she did not have the skills they needed.  However, because of caste and religious rules, they young men could not allow another man to enter their wife's chamber -- even if it was a doctor and she was dying.  One replied that it was better that his wife die in childbirth than risk her soul.

They went their ways, again all at different times.  Ida was very upset, and after a sleepless night she sent someone to inquire after the young women.  All three had died.

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Ida Scudder, from NIH Changing the Face of Medicine

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Early Years of Dr. Ida S. Scudder

5/29/2015

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Ida Sophia Scutter was born in 1870 to Dr. John Scudder Jr. and his wife Sophia in Shelton, Nebraska.  Many sources report she was born in India, but in a transcript of an interview with her she states that she was actually born here in the US.   When she was six years old her family moved to Oklahoma, and she graduated from high school there. 

Northfield Seminary

She graduated at the top of her class in Oklahoma, and her father was suspicious of the quality of education being provided.  The family moved east, and Ida was supposed to Northfield Seminary in Massachusetts.  However, this was during the time of a terrible flu epidemic that was moving across the US, and she became ill and missed a good portion of the first year.  She spent three years at this school, which was founded by none other than D.L. Moody.  The primary emphasis of this school was to prepare young ladies for missionary work, and to provide education and employable skills to underprivileged women.  To this day, tuition costs can be covered in part by performing by working for the school.

Medical Education
Next, Ida headed to Mount Holyoke.  It was there, in her senior year, that she decided to become a medical doctor.  After graduation, Ida headed to the Women's Medical College in Pennsylvania where she planned on specializing in pediatrics.  She did her internship at Albany Medical College, but was in need of money.  To earn some much needed cash, she went to work for the Children's Community in New Haven.

Answering a Need
Ida's grandfather was the first medical missionary ever to go out from the United States, and most of her aunts and uncles were active in missionary work. If Ida went into missions, she would actually be the fourth generation of missionaries from the Scudder family.   She was even named after her aunt, Dr. Ida Scudder, who was a medical missionary in India. 
However, Ida did not want to be a missionary.  But, while working in New Haven, she found out that there as a urgent need in Vellore, India regarding her mother's health... and that happened to be where her medical doctor aunt happened to be, also.

Ida headed off to Vellore to help for a while, temporarily putting her medical education on hold.  She did not intend to, as she said, "become one of THOSE Scudders."  She spent five years there before returning to the United States to finish her education.

TO BE CONTINUED ....

Sources

Historic American Landscapes Survey, Northfield Seminary for Young Ladies
Oral History of Dr. Ida Scudder
Boston University History of Missiology, Biographies: Ida Sophia Scudder and The Legacy of Ida S. Scudder

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Dr. Ida Sophia Scudder

5/27/2015

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PictureDr. Ida Scudder Source: BSU History of Missiology Digital Archives
I have picked my missionary for this week's talk -- Dr. Ida Scudder, born in 1870.  Ida was a American medical missionary to India, working regularly with dangerous diseases such as leprosy and bubonic plague.  Her grandfather was Dr. John Scudder, America's first medical missionary.  Medical missions, however, was not initially in Ida's plans.

I started researching Ida using Google, and found some interesting resources.  To my utter delight, I found out that a church in Greenwich, CT (see Sources below) has a transcription of an interview with Ida about her life.  I also found some other interesting resources I provided links to below, if anyone might be interested.  Among them is a YouTube video where you can hear her voice, apparently toward the end of her life.

As I continue my research on her, I will share what I find out.  Now for just  preview of what this sweet looking young lady accomplished:  a college for nurses that developed into a graduate school of nursing associated with Madras University, a school to train women doctors (and later, men also), and a hospital that grew into one of India's largest medical centers.  She died at the age of 90 in Vellore, India -- where she had done so much of her work.

Sources

BSU's History of Missiology: Ida Scudder
National Institute of Health's Changing the Face of Medicine: Dr. Ida Sophia Scudder
Vellore Christian Medical College Foundation: History
Weill Cornell Medical College: India Christian Medical College
First Congregational Church of Greenwich, CT:  Oral History of Ida Scudder
YouTube:  Ida Scudder's Voice
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    Sara McCaslin is  an engineer, a computer scientist, and a freelance writer.

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