Ann Hasseltine Judson
{{short description|American missionary}}
{{Use mdy dates|date=September 2011}}
{{Infobox person
| name = Ann Judson
| image = Portrait of Ann Hasseltine Judson (4673541).jpg
| caption = Ann "Nancy" H. Judson
| birth_name = Ann Hasseltine
| birth_date = December 22, 1789
| birth_place = Bradford, Massachusetts
| death_date = {{death date and age|1826|10|24|1789|12|22}}
| death_place = Amherst, Burma (now Kyaikkami, Myanmar)
| known_for = Missionary work in Burma
| spouse = Adoniram Judson
}}
Ann Hasseltine Judson (December 22, 1789 – October 24, 1826), nicknamed "Nancy", was one of the first female American foreign missionaries.
Biography
Ann Hasseltine attended the Bradford Academy and during a revival there read Strictures on the Modern System of Female Education by Hannah More, which led her to "seek a life of 'usefulness'".{{cite journal | author=Dana L. Robert | author-link=Dana L. Robert | title=The Mother of Modern Missions| journal=Christian History & Biography | date=Spring 2006 | volume=90 | pages=22–24 }} Born in Bradford, Massachusetts
a teacher from graduation until marriage. Her father, John Hasseltine, was a deacon at the church that hosted the gathering that, in 1810, founded the American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions and, according to Ann's sister, the family first met her husband Adoniram Judson at that time.{{cite book | last=Wayland | first=Francis | author-link=Francis Wayland | title=A Memoir of the Life and Labors of the Rev. Adoniram Judson, D.D., Vol. I | orig-year= 1853 | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=OojaN0ql3wMC&q=Burma+Adoniram+%22Ann+OR+Judson%22+OR+%22Ann+OR+Hasseltine%22+OR+%22Ann+OR+Hasseltine+OR+Judson%22&pg=PA31 | access-date=June 18, 2006 | publisher=Phillips, Samson, and Company | location=Boston | year=1853}}
She married Adoniram in 1812, and two weeks later they embarked on their mission trip to India.[https://www.thetravelingteam.org/articles/ann-judson The Traveling Team website, History of Mission: Ann Judson] The following year, they moved on to Burma.S. W. Williams, ed., Queenly Women: Crowned and Uncrowned (Cincinnati: Cranson and Stowe, 1885), 59–60.
She had three pregnancies. The first ended in a miscarriage while moving from India to Burma; their son Roger was born in 1815 and died at eight months of age, and their third child, Maria, lived for only six months after her mother's death.{{cite journal | author=Richard V. Pierard | author-link=Richard V. Pierard | title=The Man Who Gave the Bible to the Burmese | journal=Christian History & Biography | date=Spring 2006 | volume=90 | pages=16–21 }}S. W. Williams, ed., Queenly Women: Crowned and Uncrowned (Cincinnati: Cranson and Stowe, 1885), p. 68. While in Burma, the couple's first undertaking was to acquire the language of the locals. Missionary efforts followed, with the first local converting to Christianity in 1819.S. W. Williams, ed., Queenly Women: Crowned and Uncrowned (Cincinnati: Cranson and Stowe, 1885), p. 60. Due to liver problems, Ann returned to the United States briefly in 1822–23.{{cite web|year=2003 |title=Ann Hasseltine Judson: First American Woman Missionary |work=Glimpses No. 46 |url=http://chi.gospelcom.net/GLIMPSEF/Glimpses/glmps046.shtml |access-date=June 18, 2006 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://archive.today/20050321091431/http://chi.gospelcom.net/GLIMPSEF/Glimpses/glmps046.shtml |archive-date=March 21, 2005 }}
Image:Nancy visits Adoniram.jpg
During the first Anglo-Burmese war (1824–26), her husband was imprisoned for 17 months under suspicion of being an English spy, and Ann moved into a shack outside the prison gates so as to support her husband. She lobbied vigorously for months to convince the authorities to release her husband and his fellow prisoners, but her efforts were unsuccessful. She also sent food and sleeping mats to the prisoners to help their time in prison to be more bearable.S. W. Williams, ed., Queenly Women: Crowned and Uncrowned (Cincinnati: Cranson and Stowe, 1885), p. 63. During this time, Ann wrote stories of life on the mission field and the struggles she faced. She wrote tragic descriptions of child marriages, female infanticide, and the trials of the Burmese women who had no rights except for the ones their husbands gave them. Ann's health was fragile by the time her husband was released. Her efforts to be near him when he was moved to a new location, all while she was nursing a newborn child, had involved strenuous travel and living conditions that may have contributed to her illness.S. W. Williams, ed., Queenly Women: Crowned and Uncrowned (Cincinnati: Cranson and Stowe, 1885), pp. 66–67. After her husband's release they both remained in Burma to continue their work. Ann died at Amherst, Lower Burma, of smallpox in 1826.
She wrote a catechism in Burmese, and translated the books of Daniel and Jonah into Burmese. She was the first Protestant to translate any of the scriptures into Thai when in 1819 she translated the Gospel of Matthew.
Her letters home were published in periodicals such as The American Baptist Magazine and republished after her death as devotional writings, making both her and Adoniram celebrities in America.{{cite journal | author=Ruth A. Tucker | author-link=Ruth A. Tucker | title=Let Freedom Ring| journal=Christian History & Biography | date=Spring 2006 | volume=90 | pages=12–15 }}
Her work and writings made "the role of missionary wife as a 'calling'" legitimate for nineteenth-century Americans. There have been at least sixteen biographies of Judson published, the most famous having a new edition printed almost every year from 1830 to 1856, and was described by Unitarian Lydia Maria Child as "a book so universally known that it scarcely need be mentioned."{{cite journal | title=Did You Know? | journal=Christian History & Biography | date=Spring 2006 | volume=90 | page=2 }}
Publications
- Knowles, Life (Boston, 1829) New International Encyclopedia
- Knowles, James D. Memoir of Mrs. Ann H. Judson, Late Missionary to Burmah (Boston: Lincoln & Edmonds, 1831) fourth edition
Namesake colleges
References
{{Reflist}}
External links
- [http://www.wholesomewords.org/missions/bjudsonann.html Biography at Wholesome Words]
- [http://www.missionaryetexts.org/#m-judson E-text of an 1829 Biography]
- [https://archive.org/details/bub_gb_bb4u5bmWDGUC Google E-text of an 1829 Biography]
- [https://missiology.org.uk/pdf/e-books/grose/judson-centennial.pdf Missiology website, The Judson Centennial, 1814-1914 edited by Howard B. Grose and Fred P. Haggard] (online copy)
{{Christianity in Myanmar}}
{{Protestant missions to Southeast Asia}}
{{Authority control}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Judson, Ann Hasseltine}}
Category:People from Haverhill, Massachusetts
Category:People of the First Anglo-Burmese War
Category:Baptist missionaries from the United States
Category:Baptist missionaries in Myanmar
Category:Baptist missionaries in India
Category:Translators of the Bible into Burmese
Category:Female Christian missionaries
Category:Infectious disease deaths in Myanmar
Category:Women in 19th-century warfare
Category:Women in war in Southeast Asia
Category:American expatriates in India
Category:American expatriates in Myanmar
Category:American evangelicals
Category:People from Bradford, Massachusetts
Category:19th-century American translators
Category:19th-century Baptists