Gershom Whitfield Guinness (April 25, 1869 in Paris, France – April 12, 1927 in Peking) was a Protestant missionary in China, where he also was a practising medical doctor and a writer.
Biography
A descendant of Guinness brewing family, he was a son of
Henry Grattan Guinness
Henry Grattan Guinness (11 August 1835 – 21 June 1910) was an Irish Protestant Christian preacher, evangelist and author. He was the great evangelist of the Third Evangelical awakening and preached during the Ulster Revival of 1859 which dr ...
, Irish Protestant missionary, originally from Dublin, who worked around the world for 15 years, and his wife and partner
Fanny Grattan Guinness, née Fitzgerald. He was educated at the High School, Launceston, Tasmania; and Leys School, Cambridge. B. A. 1891. Enrolling into Caius college in 1888 to study medicine, he received his M. B. and B. C. there in 1896.
As most of his other siblings, he became a missionary and fulfilled one of his father's dreams by joining, as his sister
Geraldine had done earlier, China Inland Mission, coming to Kaifeng, Henan, in 1900 and immediately barely escaped being slaughtered in anti-foreign
Boxer Rebellion. He is mostly remembered for the letters he wrote to his father while escaping the rebels, and the book he wrote later recollecting his experience, "A Great Deliverance." His biography by his sister Geraldine was published in 1930.
Family
*Son Henry Whitfield Guinness (April 18, 1908, Kaifeng, Henan, China — February 17, 1996, Pembury, Kent) was a missionary in China. Henry's son
Oswald Guinness became a U.S. author and Christian apologist.
Obituary: Henry Guinness
in The Independent of March 12, 1996, accessed October 15, 2013.
*Daughter Pearl Guinness (1910–1918), her brief life also subject of a book by Geraldine Taylor.
References
{{DEFAULTSORT:Guinness, Gershom
1869 births
1927 deaths
Protestant writers
English Protestant missionaries
Protestant missionaries in China
British expatriates in China
Gershom Whitfield Taylor