In 1929, a graduate of St. Stephen’s Girls’ College, working as a dental practitioner in Hong Kong, reflected on her experience in the profession:
I have had people who asked me the following questions often, through sheer curiosity I suppose, because lady dentists were practically unheard of before in China and I hope it was not with the intention to insult. “Can you ‘pull’ teeth with a small hand like yours?” I simply laughed and replied saying “oh, no I have got to use my feet besides!” and they knew that I was making fun of them and they could not help laughing. Then I explain to them that it is not so much the strength but the proper technic which accounts for the success in extraction… . It seems to me that there is a great field for women in dentistry, I mean to those who are inclined, as women are naturally gifted with a deeper sympathy and a keener sense of touch, which qualities are so essential to a successful operator at the dental chair and especially when working with children.Footnote 1
School magazines and the public press were effective outlets that Chinese and European female professionals used to articulate new ideas regarding gendered professional and public engagement in interwar Hong Kong. In a period of burgeoning urban print culture where magazines, periodicals, and newspaper columns were increasingly created by and for Chinese girls and women, the literary space of print press circulated new ideas about women’s urban lifestyle, social activities, public initiatives, professional aspirations, and educational possibilities.Footnote 2 In printing this extract, the school magazine provided a space in which a Chinese female dentist could define her own professional identity and respond to public stereotypes against female health care professionals (see figure 1).Footnote 3 Writing for magazines and the public press thus became a means by which women could voice their perspectives and reflect on their broader roles in society. By expressing their viewpoints on women’s social and professional engagement, female writers helped define and shape new ideas on women’s usefulness in the public domain. As well, print offered a platform for its female writers to forge connections beyond the colonial territories. It allowed them to imagine new forms of usefulness.
This paper is focused on the literary space of English-language periodicals, examining how European female teachers and Chinese schoolgirls at St. Stephen’s Girls’ College deployed the bilingual school magazine News Echo and other local English newspapers such as the China Mail, South China Morning Post, Hong Kong Telegraph, and Hong Kong Daily Press (which routinely published school annual reports by government and grant-in-aid schools) to articulate in print new ideals of female usefulness in interwar Hong Kong that connected with the rebuilding of China.Footnote 4 These ideals are discussed in relation to Chinese women’s presence in higher education and their contribution to public affairs. The writings by teachers and students of St. Stephen’s are read both as documents of everyday school life and changing schooling practices, and as sources of cultural imagining that actively constructed new forms and ideals of modern womanhood. Through the narration of European teachers and Chinese students in accounts of school events and daily activities, these writings portrayed the students as the “really healthy, sound minded, useful women of China.”Footnote 5 The medium of print served as a site of deliberate articulation of a branded image, an “ideal Chinese woman” that St. Stephen’s sought to produce. It was a way to circulate new ideals of womanhood to middle- and upper-class English-speaking readers in Hong Kong, and thus gain broader resonance among the elite professional and intellectual classes of European and Chinese communities.
St. Stephen’s brand of usefulness was in part an explicit response to the “New Woman” phenomenon in Republican China (1911-1949). As the historian Madeleine Y. Dong illustrates, Republican China was a site of cosmopolitan modernity marked by, among other trends, the establishment of the nuclear family as the norm; the advent of young women and men receiving education or joining the workforce in integrated public spaces away from their parents’ homes; and the emergence of an urban culture targeting the young. It was the age of the “Modern Girl” and “New Woman,” defined by mobility, adventure, openness, and experimentation. The modern feminine look was widely adopted by diverse groups of women, including high school and college students, professionals, and the young wives of the upper- and middle-classes. The image was so prevalent that by the 1930s, the Modern Girl look had become a passport to opportunity and a requisite dress code for young female city dwellers.Footnote 6 However, in a slight twist to the Modern Girl phenomenon that emerged in the heyday of interwar feminism and later gained global resonance in cities like Bombay, Tokyo, New York, and London (along with the rise of feminist civil society and women’s suffrage movements, as well as the increasing participation of women in nationalist movements), the New Woman in the Republican China context was instead an invention of the male intellectual class.Footnote 7 As Louise Edwards suggests, in the context of Republican China, the New Woman discourse revealed the reformist intellectual class’s concerns about power and governance in modern China at a time when intellectuals were increasingly repressed and politically marginalized. Engagement and preoccupation with the attributes of modern women was in part an attempt by some reformist intellectuals to reclaim their roles as moral guardians and leading advisers for the nation.Footnote 8 As a creature of the progressive intellectual class’s political aspirations, the symbol of the New Woman was “part of a modernizing discourse that made possible the imagining of a new nation.”Footnote 9 She was to be politically aware, educated, independent, and patriotic.Footnote 10 The historian Tani Barlow argues that as an invention of the male-dominated intellectual class, the Chinese New Woman had less potency for the women’s rights’ movement than she did with the nationalist project of state-building.Footnote 11
Social change had begun even prior to the mass circulation of the image of the New Woman in print media such as novels, magazines, periodicals, and newspapers. In the late decades of the Qing dynasty (1644-1911), public engagement of Chinese women was already prominent.Footnote 12 This new public realm drew in the “new women”—students, teachers, suffragists, revolutionaries, writers, doctors, and other modern-educated professionals who emerged during this period. The spheres of their professional and public engagement included public schools, hospitals, feminist and patriotic associations, and business firms.Footnote 13 Female professionalism played an important role in enabling Chinese women to reposition themselves and become effective public actors. Further, against this backdrop of women’s professional advancement, the public, private, and domestic spaces were being remade and rethought in early twentieth-century China.Footnote 14
In Hong Kong, the interwar period was also marked by the rupture of the spatial divide between the domestic and the public that had traditionally defined women’s usefulness. Resonating with the transnational wave of the women’s movement, interwar Hong Kong witnessed the rise of Chinese women’s associations, notably the Hong Kong Chinese Young Women’s Christian Association (YWCA), established in 1920.Footnote 15 In the same year, the Girl Guide movement also started in Hong Kong.Footnote 16 Just as these youth and women’s associations increasingly brought Chinese girls and women into the public sphere, Chinese females also made their way into the professional realm. According to the 1921 Census, which documented the professional occupations of Chinese females in Hong Kong, there were 10 practicing dentists along with 20 doctors (specializing in Chinese medicine), 59 midwives, and 61 nurses. In addition, 67 women worked in the religious field, 73 were hospital attendants, and 324 were teachers.Footnote 17 By 1931, numbers had increased: 7 were practicing physicians, with 27 dentists, 56 doctors (specializing in Chinese medicine), 177 midwives, 235 nurses, 435 in religion, and 866 teachers.Footnote 18 The entry of Chinese women into professional careers was intricately connected with a colonial educational system that provided females with professional pathways in the form of higher education and specialized training.Footnote 19 During this period, secondary girls’ schooling and higher education forged a tighter connection as they responded to a shifting social demography of urban working women.
It is within the context of these new gender dynamics, both in Hong Kong and broadly in Republican China, that this paper examines the schooling practices at St. Stephen’s and the new ideals of “useful woman” it produced. Staffed by a group of European professional women—many of whom were educated within the British Empire in places such as England and Australia—the mission school was undoubtedly influenced by women’s activism and the progressive ideas of its English and Australasian teaching staff.Footnote 20 However, as a Chinese elite-sponsored school, St. Stephen’s also tactically reframed its purpose and function in the face of bourgeoning Chinese nationalism in interwar Hong Kong.Footnote 21 It is precisely because Hong Kong at this historical moment was sitting between two empires—each asserting a new identity—that St. Stephen’s assumed a culturally fluid stance. One former empire, Republican China, had a weak central government and was multiply colonized, and in this period of weak political unity after the fall of the Qing Empire, nationalism or “national awakening” emerged as the primary construct around which people rebuilt their identity.Footnote 22 The other empire, Great Britain, had just suffered a disastrous loss in the Boer War (1899-1902), which shook the confidence of the English urban elites and the middle classes about the empire’s future. They feared and lamented that the once invincible empire was in decline.Footnote 23 In this turbulent context, the purpose and function of girls’ education were reinvented to shore up nationalist and imperial agendas. St. Stephen’s believed it was making a special contribution to the education of women in China, portraying its pupils as “girls of China” rather than “girls of the colony.” This framing also offers a tantalizing glimpse of the imperial moment of mission-run girls’ schools in Hong Kong when missionaries—resonating with the colonial state—envisioned having a role in Republican China’s modernization.
Hong Kong Chinese women’s history is marginalized by both the “masculinist field of Chinese history” and the Euro-American-dominated fields of women’s history and imperial history.Footnote 24 Living on the far edge of the British and the Chinese empires, Chinese women in colonial Hong Kong suffered from a multi-layered “regime of silence” that so often overlooked their existence and experience in, and contribution to, public affairs in Hong Kong, China, and the British Empire. In the field of education, the historian Patricia Chiu has examined girls’ schooling in the early colonial decades of Hong Kong through the Victorian gender paradigm. Chiu shows that for an extended period in the nineteenth century, schooling practices in mission girls’ schools were informed by the Victorian social understanding of gender that denoted a separate sphere for women.Footnote 25 The “accomplishments curriculum” was a common practice in state and grant-in-aid English girls’ schools that ensured middle-class Chinese girls were educated in the skills that they could perform in the domestic sphere. Performativity was an important aspect of gender, because refined femininity was considered performative of middle-class social status.Footnote 26 Training in feminine accomplishments was also instrumental in producing a particular form of urban domestic culture that marked colonial civility and respectability.Footnote 27 Despite the influence of the discourse of colonial domesticity on girls’ education in Hong Kong, little study has focused on the impact of the nationalist discourse in shaping Chinese girls’ schooling experience and career aspirations in interwar Hong Kong. Through a site-specific case study of one elite girls’ school, this paper addresses the lacuna by examining how St. Stephen’s strategically positioned itself as an educational site for the New Woman of China. St. Stephen’s brand of usefulness was defined through the narrative of science learning and a sense of service. In framing St. Stephen’s girls as the “useful women of China,” the school simultaneously tapped into the nationalist sentiment of its elite Chinese sponsors and the imperial sentiment of the colonial state. English education for Chinese girls, this paper shows, was framed by the colonial authorities as an imperial project for the benefit of China. Such framing, in turn, allowed St. Stephen’s to forge layered connections with the transnational women’s networks in Republican China and the Church Missionary Society’s South China Mission, as well as the educational network within the British Empire.Footnote 28 It is in the intersecting worlds of empires, transnational women’s networks, and missions that St. Stephen’s envisioned its role in the shaping of modern China.
A School to Educate the “Useful Women of China”: The Founding of St. Stephen’s Girls’ College
At the turn of the twentieth century, after six decades under colonial rule, English schools for Chinese girls in Hong Kong emerged through a healthy collaboration between missionaries and the colonial state. The first government school for Chinese girls, the Central School for Girls (later renamed Belilios Public School), had been established on March 1, 1890. This marked the systematic involvement of the colonial state in girls’ education. As the inspector of schools E. J. Eitel suggested, the curriculum at this school followed that of the public schools in England: course subjects included reading, arithmetic, English composition, grammar and analysis, geography, map drawing, history, and needlework.Footnote 29 Other influential missionary girls’ schools active in this period included the Diocesan Girls’ School, the French Convent, and the Italian Convent. The Diocesan Girls’ School, founded by the Anglican Church in 1860 for the care of girls of mixed parentage, later had a multiracial enrollment.Footnote 30 Similarly, the French Convent, founded by Sisters of St. Paul de Chartres in 1847 for European children, also later extended admission to multiple racial groups.Footnote 31 In contrast, the pupils enrolled in the Italian Convent, founded by the Canossian Sisters of Charity in 1860, were chiefly Chinese and Portuguese.Footnote 32 These English girls’ schools (where the medium of instruction was English) educated a racially diverse but predominantly Chinese middle-class cohort.Footnote 33 By the early twentieth century, these schools featured a line of vocational training, preparing the future professional class by providing instruction in subjects such as typewriting, shorthand, accounting, and stenography, as well as first aid and home nursing.Footnote 34
The curriculum and the “socially mixed” character of these English girls’ schools gradually dissatisfied the expectations of the Chinese elites. In 1901, a group of elites—led by Ho Kai (lawyer and merchant, key promoter of Western medicine and Western education among the Chinese), Wei Ayuk, Fung Wa Chun, Chan Tung Shang, Uen Lai Chun, Lo Kun Teng, S. W. Tso, and Wei On—petitioned the colonial state to establish a separate strand of upper-class English schools for their sons and daughters, stating that the English education offered by the state was insufficient and undesirable in its “intermingling of students from all social classes.”Footnote 35 After the secretary of state for the colonies rejected the petition on the ground that such an institution would be “exclusionary” in character, the group approached the Church Missionary Society of England (CMS).Footnote 36 With the promise of financial backing from the Chinese elites (who played a prominent part in the official and business life of Hong Kong), in 1903, the CMS founded St. Stephen’s College (for boys), and in 1906, St. Stephen’s Girls’ College.Footnote 37
From its inception, St. Stephen’s Girls’ College was branded by the CMS as a site to inculcate “morality, modesty, and true womanliness” through its unique approach of instilling Western civility in the students while simultaneously preserving their Chinese cultural character. The aim of the college was to “conserve and stimulate all that is noblest and best in the character of Chinese young ladies, and at the same time to provide for them an excellent modern education under the direction of experienced English ladies. Hence while they are instructed in Western science and arts they are required to hold on to their own national good manners and propriety.”Footnote 38
This emphasis on “holding on” to Chinese culture was in stark contrast with other English girls’ schools that discounted Chinese traditions of learning.Footnote 39 Referring to St. Stephen’s, Gerard Heath Lander, the bishop of Victoria from 1907 to 1920, further stated that Chinese girls “would be given a first-class education, based upon a Christian morality. It would conserve their Chinese good manners and propriety. Although the society [CMS] taught English, it did not desire to Anglicise the pupils, or to unfit them for any society in the Empire of China to which, in the days to come, they might be called.”Footnote 40
The purpose of the school, as it was framed by the CMS and the bishop of Victoria, was to prepare Chinese girls to serve in China. In so doing, St. Stephen’s became a site where the CMS envisioned and exercised its broader role in the modernization of Republican China. The school consisted of three divisions: kindergarten, preparatory school, and the girls’ college. In the girls’ college, according to a prospectus for the school from 1913, subjects taught in the morning classes included scripture, English, reading and recitation, arithmetic, algebra, geometry, history, geography, hygiene, nature study, singing, Swedish drill, and drawing. In the afternoon, lessons were given in Chinese language and literature, needlework, music, and extra English for pupils preparing for the Oxford Local Examination (the official school-leaving examination before 1915).Footnote 41 To accommodate the students coming from various parts of China and from overseas (such as the Straits Settlements), boarding quarters were established and managed by four English ladies and one Chinese matron.Footnote 42 The first girl boarder came from Canton.Footnote 43 Later, the school also attracted boarders from Swatow, Amoy, and Foochow, as well as from far distances such as Formosa, Peking, and Tientsin.Footnote 44 By 1913, the college already had seventeen boarders and eighty-eight day pupils.Footnote 45
Before being added to the grant-in-aid school list in 1924, the college was a self-supporting mission school fully funded by Chinese elites (who were also parents of the school pupils).Footnote 46 The CMS provided the school principal, while the daily operation of the school fell under the management of a local council (also being referred to as the “college council” or “school council”). The council was composed of both Chinese and European members, drawn from the educational sphere of Hong Kong or as prominent public figures.Footnote 47 Past school council members included, for example, the bishop of Victoria, Rt. Rev. C. R. Duppuy (serving as bishop 1920-1932 and acting as council chairman 1926-1932), the governor’s wife, Lady Clementi (a member in the late 1920s), and Dr. S. W. T’so, a distinguished Hong Kong lawyer and advocate for modern education. Dr. T’so was one of the founders of St. Stephen’s Boys’ College and St. Stephen’s Girls’ College and a member of the Board of Education, among his other educational positions. He served on St. Stephen’s school council between 1906 and 1945.Footnote 48
The teaching force comprised both English and Chinese staff.Footnote 49 The school principal served in the traveling network of teachers in the CMS South China Mission, and often would go on to teach in South China after Hong Kong. For example, Miss Griffin, who served as principal of St. Stephen’s between 1915 and 1921, later acted as principal of St. Hilda’s School, Canton.Footnote 50 The English teaching staff were recruited upon graduating from college. In 1925, for example, the school welcomed the arrival of Miss Pope, “who brings with her the healthy traditions of Roedean School and English University life.” Miss Vincent who received her B. A. from Westfield College, University of London, and Miss Wise, who received her B.A. from Sydney University, also joined the staff.Footnote 51 On the side of the Chinese staff, many were “old girls” (alumnae) of St. Stephen’s returning to teach after their university studies.Footnote 52 Additionally, the school had a Director of Chinese Studies who oversaw the classes in Chinese language and literature from kindergarten to matriculation standard, which for an extended period over the interwar years was supervised by Mr. Lo Kwan-sheung.Footnote 53 The teaching staff were part of the wider professional network of European and Chinese teachers working in China and the Far East. Many of the staff who worked at St. Stephen’s would have working experience in other parts of China. For example, in 1928, during a staff shortage, Miss Pim from the Kwangsi-Hunan Mission (in South China) assisted at the school.Footnote 54 The following year, Miss Mannett came to work at St. Stephen’s from Shanghai, but was all too quickly recalled back to her important work in Chengtu University, Szechuan.Footnote 55
As women’s professional and educational mobility rose as a transnational and global phenomenon in the interwar period, St. Stephen’s was further integrated into this broader educational and professional exchange.Footnote 56 By recruiting the “new women” educated in the universities in Hong Kong, China, and overseas, and working through them to devise a progressive science curriculum that connected St. Stephen’s with higher education, the school helped prepare a generation of accomplished Chinese women who later ventured into the interior of China, building careers in modern education, medicine, commerce, and transportation.Footnote 57 The “career women” that St. Stephen’s helped to produce, in turn, allowed the school to define its role in the shaping of modern China.
Chinese Women in Higher Education: Curriculum Changes and Alumnae Activities at St. Stephen’s, 1921-1941
As educational exchange and mobility became a global phenomenon in the early twentieth century, the education of Chinese girls in interwar Hong Kong came in constant dialogue with women’s education in Republican China. With regard to higher education, as the historian Paul Bailey shows, the May Fourth Movement (emerging in 1919 and extending into the early 1920s) was a landmark moment that shaped the educational landscape of Chinese women. In May 1919, the first official higher education institution for Chinese women, the Peking Women’s Higher Normal School, was established. This supplemented the previous Euro-American mission-run universities such as Yenching Women’s University in Peking (established in 1908), Huanan Women’s University in Foochow (1914), and Ginling Women’s University in Nanking (1915).Footnote 58 While the attendance of women constituted less than 10 percent of the total enrollment of university students in the Republican period,Footnote 59 it was the gradual growth in enrollment that indicated the expansion of their education, as well their own changing attitudes toward higher education. Following the May Fourth Movement in 1920, a group of female students became the first to attend a state co-ed university in Republican China, with nine students from cities across the country enrolling at Peking University to audit a number of courses.Footnote 60
Also in 1920, St. Stephen’s Girls’ College made its first appeal to Hong Kong University (HKU, established in 1912) to open its doors to women.Footnote 61 The following year, HKU began to officially admit women students.Footnote 62 By 1922, HKU had received its first woman undergraduate from China, who received accommodations at St. Stephen’s.Footnote 63 Altogether, the university admitted four women students that year.Footnote 64 In a commencement address the vice-chancellor of HKU, Sir William Brunyate, declared that women university graduates would be an asset to China, and that “there can be no doubt that China offers almost limitless scope for women doctors.”Footnote 65 This imperial mindset, that HKU was educating a stream of doctors and engineers for the benefit of China, was indeed inscribed in the founding logic of the university. As the historian Peter Cunich suggests, HKU was born out of the “pragmatic desires of the Chinese elite and the informal imperial ideals of the governor [Sir Frederick Lugard].” Lugard framed the university as an “imperial” project for the benefit of China.Footnote 66 The comments by the director of education, E. Irving, upon the opening of the university also aligned with this view: “As the University is only just founded we cannot tell where the students will go after graduating, but it is expected that they will become engineers and doctors on the Coast and later in China itself. The Arts students will most probably enter the Chinese Government Service.”Footnote 67
In fact, even before the founding of HKU, Hong Kong had been educating a stream of students who showed promise of becoming the “architects” of modern China. As the historian Ng Lun Ngai-Ha demonstrates, the English education offered in Anglo-Chinese schools in Hong Kong produced not only the leading citizens of the local community but also a generation of Western-educated young men who went to China to work in civil services. They were instrumental in establishing modern welfare, engineering, and medicine, as well as modern communication and transportation (such as rail transport) in China.Footnote 68 This is in part why the historian John Carroll suggests Hong Kong played a crucial role in China’s nation-building from the late Qing dynasty and throughout the first half of the twentieth century. In addition to working in China as lawyers, teachers, doctors, scientists, and engineers that helped to build China’s modern infrastructure, Hong Kong-educated Chinese also donated heavily to philanthropic, educational, medical, and public works projects in their native districts. By the early 1900s, Hong Kong was also the principal connecting point and remittance center for overseas Chinese, mobilizing the flow of funds, goods, and people between South China and North America, Australia, South America, and other parts of the world.Footnote 69
Just as the male intellectuals and professionals educated in Hong Kong took up a larger role in the shaping of modern China, the unprecedented attention to women’s education in Republican China also sparked new conversations and exchange between Hong Kong and mainland China. It opened up a space for new imperial imaginings. On April 7, 1922, while laying the foundation stone of the new college site of St. Stephen’s, the prince of Wales made a public speech about girls’ education in Hong Kong, stating, “In the present day there is doubtless a call on educated women to play a larger part in the life of China. They can do much to develop the position of women, and I trust the aims of the College may receive a full measure of success… . It is hoped that many of the girls will subsequently enter upon the University career.”Footnote 70
Women’s education in Hong Kong, as it was framed by the prince of Wales and other colonial authorities, functioned as a means to help China to progress. By invoking women’s role in the national project of the rebuilding of China, such framing resonated with the New Woman discourse. As the historian Sarah E. Stevens suggests, the New Woman, as a cultural figure, highlights the transformation of “a backward or bourgeoise woman into a New Woman, who stands for the nation and its quest for modernity,” thus representing the necessary transformation of the Chinese nation. The vision for this transformation to modernity was essentially that it would occur through Western science.Footnote 71 At St. Stephen’s, it was the school’s progressive science curriculum that marked it as a pioneering site for the modern education of Chinese women.
St. Stephen’s School Curriculum and Higher Education
Women in China had already begun to study overseas during the final years of the Qing dynasty. Between the 1880s and 1890s, under the sponsorship of missionaries, four Chinese women went to the United States to train as doctors. By 1911, there were a reported fifty Chinese female students in the US.Footnote 72 In Hong Kong, it was also around this period that St. Stephen’s sent its first candidate, Wan Suk Ching, daughter of Dr. Wan Tuen Mo, for the Oxford Local Examination. Miss Wan succeeded as the first Chinese girl to pass the Oxford examination in Hong Kong, and was awarded an Associate of Arts degree at Oxford.Footnote 73 This early instance of higher education exchange, in which Chinese girls pursued university studies in the US and England, was partly the result of the restrictive admission of women at local universities in Hong Kong and China. After the opening of HKU and its subsequent decision to begin admitting women students, schools in Hong Kong began to undergo curriculum changes that prepared Chinese girls for the Hong Kong Matriculation exam, which had replaced the Oxford Local Examination.Footnote 74 At St. Stephen’s, a year after HKU began officially admitting women students, the headmistress, Miss Middleton-Smith, added a matriculation class to the courses after noticing the curriculum had not been systematically changed.Footnote 75 While these curriculum changes were incremental at first, it nonetheless made St. Stephen’s the main feeder of women students to HKU. By 1924, the school had already sent five pupils to HKU: three were studying medicine, one was studying education, and one engineering.Footnote 76 Partly owing to its geographic proximity to the university, St. Stephen’s also established a women’s hostel for female university students.Footnote 77 By 1928, with more and more St. Stephen’s pupils moving on to the university to study medicine, Miss Atkins, the new headmistress, indicated the school was planning to build a new wing that would include a science laboratory to prepare pupils “more adequately for the higher work they must undertake” at the university.Footnote 78 In 1929, the new wing was completed, with an art room, a covered playground, and a science laboratory for physics and chemistry.Footnote 79 The project was funded by Chinese elites (as early as 1919, a Chinese Building Fund Committee, led by Sir Robert Ho Tung as chairman, Dr. S. W. Ts’o as secretary, and Mr. Kwok Siu Lau as treasurer, was established to take care of funding St. Stephen’s new buildings).Footnote 80 The following year, the school secured the service of Miss F. B. Wood, BSc, who traveled from England to teach botany, physics, and chemistry.Footnote 81 Later, the school recruited two more female science teachers from Australia: Miss Blanchett and Miss Macindoe.Footnote 82 St. Stephen’s science teachers were well-qualified university graduates. For example, the science teaching staff during the interwar years included Mrs. Chung, an HKU graduate, and Dr. Feng of Foochow University.Footnote 83
During this period, the St. Stephen’s administration framed the teaching of science as a building block for modern learning that would serve the goal of rebuilding China. As the headmistress Miss Atkins suggested in 1931, “New China has been passing through the destructive stage of her progress and is still in need of constructive thought and ability. In the casting away of the old and the putting on of the new, what standards ought to be used? Surely those of truth and reason, and it is in the experimental work of the laboratory and in the hours of communion with God of truth that those standards will be tested and proved.”Footnote 84
Although St. Stephen’s emphasized the role of missionaries, at the same time it nonetheless strategically positioned the science curriculum and the experimental work of the laboratory as the key to modern learning. The school magazine News Echo also published articles on the value of science subjects during this period. As early as 1929, the magazine published an article by HKU lecturer G. A. C. Herklots advocating for the learning of botany at girls’ schools. The article promoted botany as a subject for boys and girls in all schools because it would train pupils to “perceive the essentials of a problem … to arrange thoughts and actions in a logical manner.”Footnote 85 By 1934, a more progressive division of science learning had emerged at St. Stephen’s. In the upper school (for senior students), the morning classes included scripture, arithmetic, mathematics, English literature, history, geography, physics, chemistry, botany, hygiene, drawing, and singing. In the lower school (for junior students), the morning subjects included scripture, arithmetic, English (conversation, composition, and grammar), science, history, geography, drawing, reading, gymnastics, and nature study.Footnote 86 For purposes of observation and experiment and as part of the science curriculum, St. Stephen’s pupils also visited sites of scientific and engineering interest, including the dairy farm at Pokfulum, the commercial press printing works at North Point, the water works, the Kai Tak aerodrome, and the observatory.Footnote 87
In adapting the school curriculum for higher education purposes, St. Stephen’s helped prepared a generation of women for universities throughout China. Apart from St. Stephen’s being the main feeder of HKU (by 1930, twenty-four girls from St. Stephen’s had entered HKU), its pupils were found studying in universities in all parts of China.Footnote 88 In 1937, for example, three St. Stephen’s girls passed the admission examination to St. John’s University, Shanghai; one pupil went on to take a special physical training course in Ginling College, Nanking; and three others enrolled at Lingnam University, Canton.Footnote 89 The following year, St. Stephen’s pupils entered Lingnam, Yenching (a university in Peking), and Ginling.Footnote 90 The year after that, St. Stephen’s pupils also entered the National Southwest Associated University in Kunming.Footnote 91 Ultimately, this generation of university women would become the “career women” in Hong Kong and China. They immersed themselves in medical and health work, in social work (taking positions in the Society for the Protection of Children and the YWCA), and in education.Footnote 92 As they became headmistresses, teachers, doctors, engineers, clerks, nurses, and social workers, working and living throughout China and in many other parts of the world, they helped interweave St. Stephen’s into the broader educational and professional networks of women who contributed to the modern enterprises of education, medicine, commerce, and philanthropy (see figure 2).Footnote 93
Alumnae Activities at St. Stephen’s: Careers in Hong Kong and China
The Modern Girl phenomenon brought women’s presence into cosmopolitan professional and public space.Footnote 94 In the eyes of their Republican contemporaries, women’s professional aspirations were signs of their desire for financial independence, adventure, greater autonomy over their own lives, and increased mobility in both urban and rural areas.Footnote 95 As the modernization of China was increasingly imagined through the cultural figure of the modern woman, women’s professional choices began to operate as a matter of political significance and public interest.Footnote 96 This broader context also affected the career aspirations of Chinese women outside China.
As hopes for national progress came to be increasingly centered on “properly” educated Chinese women, a generation of St. Stephen’s alumnae took girls’ education into their own hands.Footnote 97 Acting as headmistresses and teachers in girls’ schools in Hong Kong and China, they saw themselves as both guardians and pioneers of modern education for Chinese girls. As early as 1922, the headmistress Miss Middleton-Smith shared that “quite a large number [of students] are continuing their studies in America,” and that a few would be returning to Hong Kong upon graduation to open schools for girls.Footnote 98 This early generation of Chinese women university graduates returning from overseas were instrumental in bringing progressive educational ideas as well as new forms of women’s public engagement back to China. As the historian Marie Sandell shows, in the early twentieth century, a class of highly educated elite Chinese girls pursued their higher education in the West. Influenced by the women’s movement during their university study, this cohort started and led women’s organizations upon their return to China.Footnote 99 Higher education for Chinese women, both overseas and domestic, thus allowed women to reposition themselves and become effective public actors. Equipping the next generation of Chinese girls for their larger role in the nation-rebuilding project was one of the women’s goals. At St. Stephen’s, Rose Hing Huen Tan, editor of the “Alumni Section” of the school magazine News Echo, reported in 1929 that Mrs. Chan Wing Shen, a graduate of St. Stephen’s, had just founded the Lop Shuet Girls’ School at Kai Tack Bund, Kowloon City. Miss Tan emphasized,
It has long been Mrs. Chan’s cherished hope to establish an adequate institution for girls living on the mainland—adequate in meeting the needs of Chinese girls of today who, with the steady rise of women’s influence and participation in the Nation’s welfare, governmental, social, economic, and educational, must be adequately prepared for this change. With this in mind, the founder has carefully made up a curriculum that gives every pupil a sound foundation of general knowledge on the one hand and a thorough preparation for advanced education on the other.Footnote 100
For Mrs. Chan and her colleagues, education for Chinese girls needed to be pragmatic and adequate for preparing them for the newly reconfigured professional and public domain in Republican China. The modern and progressive educational ideas Chinese women received at St. Stephen’s would find their usefulness in a diverse array of professions including modern education, medicine, telecommunication, and transportation. As the school magazine reported, that same year, in Hong Kong three St. Stephen’s alumnae (Doris Leung, Li Luk Wa, and Jean O’Hoy) had returned to the school as teachers. One alumna, Chinn Yee Ching, became the headmistress of Fairlea School (a CMS girls’ school), and another alumna, Yue Yuk Fan, became the headmistress of Yeuk Chi School. One alumna, Yung Hei Wan, was working for the Canton-Kowloon Railway. In Shanghai, two St. Stephen’s alumnae, Kwok Wing Yuen and Kwok Sheng Man, were practicing dentists. In Peking, alumna Winifred I Sheng Liang was acting as the chair of the Women Students’ Self Government Association and chair of the Sociology Club at Yenching University.Footnote 101
Throughout the 1920s, cosmopolitan Republican China absorbed a generation of Chinese women educated in Hong Kong into its educational and professional network. By the 1930s, the heightened political turbulence in Republican China, and particularly the struggle against Japanese imperial expansion, had served as another common context upon which St. Stephen’s headmistresses drew to shape pupils’ career aspirations. In 1930, for example, at School Prize Day, headmistress Miss Wise suggested, “A few of our old girls have decided to train as nurses, and we are hoping that as time goes on more will decide to take up this profession, for there is, perhaps, no greater need in China today than the need for helpers in medical work.”Footnote 102
Much of the writings by European headmistresses in this period intended to provide moral and career guidance to middle- and upper-class Chinese schoolgirls who, in the face of national crisis, were exploring the possibilities of useful work outside the domestic sphere. The school explicitly and constantly invoked the national rebuilding of China, whereas that sentiment was commonly absent in the annual school reports of other government and grant-in-aid girls’ schools, which tended to focus on changes in school curriculum, struggles over the medium of instruction, and girls’ engagement with imperial youth organizations such as the Ministering Children’s League and the Girl Guides.Footnote 103 Encouraged by the school’s call to service, by 1932, in Hong Kong, St. Stephen’s alumna Cheng Hung Yue was practicing in the Government Civil Hospital. Another alumna, Dr. Leung Chum Ha, was practicing at the Tung Wah Hospital. Twelve “old girls” were training as nurses in the Government Civil Hospital and the Nethersole Hospital.Footnote 104
Toward the late 1930s, in the wake of Japanese invasion (followed by the occupation of Hong Kong in 1941), St. Stephen’s alumnae were further absorbed into the war relief network in mainland China. In 1938, one alumna, Helen Chung, was working with the YWCA in Kunming; another, Kwok Sheung Man, was doing refugee relief work in Tientsin. Yung Hei Wan was serving as president of the Canton Branch of the YWCA.Footnote 105 As well, alumnae provided aid to the war orphans and students at the YWCA and the Red Cross in Hong Kong.Footnote 106 Commenting on the role Chinese women outside China played in the war relief effort, Miss Ellen Tsao Li, St. Stephen’s alumna and founder of the Hong Kong Chinese Women’s Club, suggested that the women’s club served as “a connecting link between similar clubs in Shanghai and other cities in China, Saigon, Singapore, Java, Australia and America, and also act as a liaison body with principal relief organizations in China like the Chinese Red Cross Society to which we have contributed not only medical supplies and ambulances but support of various kinds.”Footnote 107
In collaboration with the Hong Kong branch of the Women’s Christian Temperance Union, Ellen Li established the South China Refugee Industrial Training Center for the training of refugee girls and women in the art of needlework, dressmaking, and other works of art by machine and by hand.Footnote 108 The associational work of St. Stephen’s alumnae in support of war relief reflected not only how Chinese women educated in Hong Kong responded to the national crisis of the day, but also how they were able to utilize the transnational connections they had built up during their study at St. Stephen’s and put it to philanthropic use (see figure 3).
Chinese Women in Public Affairs: Philanthropic Activities at St. Stephen’s, 1921-1941
Running parallel to the curriculum changes that prepared Chinese girls for the Hong Kong Matriculation exam—which in turn produced a class of “career women” for China—was St. Stephen’s branding of its “useful women,” constructed through the narrative and practice of social service. Building on its apparent connection with the CMS South China Mission, every year the schoolgirls participated in fundraising concerts and bazaars that collected funds for the CMS girls’ schools and leper hospitals in South China cities such as Yunnanfu and Pakhoi.Footnote 109 St. Stephen’s also functioned as the liaison center of the youth branch of Chinese women’s associations such as the YWCA (an “organization by means of which women could step from home to community life and service”).Footnote 110 As early as 1917, a school branch of the YWCA was formed at St. Stephen’s. The school organizer and one of St. Stephen’s schoolgirls, Miss W. U. Kwok, writing in the South China Morning Post in 1919, discussed the training the branch offered in “how to organize and carry through work by their [schoolgirls’] own effort.” As she explained, under the direction of committee members (which included two school staff), the branch ran a literacy class for female domestic service workers every Wednesday and Saturday afternoon. If schoolgirls wished “to serve China in this time of crisis,” Kwok urged in closing, “we must all begin by learning to replace an independent, selfish spirit by a spirit of loving service.”Footnote 111 Similar to the writing of European headmistresses, the Chinese schoolgirls’ writing also had a clear purpose of guiding young girls during an era that was being defined simultaneously as a time of “cosmopolitan modernity” and “national rebuilding” in Republican China.
This broader context in Republican China shaped Chinese women’s active involvement in the philanthropic scene in interwar Hong Kong. Between 1925 and 1930, to support the young women’s education campaign launched by the National Committee of the YWCA in China, the Hong Kong YWCA formed the Wa Kwong Club (Light of China) for young women in junior and secondary schools and in Hong Kong factories.Footnote 112 St. Stephen’s was one of the first girls’ schools to establish a branch of the Wah Kwong Club, which routinely organized social gatherings, outdoor activities, and community services.Footnote 113 In 1926, for example, to support educational work serving street children, St. Stephen’s pupils founded a free school that ran every Wednesday and Saturday afternoon for girls and boys from the neighborhood (see figure 4).Footnote 114 One volunteer teacher and pupil of St. Stephen’s, Fung Fung Ting, reflected on her experience of teaching in the free school:
The Free School is one of our best services for society. It is run with the aim of helping poor children to get more knowledge and to be useful to the country… . They were altogether seven teachers and more than sixty students. Time passes quickly, when we look back, we realize how little we have done. But anyway we have tried our best to bring up those poor children, so that they may be useful as they become bigger.Footnote 115
Here, writing for the school magazine became a means for Chinese girls to reflect on their changing roles in society and to define their own usefulness. By teaching the street children to “be useful to the country,” the schoolgirls also exercised the usefulness that they themselves sought to achieve. By the late 1930s, in response to the war casualties piling up in South China in the fighting against the Japanese invasion, particularly in Fukien and Kwangtung, St. Stephen’s pupils helped to make bandages, swabs, hospital gowns, and padded coats at the Hong Kong Women’s Medical Association and the Hong Kong Chinese Women’s War Relief Association.Footnote 116 They also volunteered at the Women’s Street Sleepers’ Shelter during the winter, and at the food center in the old St. Peter’s Church in the summer.Footnote 117
St. Stephen’s participation in war relief was part of the development of a transnational network of Chinese women’s associations involved in humanitarian assistance. Just a year before the British colonial government in Hong Kong fought against the Japanese troops and were defeated on December 25, 1941, St. Stephen’s pupils were making regular monthly collections for soldiers in Central China through the National Young Men’s Christian Association Emergency Service and also raising funds to cover a stipend for a teacher’s service at St. Peter’s Soup Kitchen.Footnote 118 As much as these war relief efforts assisted the national resistance against Japanese troops in China, they were also in aid of the British colonial state as it struggled to provide school, shelter, food, and care for the war refugees in Hong Kong.
Conclusion
The writings of teachers and students at St. Stephen’s can be read in myriad ways. They provide an account of everyday school life, but they can simultaneously be read as a source of cultural imagining of new forms and ideals of modern womanhood. The writing by the European headmistresses, in particular, was often deliberate in its effort to provide career and moral guidance, which can be read as a response and remedy on the part of the European intellectuals to an interwar cosmopolitan modernity that to a certain extent had triggered anxiety and an eagerness to guide the students. The writing by the Chinese girls and women, on the other hand, was both a document of school events and a reflection of their useful role in the immediate context of Hong Kong and the larger context of Republican China. With an explicit and constant reference to China, St. Stephen’s brand of usefulness was in part a response to the New Woman phenomenon in Republican China. As the nation of modern China came to be increasingly imagined through the cultural figure of the modern woman, women’s education, professional choices, and public activities became a matter of political significance and at times the center of public interest. St. Stephen’s strategically tapped into this bourgeoning interest in the New Woman. The school both imagined and exercised its role in the shaping of modern China. By branding St. Stephen’s as a site that educated the “really healthy, sound-minded, and useful women of China,” the school further opened up a space for new imperial imaginings for the British colonial government.Footnote 119 In the minds of the CMS and the colonial sate, English education for Chinese girls served as an imperial project for the benefit of China.
As women’s increasing educational and professional mobility became a global phenomenon in the interwar period, it is not surprising that Chinese women educated in Hong Kong were absorbed into the broader professional networks of education, medicine, commerce, and transportation in Republican China. In the school magazine News Echo, alumnae and teachers of St. Stephen’s wrote about their encounters and careers in all parts of China and various regions of the world. The political turbulence in the interior of China in the face of Japanese imperial expansion in the late 1930s, and the eventual occupation of Hong Kong in 1941, opened up new dialogue and exchange between Hong Kong and China. By that point, Chinese women’s war relief and philanthropic activities in Hong Kong were concerned less with the expanding of the public sphere for the modern women than with the circumstantial struggle of a colonial city in the wake of the Pacific War (1941-1945). The writings of teachers and students at St. Stephen’s in interwar Hong Kong served as a document of schooling practice, a source of moral guidance, an account of cultural imagining, and, above all, a portrait of usefulness that the writers themselves sought to achieve.
Stella Meng Wang is a postdoctoral research fellow at the Education University of Hong Kong. The author would like to thank John Carroll, Elizabeth Sinn, and the journal’s anonymous reviewers for their insightful comments and suggestions, as well as St. Stephen’s Girls’ College for permission to reproduce the images used in the paper. This research was supported by the Post-doctoral Fellowship Matching Fund Scheme at the Education University of Hong Kong.
Disclosure statement
The author reports no potential conflict of interest.