William Carey Pioneer Missionary to India’s Millions
John Brown Myers [1844/45-1915] provides us with a brief biography of William Carey – “The Founder of Modern Missions”. The book includes chapters on Carey’s role as a translator, a philanthropist and a naturalist. My thanks to Redcliffe College for providing me with a copy to digitise. This book is in the public domain.
John Brown Myers [1844/45-1915], William Carey. The Shoemaker Who Became “The Father and Founder of Modern Missions”. Kilmarnock: John Ritchie, [1905]. Hbk. pp.151. [Click to download complete book in PDF]
Contents
Preface
- His Early Years
- His Life at Moulton and Leicester
- He Offers Himself as a Missionary, and Starts for India
- First Experiences
- Removal to Serampore
- The Serampore Mode of Life
- Three Important Events
- Various Circumstances
- Carey as a Translator
- Carey as a Philanthropist
- Carey as a Naturalist
- Carey and Serampore College
- Conclusion
Chapter 1: The Early Years
If Thomas Fuller, the author of the “Worthies of England,” himself a Northamptonshire man, had died a century after instead of exactly a century before William Carey was born, he might have written a work restricted to the worthies of his own county, and to those two hundred years, as voluminous and interesting as his well-known folio. From Dryden, whose birthplace, like his own, was the village of Aldwinkle, down to John Clare, who may be regarded as the English Robert Burns, how many celebrities, and that not alone of poet fame, would have received biographical notice! The dwellers in the midland shire may well be proud of the eminent men who have been born upon its soil. [Continue reading]