
In the early nineteenth‑century world of missionary enterprise, three remarkable women—Ann, Sarah, and Emily Judson—step onto the stage of Burma’s remote villages. Their stories unfold against a backdrop of tangled politics, unfamiliar languages, and the daily hardships of frontier life, offering a vivid portrait of devotion that goes beyond the usual narratives of their era. Through letters, diaries, and personal reflections, listeners catch a glimpse of how each wife balanced the demands of family, faith, and a relentless call to serve.
The memoirs reveal the quiet courage required to navigate cultural barriers, endure illness, and confront the ever‑present threat of danger, all while supporting their husband’s pioneering work. Their perseverance shines in moments of simple triumph—learning a new dialect, sharing a prayer with a village elder, or caring for a child far from home. Together, these accounts illuminate a path of self‑sacrifice that shaped the early growth of the mission and left a lasting imprint on both the people they reached and the legacy of women in religious service.
Language
en
Duration
~7 hours (448K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Joel Erickson, Robert Cicconetti, Stacy Brown Thellend and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net
Release date
2005-10-13
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Known today for a vivid 19th-century work on the three Mrs. Judsons, this American writer brought missionary history to life through stories of courage, loss, and conviction.
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