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  1. The Chefoo School (traditional Chinese: 芝罘學校; simplified Chinese: 芝罘学校; pinyin: Zhīfú Xuéxiào; Wade–Giles: Chih-fu Hsüeh-hsiao), also known as Protestant Collegiate School or China Inland Mission School, was a Christian boarding school established in 1881 by the China Inland Mission—under James Hudson Taylor ...

  2. 16 de ago. de 2015 · The Japanese invaders decided to turn Chefoo School into a military headquarters She remembers how the schoolchildren would watch the Japanese at bayonet practice.

  3. Classes began in 1881 with 3 students By 1905, the Chefoo School, officially the Protestant Collegiate School – enrolled 226 sons and 193 daughters of CIM missionaries. Also attending the school were children of other missionary groups, businessmen, and government officials living in China, including a few Americans.

  4. The Chefoo School was established by the CIM in 1881 at the treaty port of Chefoo (now Yantai) on the northern shore of the Shandong peninsula. Its primary purpose was to provide a boarding school for CIM missionary children, but it was also available to missionaries from other Protestant mission organizations, local business families, and ...

  5. The Chefoo School was established by the China Inland Mission - under James Hudson Taylor - at Chefoo (Yantai), northern China, in 1880. Its aim was to provide an education for the children of missionaries and the business and diplomatic communities.

  6. The Chefoo School, also known as Protestant Collegiate School or China Inland Mission School, was a Christian boarding school established in 1881 by the China Inland Mission—under James Hudson Taylor—at Chefoo (Yantai), in Shandong province in northern China. Its purpose was to provide an education for the children of foreign missionaries ...

  7. 8 de abr. de 2017 · Modelled on the British public school system, Chefoo School would acquire a reputation as the finest school east of Suez. In anticipation of a boom, the Newmans added a second floor to the hotel. Not only was their gamble paying off, but their children were getting a better education than they would have had in Britain.