Ex-missionary Douglas Wingeier honoured
FORMER students and parishioners
of the Rev Dr Douglas Wingeier will be glad to know, and congratulate
him for his honour of receiving the Distinguished Alumnus Award
recently from Boston University School of Theology. This event
took place at a special luncheon during the 50th reunion of the
class of 1954 of the school in May this year.
The
Rev Dr Wingeier earned both his M.Div. and Ph.D. degrees from
Boston University and was, on the recommendation of the School
of Theology Alumni/ae Board, given the award for "outstanding
achievement and distinction in service to the profession"
of ministry.
As a Methodist missionary in Singapore, he was a lecturer in
Christian Education and Director of Field Education at Trinity
Theological College from 1963 to 1970. He also served concurrently
as Pastor of the English congregation at Foochow Methodist Church
from 1963 to 1966 and was, in 1967, appointed Pastor of the Chinese
congregation of Queenstown (Chinese) Methodist Church. He and
wife, Carol, had studied Mandarin full-time at Yale University,
and continued to study with Trinity College Dean Rev Peter Hsieh,
enabling him to be fluent in the language. It is interesting that
his pastorate at Queenstown was to the Chinese congregation when
the Rev T. C. Nga pastored the English congregation.
After returning to the United States in 1970, he taught at Garrett-Evangelical
Theological Seminary in Evanston, Illinois to round off a career
stretching 45 years.
Retired from the active ministry,
he now lives in North Carolina (36 Bust-O-Dawn, Waynesville, NC
28786, USA), and continues to teach and write, and is engaged
in peace activism.
Grandparents
missionaries too
On a historical note, the Rev Dr Wingeier was the second member
of his family to serve as a missionary in Singapore. His maternal
grandfather, Charles S. Buchanan, came to Singapore and married
his wife, Emily, in 1895. He began teaching at Anglo-Chinese School,
and was appointed lay missionary in 1897, and appointed Principal
from 1903 to 1905.
Thence, he was re-assigned to
Java where he was responsible for work in the local vernacular
in Tjisaroea-Buitenzorg and was, as a member of the Malaysia Annual
Conference, appointed District Superintendent from 1913 to 1915.
He played an important role in building a hospital in a missionary
career spanning the best part of 30 years in the region.