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MINNIE VAUTRIN

Program
Illinois State Historical Society
Subject
Education, People, Religion
Location
203 4th St., Secor, IL 61771
Lat/Long
40.7402196, -89.1339388
Grant Recipient
Illinois State Historical Society
Historic Marker

MINNIE VAUTRIN

Inscription

MINNIE VAUTRIN

WILHELMINA “MINNIE” VAUTRIN, (1886-1941) WAS BORN IN SECOR, ILLINOIS, TO FRENCH IMMIGRANTS. HER MOTHER DIED WHEN MINNIE WAS 6, AND SHE WAS RAISED BY HER FATHER AND GRANDPARENTS. SHE EXCELLED AT SCHOOL AND  WORKED HER WAY THROUGH ILLINOIS STATE NORMAL UNIVERSITY AND LATER, THE UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS. IN KEEPING WITH HER DISCIPLES OF CHRIST FAITH, MINNIE WAS A MISSIONARY TO CHINA FOR 28 YEARS, TEACHING AT GINLING COLLEGE IN NANJING, FIRST AS AN INSTRUCTOR AND LATER SERVING AS PRESIDENT. WHEN THE JAPANESE ARMY INVADED CHINA IN 1937, NANJING BECAME A TARGET AND THOUSANDS OF CIVILIANS WERE DISPLACED, TORTURED, OR KILLED. WOMEN WERE ESPECIALLY VULNERABLE. VAUTRIN OPENED GINLING’S GATES AS A REFUGE TO WOMEN AND GIRLS, SAVING AN ESTIMATED 10,000 LIVES. WRITTEN ACCOUNTS REPORT THAT SHE STARED DOWN ARMED JAPANESE SOLDIERS TO PROTECT HER CHARGES, FOR WHICH SHE IS REMEMBERED AS “THE AMERICAN GODDESS OF MERCY.”

SPONSORED BY

THE DISCIPLES OF CHRIST HISTORICAL
SOCIETY, WILLIAM G. POMEROY FOUNDATION, THE
CHINESE CONSULATE GENERAL IN CHICAGO, AND THE LLLINOIS
STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY.
APRIL 2023.