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Ellen Henrietta Ranyard : ウィキペディア英語版
Ellen Henrietta Ranyard
Ellen Henrietta Ranyard (January 9, 1810 – February 11, 1879) was an English writer and missionary who worked with the poor of London. She founded the London Bible and Domestic Female Mission.
==Life==
She was born Ellen Henrietta White in the district of Nine Elms, London, the eldest daughter of John Bazley White, a cement maker. At the age of sixteen she and a friend, Elizabeth Saunders, caught a fever while visiting the sick poor. Her friend died, and from that time onward, Ellen White regularly visited the poor, collected money to supply them with bibles, and interested herself in the bible society.
After her family removed to Swanscombe in Kent, she married there, on 10 January 1839, Benjamin Ranyard. In 1852 she wrote ''The Book and its Story, a Narrative for the Young'', which proved extraordinarily popular. In 1857, with her husband and family, she took up residence at 13 Hunter Street, Brunswick Square, London. Soon afterwards she founded, in Seven Dials, a missionary society for the supply of bibles, and described her labours in a periodical, which she supported, called ''The Book and its Missions, past and present'' (vols. i. to ix. 1856 – 64). From 1865 the magazine was wholly devoted to furthering her mission, and was renamed ''The Missing Link Magazine, or Bible Work at Home and Abroad'' (1865 – 79). In 1879 upwards of 170 bible women were employed in the work of the mission. In 1868 Mrs. Ranyard commenced training nurses, and eighty were ultimately engaged in attending the sick poor in the poorest districts of London.
She died of bronchitis at home in the winter of 1879. Her work was continued as the London Bible and Domestic Female Mission, whose doings are chronicled in ''Bible Work at Home and Abroad,'' vol. i. 1884. Her husband died one month after she did on March 10, 1879, aged 86. Both were buried in West Norwood Cemetery. Her son was the astronomer Arthur Cowper Ranyard.

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