DeWitt Clinton Jansen


DeWitt Clinton Jansen, was a member of the Shanghai Municipal Council from 1893 until his death in November 1894; an Associate judge of the United States Consular Court in Shanghai; the proprietor of the Astor House Hotel in Shanghai, the first western hotel in China, from 1874 to his death in 1894; and was the first District Deputy Grand Master of the Cosmopolitan Lodge of Freemasons which began working in Shanghai in 1864. Jansen Road in Yangtsepoo was named in his honour.

Family background

DeWitt Clinton Jansen was of Dutch ancestry, and was born at Shawangunk, New York on 8 November 1840, the second son of John Richard Jansen and Rachel Terwilliger, and the brother of Mary, Richard, William, and Cornelius. Jansen was the a great-great grandson of Thomas Jansen, who was one of the first settlers in the Wallkill valley, who built the Thomas Jansen House, a Dutch stone house on Jansen Road in Shawangunk. D.C. Jansen is a descendant of Mathijs Jansen van Ceulen, original owner of the piece of ground on Isle van Pappermemmins currently home to Columbia University.
His ancestors were among the first to settle Kingston, New York in 1652.
After the death of his father in 1845, Jansen and his older brother William lived with his grandparents, Thomas Johnson , and Leah Bleynman Johnson. On 8 November 1871 Jansen married Ellen McGrath in a ceremony performed by Rev. William Henry Collins, a missionary of the Church Missionary Society, at the Church of Our Saviour, Hongkew, China, one of the first churches in Shanghai. Jansen and Ellen had seven children: Ellen Rachel ; Edith Mary ; Mabel ; John DeWitt ; Grace; Edward Clinton ; and Catharine.

Career highlights

Jansen left the United States on 7 August 1857, while still aged 16. Jansen was a merchant sailor, and colporteur in China's interior. From 1871 Jansen was resident in Shanghai, and was employed by the Imperial Maritime Customs.

Astor House Hotel (1874-1894)

By 1874 Jansen purchased the Astor House Hotel.

Social activities

Jansen was a polyglot, fluent in a number of Chinese dialects, and assisted in the preparation of an 1871 Pekinese-English dictionary.

Church

Jansen was a regular attender and member of the Church Committee of the Union Church, which had been located on the London Missionary Society compound on Shantung Road since 1864, and in a new church building erected in 1886 at a new site on the corner of Soochow and Yuen-ming-yuen Roads.

Freemasonry

Jansen was a founding member of the first American Freemason lodge in China, the Cosmopolitan Lodge, which began working in Shanghai in 1864. From 27 December 1891, he was the first District Deputy Grand Master. of that lodge, a position he held until his death in November 1894.

Natural history

Jansen had an interest in natural history. In 1870 he sent specimens from China to the American Museum of Natural History. Jansen also served as Honorary Curator of the Shanghai Museum, from about 1880.
Jansen was a member of the China Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland from 1877 until his death in 1894.

Shanghai Municipal Council

According to his obituary, Jansen was "a painstaking and prominent member of the Municipal Council."

United States Consular Court

By October 1894 Jansen was an Associate judge on the United States Consular Court in Shanghai.

Death

On 6 November 1894, during an installation meeting of the lodge, Jansen "suddenly fell back in his chair, gave one or two gasps for breath" and died. On 8 November 1894 Jansen was buried in the New Cemetery of Shanghai. J.I. Miller eulogised Jansen:
speaking of Bro. Jansen as a 'typical Freemason, a just and upright man,' saying that, "His labours for the good of the Settlement and its public institutions are so well and widely known, that I will not dwell here upon them. Whatever he did, he did well."

On Sunday 11 November 1894 a memorial service was held at the Union Church, with the funeral sermon, based on Revelation 3:12, preached by Rev. John Stevens.