James Scarth Gale


James S. Gale was a Canadian Presbyterian missionary, educator and Bible translator in Korea.

Early life

Gale was born on February 19, 1863 in Alma, Ontario, Canada. His father John Gale was a Scottish immigrant who moved to Canada in 1832. His Pennsylvania Dutch mother Miami Bradt was from Hamilton, Ontario. Together they had six children, of which James was the fifth.
In 1882 Gale entered St. Catharine's Collegiate Institute, St. Catharines, Ontario. From 1884 to 1888 Gale studied arts at the University of Toronto, including the summer of 1886 at the Collège de France, Paris on a language course. During his first year of study he heard Dwight L. Moody preach and was deeply impressed. Gale graduated with a B.A. from the University College of the University of Toronto in 1898.

Career

After graduation, on April 12, 1888, he was appointed a missionary of Toronto University's YMCA and was sent to Korea. On November 13, 1888, he set sail from Vancouver, arriving in Pusan on 12 December, from where he took a coastal vessel to Jemulpo, present-day Incheon.
In 1889 he visited Haeju, in Hwanghae province and from there moved to Sollae village, in Jangyeon District, Hwanghae from March to June. This village was home to Seo Sang-ryun, one of the first Korean Protestants and his brother, who had been baptized by Horace Grant Underwood. From August 1889 to May 1890 he lived in Pusan. In 1890 he taught English at the "Christian School". In February 1891 he and Samuel A. Moffet visited John Ross in Mukden, Manchuria and returned to Seoul in June.
In August 1891, terminating the relationship with the Toronto University YMCA, he moved to the American Presbyterian Mission Board, North. From 1892-1897 the Gales lived in Wonsan while Gale served as member of the "Board of Official Translators" of the Korean Bible. He worked with Henry G. Appenzeller, Horace G. Underwood, William B. Scranton, and William D. Reynolds.
In 1897 he returned to Canada and the US, and on May 13 was ordained as a Presbyterian minister at New Albany Presbytery, Indiana. In 1900 he became the first minister of Yondong Presbyterian Church in Seoul.
As an educationalist, he founded the Jesus Church Middle School, present Kongsin Middle and High School, as well as Yondong Girls’ School, presently Chongsin Girls’ School, in Seoul. In 1904 he organized the Association of Korean Education with the members of the Yondong Church. In 1917 he founded the Korean Music Society.
In May 1927 he resigned as pastor of Yondong Church, leaving Korea on June 22, a year before official retirement. Gale died on January 31, 1937 at the age of 74 in Bath, England. He is buried in Lansdown Cemetery, Bath.

Personal life

He married twice. On April 7, 1892, he married to Harriet E. Gibson Heron, the widow of John W. Heron, M.D., also of the American Presbyterian Mission, North, who had died in Korea on June 26, 1890. Harriet Gale died on March 29, 1908, aged 48. On April 7, 1910, he was remarried to Ada Louisa Sale. Her father, George Sale, was a businessman in Japan.

Legacy

Gale was talented in so many ways, his influence was great, although he was often frustrated by the rivalries, jealousies and personality clashes that too often characterized the missionary community in Korea. His linguistic skills were essential in the work of Bible translation, while his literary and poetic sensitivity gave his writing an added charm. He was unable to publish a considerable portion of what he wrote or translated and much remains to be published in his papers in the University of Toronto.




Kim Man-Choong,
Scholarly articles
. The Korean Repository, Vol.III, pp. 475–481.
. The Korean Repository, Vol.IV, pp. 81–89
In Transactions of the Royal Asiatic Society Korea Branch
. I:1-24. 1900.
II, part Il:1-43. 1902.
. IV, part I:12-61. 1912–13.
. IV, part III:17-22. 1913.
. VI, part II:1-22. 1915.
. XIII:1-67. 1922.
XV:3-22. 1924.

Korean mythological origins

James Scarth Gale said that Koreans claimed to be descended from the gods with slight admixture from Chinese.