Marilla Baker Ingalls | |
---|---|
Personal | |
Born | Marilla Baker November 25, 1828 Greenville, New York, U.S. |
Died | 17 December 1902 Thongze, Burma |
Resting place | Burma |
Spouse |
Lovell Ingalls
(m. 1850; died 1856) |
Denomination | American Baptist Missionary Union missionary |
Profession | missionary |
Senior posting | |
Profession | missionary |
Marilla Baker Ingalls (née, Baker; November 25, 1828 – 17 December 1902) was an American Baptist Missionary Union missionary[1] and writer. After marrying the widower, Rev. Lovell Ingalls, they sailed for Burma in 1851. Widowed in 1856, she continued working as a missionary in Burma till her death there in 1902. Ingalls had great influence among the Buddhist priests in spreading the word of Christianity. She established Bible societies, distributing tracts in their own language to the French, English, Burmese, Shans, Hindus and Karens. She opened a library for the benefit of the employees of the railway, and established branch libraries on these lines. Her work was most valuable among the men who went out into these countries to work for the syndicates building railroads, and also among the local workers. The various governments represented appreciated her work, and often assisted her.[2]
Ingalls was the author of, Ocean Sketches of Life in Burmah (1858), A Golden Sheaf from the Judsons' Work at Ava (1881), and The Story of the Queen's Bible (1909). She was a constant and graphic writer to publications such as the Baptist Missionary Magazine.