Fanny Gulick | |
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Personal | |
Born | Frances Hinckley Thomas April 16, 1798 Lebanon, Connecticut, U.S. |
Died | May 24, 1883 Kobe, Japan |
Religion | Presbyterian |
Spouse | Peter Johnson Gulick |
Children | 8, including Luther Halsey Gulick Sr. and J. T. Gulick |
Profession | Missionary |
Senior posting | |
Profession | Missionary |
Fanny Gulick (born Frances Hinckley Thomas; April 16, 1798 – May 24, 1883) was a 19th-century American Presbyterian missionary to the Hawaiian Kingdom and to Japan. Fanny and her husband, Rev. Peter Johnson Gulick had eight children, seven of whom also became missionaries. She was the first to instruct the island women in plaiting the straw-like covering of the sugarcane blossom into materials for hats and bonnets[1] — an industry that soon became an important one.