Helen G. Moore Oral History Interview
9 June 1977
Oral History #OH0045
- Creator(s)
- Lennon, Donald R. (Interviewer); Moore, Helen G., 1903- (Interviewee)
- Physical description
- 0.01 Cubic Feet, 2 audiocassettes, 2.5 hours, 55 pages
- Preferred Citation
- Helen G. Moore Oral History Interview (#OH0045), East Carolina Manuscript Collection, J. Y. Joyner Library, East Carolina University, Greenville, North Carolina, USA.
- Repository
- ECU Manuscript Collection
- Access
- No restrictions
Biographical/historical information
Helen G. Moore was a native of Albany, New York born in 1903. As a missionary for the Methodist Episcopal Church, she travelled to Japan in 1931 to teach at the Kwassui Girls School in Nagasaki. After four years she returned to New York, where she taught school for two years. Moore then returned to Japan in 1937 and remained there until evacuated to the Philippines in March 1940. During the Japanese occupation of the Philippines she was interned and for 72 days she was imprisoned at Santiago Prison in Manila. In 1945 she was liberated and returned to the U.S. She once more returned to Nagasaki in 1947 where she resumed her missionary work for the Methodist Church.
Administrative information
Source of acquisition
Gift of Helen G. Moore
Processing information
Encoded by Apex Data Services
Copyright notice
Repository does not own copyright to the oral history collection. Permission to cite, reproduce, or broadcast must be obtained from both the repository and the participants in the oral history, or their heirs.
General note
1931-1977
Related material
Helen G. Moore Papers (#1239), East Carolina Manuscript Collection, J. Y. Joyner Library, East Carolina University, Greenville, North Carolina, USA.
Key terms
Personal Names
Moore, Helen G., 1903-
Corporate Names
Methodist Episcopal Church--Missions--China
Methodist Episcopal Church--Missions--Japan
Methodist Episcopal Church--Missions--Korea
Topical
Missionaries--China
Missionaries--Japan--Nagasaki-shi
Missionaries--Korea (South)--Seoul
Missionaries--New York (State)--Albany
Teachers--New York (State)--Albany
World War, 1939-1945--Prisoners and prisons, Japanese