Patricia St. John
This article needs additional citations for verification. (November 2009) |
Patricia Mary St. John | |
---|---|
Born | 1919 |
Died | 1993 England |
Occupation | Writer, missionary nurse |
Patricia Mary St. John (1919–1993) was an English writer who was known as one of the most prolific British Protestant evangelical writers of fiction in the latter part of the 20th century. She worked for much of her life as a Protestant missionary nurse in Morocco. During her time as a house mother at Clarendon School for Girls which was run by her aunt, she wrote Treasures of the Snow and The Tanglewoods' Secret. Her later novels Star of Light and Secret of the Fourth Candle were based on her experiences in Tangiers. She lived for some years until her death in Canley, Coventry in 1993.[1]
Early years[]
The third of five children (the others being Farnham, John, Oliver and Hazel), Patricia was born on 5 April 1919 in Hastings, Sussex to Harold (Harry) and Ella St. John nee Swain, shortly after her parents' return from South America (Carangola, Brazil) where they had worked as missionaries for some years.[2] Her older brother, Farnham Allen Rees St. John, was born on 2 June 1918: he also used the name Farnham Allen Rees.
From her memories of a year lived in Alpine Switzerland she wrote her second book, Treasures of the Snow.
Mission work[]
After completing her school education, Patricia trained to become a nurse during World War II. After the war ended she became a house mother at her aunt's boarding school, Clarendon School for Girls, until joining her older brother, Farnham, in Tangiers, Morocco, where he was a missionary doctor after qualifying at the University of Cambridge in 1944. A newspaper interview published in the Coventry Evening Telegraph on 24 October 1978, recalls that her writings - poetry and children's stories - had already earned her some money, so she financed herself while helping her brother. Although initially working with Farnham in the main foreign hospital in Tangier, she later spent five years manning a village clinic in Xauen, or Chaouen, in a more remote area on the coast of Morocco. Eventually, she returned to Tangiers, spending 27 years working as a missionary nurse overseas.
Later years[]
St. John lived her later years in Canley, Coventry, where she worshipped at Canley Evangelical Church and ran children's Bible classes from home. She died in Canley on 16 August 1993[3] as a result of heart problems.[4] She was pre-deceased by her brother, Farnham, who became medical director of Tulloch Memorial Hospital, Tangiers and died in Cambridge on 10 February 1980.
Works[]
St. John was known as one of the most prolific British Protestant evangelical writers of fiction in the latter part of the 20th century.[5] Some of her fiction books for children, Treasures of the Snow (1980-3), The Tanglewood's Secret (1980) and Star of Light, have been produced as movies.[6]
Biographical[]
- Man of Two Worlds: The Life of Ken Moynagh, Henry E. Walter Ltd (1976) (biography of Ken Moynagh)
- R. Hudson Pope: A Biography, Patricia M. St John, Scripture Union (1967) (biography of R. Hudson Pope)
- Until the Day Breaks: The Life and Work of Lilias Trotter, Pioneer Missionary to Muslim North Africa, OM Publishing (1990) (biography of Lilias Trotter)
- Harold St. John, Loizeaux Brothers, 2d ed edition (1962) (biography of her father, Harold "Harry" St. John)
- Patricia St. John Tells Her Own Story, OM Publishing (1995) (also published as An Ordinary Woman's Extraordinary Faith, and most recently as In Her Words) (autobiography)
Fiction[]
- The Tanglewood's Secret, Scripture Union (1967, first published 1948)
- Treasures of the Snow, Scripture Union Publishing (September 1980, first published 1950)
- Star of Light, Moody Press (July 1995, first published 1953)
- Rainbow Garden, Moody Press (July 1995)
- The Mystery of Pheasant Cottage, Moody Press (July 1995)
- Where the River Begins, Victor Books (March 1987)
- Three Go Searching, Moody Press, (July 1995) (also published as The Secret Boat, Marshall Pickering, November 1982)
- The Secret of the Fourth Candle, Moody Press (June 1981)
- Stories to Share, Shaw (7 March 2000)
- Nothing Else Matters, Scripture Union (May 2007) (also published as If You Love Me: A Story of Forgiveness)
- The Runaway, Moody Publishers (8 February 1985) (also published as The Victor)
- I Needed a Neighbour, Scripture Union Publishing (September 1987) (also published as A Courageous Journey)
- Twice Freed, Moody Publishers (1 January 1987) (historical fiction)
- Friska My Friend, Scripture Union (1983, revised 2007, reprinted 2011)
Miscellaneous[]
- Verses London: CSSM (1953)
- Breath of Life: The Story of the Ruanda Mission, London: Norfolk Press (1971)
- Would You Believe It? – You Can Grow to Know God, Marshall Pickering (August 1983)
- Prayer Is an Adventure, Christian Focus Publications (March 2004)
- Missing the Way: They Could Not Enter In (How Israel Missed God's Rest), Harvey Christian Publishers (1999)
- A Missionary Muses on the Creed, Pickering and Inglis (1966) (also published as Life Everlasting)
- Young Person's Guide to Knowing God, Christian Focus (2000, originally published in 1983 by Pickering and Inglis)
Notes[]
- ^ Patricia St. John Tells Her Own Story..
- ^ "Patricia St. John - Chapter 1 - Family Background". Kingsley Press. Retrieved 28 November 2009.
- ^ Principal Probate Registry. Calendar of the Grants of Probate and Letters of Administration made in the Probate Registries of the High Court of Justice in England. London, England
- ^ "Patricia St. John". biblebaseassemblies. Retrieved 26 June 2012.
- ^ Religion, Children's Literature, and Modernity in Western Europe, 1750-2000, edited by Jan de Maeyer, Leuven University Press, 2005, p. 136
- ^ https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0820673/[unreliable source?]
- English women writers
- 1919 births
- 1993 deaths
- English Protestant missionaries
- English evangelicals
- Christian medical missionaries
- Protestant missionaries in Morocco
- Christian writers
- Female Christian missionaries
- People educated at Clarendon School for Girls
- People from Southampton
- British expatriates in Morocco
- 20th-century English women writers
- 20th-century English writers
- 20th-century British non-fiction writers