Edling, Leila Childs,
Correspondence,
1918-1960
Manuscript Collection: MS 0529
1
box
Agency History/Biographical note:
Leila M. Childs was born on November 27, 1895 in Northbridge Center,
Massachusetts. She graduated from Mount Holyoke College in 1917. In
1920 she became an R.N. after training at Massachusetts General
Hospital. She married Eddie Emanuel Edling on October 22, 1920 and in
1921 they sailed to Africa to work as missionaries. They returned to
the United States in 1950, after raising four children in Africa.
Reverend Edling died on October 29, 1957. Leila M. Childs Edling died
on October 9, 1976 in Hermitage, Tennessee.
Scope and Content:
The Leila M. Childs Edling Correspondence consists of letters to
relatives and friends, written between 1921-1924, describing her
experiences as a teacher and nurse while at a mission station in
Angola. Edling recounts the travels with her husband, Edie Emmanuel
Edling to Lisbon before their departure to Angola. While in Lisbon,
Edling writes of the sites in the Belem district. Upon departure for
Africa, Edling describes the activities aboard the ship, including
interactions with German travelers. In Angola, where Edling was
stationed with her husband between 1921-1950, she describes her
encounters with the "native" population and highlights many of the
cultural differences between herself and the people of the
surrounding community. Edling further attempts to dispel some of the
myths of the "Dark Continent" by describing her personal interaction
with the local people, while at the same time describes the
"heathens" within the mission community. Edling's later
correspondence describes the health conditions in Angola,
particularly the bubonic plague and malaria, the growth of her
clinic, and her struggles to raise her children.
Cite as: Leila M. Childs Edling Correspondence, Mount
Holyoke College, Archives and Special
Collections, South Hadley, Massachusetts
Access Restrictions: Unrestricted
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