Tuesday, June 8, 2021

Amazing Aunt Astrid

My Grandaunt, Sister Astrid Erling (Ancestry.com)

Inga Astrid Kristina Ärling (Erling) was born on January 6, 1907 in Hässjö, Västernorrland, Sverige (Sweden). Her mother died when she was 3 years old and her father left her and her younger sister in foster care in Sweden while he moved to Chicago, Illinois, remarried and started his second family. Astrid did not see her biological father again until she was 20 years old. From ages 3 – 6 years old Astrid lived in Sweden with foster families and experienced the deaths of two of her foster mothers. 
The Ahlgrens- Astrid's foster parents.  (Ancestry.com)
In 1913, a childless, Swedish-born couple, John Ahlgren and Hulda Maria Sundling Ahlgren, were visiting Sweden from St. Paul, Minnesota. They became Astrid’s foster parents. When she was six years old, Astrid emigrated with the Ahlgrens to the United States. She was raised by the Ahlgrens in South St. Paul and graduated from high school there. Sadly, during her junior year of high school, Hulda Ahlgren was killed in an accident – which means Astrid experienced the deaths of her mother and three foster mothers before adulthood!
In the fall of 1929, she began nurses’ training at Immanuel Deaconess Institute (Augustana Lutheran Synod) in Omaha, Nebraska. 
(Northomahahistory.com) 
*NOTE: I have included the Wade-Giles spelling (1940s, what Astrid used) for the Chinese place names. The current, Pinyin, spellings are included at the conclusion of this article.
After completing her training, Astrid requested assignment to India. Her request was denied and she was assigned to China. In November 1932, Astrid sailed for China and began language school in Peking. No English was ever spoken in the classroom and she attended class 6 days a week. 
China 1928-1937 (unimaps.com)
In 1933 she went to Loyang, Honan Province where a language tutor helped her with medical terms so she could teach nursing in Chinese. 
 
From there Astrid went to Hsuchang Missionary Hospital in Honan Province where she was the nursing school director, OB nurse, and treasurer of the hospital. They had 22,000 outpatients and 982 inpatients.
However, world events would soon devastate their community and challenge them professionally and personally in ways Astrid had never imagined.
1940 Augustana Lutheran China Missionary Conference (E. Christensen)
In 1937 the Japanese invaded China. Hsuchang was isolated from the rest of occupied China which made getting medical supplies extremely difficult. 
1937 - Red arrow pointing to Astrid's location, Hsuchang, Honan Province (thinglink.com)
In June 1938, The Chinese Nationalist Army destroyed levees flooding thousands of square miles of land, creating a “no man’s land” - making it difficult for the Japanese to cross and, unfortunately, for supplies to get into Honan province. Between 1938 and 1947, this environmental disaster killed more than 800,000 people and displaced nearly four million people. For several years the Japanese were only 60 miles north of Astrid’s hospital, on the other side of the Yellow River. 
1938 Yellow River Flood (inews.com)
 On December 7, 1941, the Empire of Japan attacked Pearl Harbor and the United States declared war on Japan the following day. The American missionaries were now at risk of capture and internment in Japanese concentration camps.

Then, during 1942 – 1943, there was an extreme drought, locust infestation, and great famine. The exact number of people who died from starvation varies greatly from a million to tens of millions. 

At the Hsuchang Missionary Hospital, Astrid and the other medical staff treated hundreds of starving people suffering digestive obstructions from eating tree bark, grass, thistles, and dirt. In addition to the millions who died, perhaps a further three million fled their homes seeking food elsewhere.
1942-43 Great Famine, collecting bark to eat. (disasterhistory.org)

In the early spring, 1944, the hospital staff received a letter and then a telegram from the United States Consulate warning them to get to a place of safety as they expected the Japanese to cross the Yellow River. 

Two trucks were used to evacuate the American missionary wives and children west to Hsing Ping and the hospital stopped admitting new patients. Astrid and two missionary doctors stayed behind with the Chinese staff and nursing students to care for the few remaining patients. 
Dr. Carlson and Aunt Astrid helping patients. (E. Christensen)
On April 19, 1944, the remaining hospital staff received news that the Japanese had indeed crossed the Yellow River. They began packing as many medications, equipment, and supplies as they could and loaded boxes onto ox carts, placed overstuffed bags on bicycles and packed suitcases to carry by hand. 

Early on the morning of April 20, 1944, Astrid, the remaining hospital staff, and nursing students fled on foot, on bicycles or in ox carts. Astrid rode a bicycle, along with fellow Augustana Lutheran Medical Missionary, Dr. Carlson. (Dr. Carlson’s pregnant wife and two young daughters, Erleen and Faith, had already been evacuated to Hsing Ping).

They cycled from Hsuchang to Kiahsien. They waited there two days for the other hospital staff and nursing students on foot to catch up. But there was bad news, the Japanese were only 10 miles away. 
(U.S. Army Military Institute)
THE 300 MILE BIKE “RIDE”

Astrid and Dr. Carlson once again rode away on their bicycles. The roads were packed with people fleeing west so they stayed off the roads and rode on cart paths or through wheat fields. That evening they arrived in Linju.
 
The next morning they began riding again. They were strafed by Japanese aircraft and the roads were bombed. Several times they had to throw their bicycles to the ground and take cover wherever they could. Once the planes left, they continued to Iyang. 
 
After two days in Iyang, the hospital staff on ox carts caught up with them. It was decided that the staff (Chinese) would stay there and set up a clinic while the missionaries (Americans) and nursing students (Chinese) would continue to flee west. 
Refugees fleeing the Japanese (Ohio State University)
From Iyang, Astrid, Dr. Carlson, and the nursing students rode bicycles to Hsiunghsien. There they decided that the nursing students would remain at the temporary location of the Honan University Hospital to continue their studies and treat patients. 

Astrid and the other medical missionaries continued west on their bicycles through the mountains. Many times they had to push their bicycles uphill. Astrid’s bicycle did not have brakes so she could not ride it down steep mountains unless she used her foot as a brake on the front wheel!

Throughout the 17 days of travel, the roads were packed with refugees and they were strafed many times by the Japanese. They bicycled a total of about 300 miles from the start of their escape from the flatland of Hsuchang to mountainous Lushih.
Astrid's Bike "Ride" to escape the Japanese. (E. Christensen)
In Lushih, they sent a telegram to Dr. Carlson’s family and missionary officials to let them know they were okay and still moving west.
 
With the Japanese now only a mile behind them, Astrid and the other medical staff managed to jump on a freight train with their bicycles and luggage. They traveled via the railway to Hsing Ping. 
1940s Chinese Train like the one Astrid rode on. (E. Christensen)
In Hsing Ping, they were reunited with Dr. Carlson’s family and, with a group of about 50 missionaries, chartered a freight rail car to transport their bicycles and luggage to the western end of the railroad in Paochi. On May 24, 1944, they left Hsing Ping in the freight car. 
 
Once in Paochi, the missionaries began selling things to raise funds in order for the group to charter a bus. Astrid sold her bicycle, a typewriter (?!), and some other personal items. With the proceeds the missionaries then traveled by chartered bus south through the mountains to Chungking – which took 4 ½ days. 
(Carleton University Archives)
In Chungking, Astrid and the Carlson family were taken in by the Canada Mission Hospital. Mrs. Carlson had her baby, Jon Paul, there. Unfortunately, Mrs. Carlson developed phlebitis so Astrid nursed her and the baby full-time. 
 
Meanwhile, Dr. Carlson was recruited by the Office of Strategic Services to return to Honan province as an “Advance-base Chief.” Astrid then became responsible for ensuring his family made it safely home to the United States.
 
Due to the war, there was no passenger airline service. So, finally, after waiting 4 months in Chungking, Astrid, Mrs. Carlson, Erleen, Faith, and baby Jon Paul were able to get on a freight airplane and fly to Calcutta (Kolkata), India.
Farewell card made by Chungking missionaries. (E. Christensen)

Astrid and the Carlson family arrived in Kolkata on October 17, 1944. Then they traveled to Bombay (Mumbai) where they waited 5 months for a ship to travel back to the United States. There were no passenger ships due to the war so they sailed on a troop ship, the USS General William Mann.

They left Mumbai on March 14, 1945 and sailed to Melbourne, Australia and Noumea, New Caledonia to allow troops to disembark. The few civilian passengers on board were not allowed off the ship. On April 15, 1945, almost exactly a year from the beginning of her journey, Astrid arrived in Los Angeles, California, United States of America.
USS William Mann (United States Navy)
Post WWII
After WWII, in 1946, Astrid returned to the Xuchang Missionary Hospital but left in 1949 when the control over all religious activities and organizations was placed in the Chinese Communist Department of Religious Affairs. All missionaries were excluded.

From 1950 – 1953, Astrid served as a missionary in Japan until the Japan Evangelical Lutheran Church was established. She then returned to the United States.

Astrid continued her nursing career. She taught nursing at the Lutheran Deaconess House of Omaha, Nebraska and served on the Lutheran Board of Social Ministry in St. Paul, Minnesota. Astrid also nursed patients at Salem Home for the Aged in Joliet, Illinois, Augustana Hospital in Chicago, Illinois, and Trinity Lutheran Hospital in Ashland, Michigan. 

Astrid died at the age of 91 on August 9, 1998. She is buried in Lakewood Cemetery in Minneapolis, Minnesota. 
 
A life well-lived!  Well done, Amazing Aunt Astrid!

Sources:

Christensen, Erleen. In War and Famine: Missionaries in China's Honan Province in the 1940s. McGill-Queen's University Press, 2014. 

Erling, Astrid, "Midwest China Oral History Interviews" (1978). China Oral Histories. Book 33. http://digitalcommons.luthersem.edu/china_histories/3

Erling, Astrid. Astrid Erling to Marie Erling, Hsing Ping, China, May 22, 1944.
Mitter, R. Forgotten Ally: China's World War II, 1937-1945. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2014. 

Wade-Giles spelling / Pinyin spelling: in the order of Astrid’s travels

Peking / Beijing

Loyang / Luoyang

Hsuchang / Xuchang

Honan / Henan

Linju / Ruzhou

Iyang / Yiyang

Hsiunghsien / Songxian

Lushih / Lushi

Hsing Ping / Xingping

Paochi / Baoji

Chungking / Chongqing

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