|
1799
|
|
|
| 1799 |
|
CMS founded on 12 April as the Society for Missions to African
and the East |
| 1804 |
|
First missionaries (German Lutherans) sent to West Africa |
| 1807 |
|
The British Parliament votes to outlaw the slave trade |
| 1809 |
|
First Englishman accepted for missionary training |
|
|
New Zealand mission begun |
| 1811 |
|
Work in Malta begun |
| 1812 |
|
First CMS committee meetings in Salisbury Square |
| 1813 |
|
Work in India begun |
|
|
First CMS Association formed at Dewsbury, and first Auxiliary
at Bristol |
| 1814 |
|
CMS Hibernian Society founded (Ireland) |
| 1818 |
|
Work in Ceylon begun |
| 1822 |
|
Canadian missions begun |
| 1825 |
|
First Anglican ordination of an Indian, Abdul Masih |
|
|
First Australian auxiliary of CMS formed under the Rev Samuel
Marsden |
|
|
The men’s training college opened at Islington |
| 1826 |
|
Missions in Egypt and the West Indies begun |
| 1827 |
|
Fourah Bay College founded in Sierra Leone |
| 1830 |
|
Work begun in Abyssinia (but halted in 1841) |
| 1831 |
|
Death
of William Wilberforce, a founder Vice-President of CMS |
| 1833 |
|
Tractarian movement begun |
| 1837 |
|
South Africa mission begun (ended in 1843) |
| 1841 |
|
Henry Venn appointed Secretary |
|
|
First Niger expedition |
| 1844 |
|
First CMS missionaries went to China |
|
|
Work in East Africa begun |
| 1849 |
|
Palestine mission begun |
| 1850 |
|
Home for missionaries’ children opened at Islington (moved to
Limpsfield in 1887) |
| 1857 |
|
Indian mutiny |
|
|
Niger mission begun by Samuel Crowther |
| 1861 |
|
Withdrew from West Indies |
| 1862 |
|
New CMS headquarters opened |
| 1863 |
|
First Chinese Anglican ordained (Dzaw Tsanglae) |
| 1864 |
|
Samuel Crowther first African to be consecrated a bishop in
the Anglican Communion |
| 1867 |
|
First Lambeth Conference |
| 1869 |
|
Work in Iran begun |
| 1873 |
|
Death of Henry Venn |
| 1875 |
|
First Keswick Convention |
|
|
Japan mission begun |
| 1877 |
|
Nyanza party reaches Uganda |
| 1878 |
|
Beginning of work in Tanganyika |
| 1880 |
|
Church of England Zenana Missionary Society (CEZMS) formed |
| 1881 |
|
Death of Ludwig Krapf, East Africa pioneer and missionary
explorer |
| 1883 |
|
John Batchelor began work among the Ainu in Japan |
| 1885 |
|
Bishop
James Hannington murdered in Uganda |
| 1886 |
|
Persecution of Church in Uganda |
| 1887 |
|
Nippon Sei Ko Kai (Anglican Church in Japan) formed |
| 1888 |
|
Expulsion of missionaries from Uganda |
| 1890 |
|
Death of Alexander Mackay, ‘father’ of the East African
mission |
| 1891 |
|
Death of Bishop Samuel Crowther |
|
|
Highbury training college for women opened |
| 1892 |
|
CMS Associations formed in New South Wales, Victoria and New
Zealand |
| 1895 |
|
First party of women missionaries for Uganda arrived at Mengo |
|
|
South Africa Church Missionary Association formed |
|
|
The Stewart family and other CMS and CEZMS missionaries
murdered at Hwa-Sang, China |
|
|
|
1899
|
:
|
100 years
|
| 1899 |
|
Work begun in Cairo by Temple Gairdner and in Khartoum by
Llewellyn Gwynne |
| 1904 |
|
First CMS summer school held at Keswick |
| 1905 |
|
CMS Gordon Memorial Sudan Mission founded in southern Sudan |
| 1909 |
|
“Africa and the East” exhibition in the Agricultural Hall,
Islington, attended by nearly 250,000 people |
| 1910 |
|
Edinburgh Missionary Conference |
| 1911 |
|
Opening of Henry Holland’s eye clinic at Shikarpur |
| 1912 |
|
Formation of Chung Hua Sheng Kung Hui (the Anglican Church in
China) |
| 1913 |
|
The Kabaka, Daudi Cwa, laid the foundation stone of the
extension to CMS headquarters |
| 1915 |
|
Islington College closed |
| 1916 |
|
CMS Australia and Tasmania and New Zealand CMS established |
| 1921 |
|
Ruanda Mission CMS established |
|
|
International Missionary Council founded |
| 1922 |
|
Bible Churchmen’s Missionary Society (BCMS) established |
| 1926 |
|
CMS Australia took responsibility for work in the new
Tanganyika Diocese |
| 1930s |
|
East African revival |
| 1931 |
|
HCJB, first missionary radio station, opens in Quito, Ecuador |
| 1942 |
|
Dr Max Warren appointed General Secretary |
| 1946 |
|
First Mission Aviation Fellowship aircraft commissioned |
| 1947 |
|
Church of South India formed |
| 1948 |
|
Formation of the World Council of Churches |
|
|
FEBA Radio founded |
| 1951 |
|
Missionaries expelled from China |
|
|
Work in Malaya begun |
| 1952 |
|
Trans World Radio founded |
|
|
Kenya emergency (Mau Mau) |
| 1955 |
|
Uganda emergency (expulsion of Kabaka) |
| 1954 |
|
United Mission to Nepal formed |
| 1956 |
|
Suez crisis; expulsion of missionaries from Egypt |
| 1957 |
|
Amalgamation of CEZMS and CMS |
| 1964 |
|
Expulsion of missionaries from southern Sudan |
| 1966 |
|
CMS headquarters moved to 157 Waterloo Road |
|
|
Berlin Congress for World Evangelism |
| 1967 |
|
Civil war in Nigeria |
| 1969 |
|
Men’s and women’s training amalgamated and moved to Crowther
Hall, Birmingham |
|
|
Dame Diana Reader Harris became the first woman President of
CMS |
| 1970 |
|
Church of North India founded |
|
|
CMS Nottingham Conference |
| 1971 |
|
Jane Hwang and Joyce Bennett ordained as first women priests
in Hong Kong |
| 1972 |
|
End of civil war in southern Sudan; missionaries began to
return |
| 1973 |
|
First meeting of CMS General Council |
| 1974 |
|
Lausanne Congress for World Evangelisation |
| 1977 |
|
Archbishop Janani Luwum murdered |
|
|
Centenary of the Church of Uganda |
| 1980 |
|
Inauguration of the French-speaking Province of Burundi,
Rwanda and Zaïre |
|
|
Consultation on World Evangelisation, Pattaya |
|
|
Iranian revolution, Anglican Church in Iran under attack |
| 1983 |
|
CMS Members’ Councils formed |
| 1987 |
|
157 Waterloo Road, London, became centre for the Partnership
for World Mission; CMS and USPG are its first residential members |
| 1990 |
|
Centenary of the Church in Korea |
| 1993 |
|
Formation of the Anglican Province of Korea |
|
|
Alison and Malcolm Rogers become the first CMS mission
partners to serve in Russia |
| 1994 |
|
150th anniversary of the Church of the Province of Kenya |
| 1995 |
|
Diana Witts became the first woman to be appointed CMS General
Secretary |
|
|
The Society’s name changed to Church Mission Society |
|
|
|
1999
|
:
|
200 years
|
| 1999 |
|
CMS celebrated its bicentenary with a service of thanksgiving
on Clapham Common on 29 May |
| 2002 |
|
CMS and Mid-Africa Ministry (formerly Ruanda CMS) integrated
to become one Society |
| 2003 |
|
“Inspire to Witness”, the CMS Festival in Coventry |
| 2004 |
|
The 200th anniversary of sending the first CMS missionaries,
Melchior Renner and Peter Hartwig, to Sierra Leone |
| 2005 |
|
CMS Trustees announce the move of the CMS Britain office from
London to Oxford |
| 2006 |
|
CMS opens regional offices in Ghana, Korea and Singapore |
| 2007 |
|
The new CMS Britain office opens in Watlington Road, Cowley,
Oxford, on 19 June |