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MORRISON, GEORGE ERNEST (1862-1920), known as Chinese Morrison
traveller, The Times correspondent, Peking,
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was born at Geelong, Victoria, on 4 February 1862. His father, Dr G.
Morrison, a brother of Alexander
Morrison (q.v.), was principal of Geelong College, and the boy was educated
at his father's school. Before proceeding to the medical course at Melbourne
university at the beginning of 1880, Morrison had tested his powers as a walker
during a vacation, by walking from Geelong to Adelaide, a distance of about 600
miles. After passing his first year medicine he took a vacation trip down the
Murray in a canoe from Albury to the mouth, a distance of 1650 miles, covered in
65 days. Failing in his next examinations he shipped on a vessel trading to the
South Sea islands, discovered some of the evils of the kanaka traffic, and wrote
articles on it which appeared in the Age and had some influence on the
eventual suppression of it. He next visited New Guinea and did part of the
return journey on a Chinese junk. Landing at Normanton at the end of 1882
Morrison decided to walk to Melbourne. He was not quite 21, he had no horses or
camels and was unarmed, but carrying his swag and swimming or wading the rivers
in his path, he walked the 2043 miles in 123 days. No doubt the country had been
much opened up since the days of Burke and Wills, but the journey was
nevertheless a remarkable feat, which stamped Morrison as a great natural
bushman and explorer. He arrived at Melbourne on 21 April 1883 to find that
during his journey McIlwraith
(q.v.), the premier of Queensland, had annexed part of New Guinea, and was
vainly endeavouring to get the support of the British government for his action.
The Age decided to send Morrison to New Guinea as its special
correspondent, but this was not announced at the time, and Morrison, on being
interviewed in Sydney, gave the impression that he was going to see what were
the prospects of forming a Presbyterian mission station. He sailed from Cooktown
in a small lugger and arrived at Port Moresby after a stormy passage. On 24 July
Morrison with a small party started with the intention of crossing to Dyke
Acland Bay 100 miles away. Much high mountain country barred the way, and it
took 38 days to cover 50 miles. The natives became hostile, and about a month
later Morrison was struck by two spears and nearly killed. The only thing
possible was to retrace their steps, Morrison was strapped to a horse and, not
having to cut the track as they went, Port Moresby was reached in days. Here
Morrison received medical attention but it was more than a month before he
reached the hospital at Cooktown. In spite of his misfortune Morrison had
penetrated farther into New Guinea than any previous white man. Much the better
for a week in hospital Morrison went on to Melbourne, but he still carried the
head of a spear in his body and no local surgeon was anxious to probe for it in
the condition of surgery in that day. Morrison's father decided to send the
young man to John Chiene, professor of surgery at Edinburgh university, the
operation was successful, and Morrison took up his medical studies again, at
Edinburgh. He graduated M.B. Ch.M. on 1 August 1887.
After his graduation Morrison travelled extensively in the United States, the
West Indies, and Spain, where he became medical officer at the Rio Tinto mine.
He then proceeded to Morocco, became physician to the Shereef of Wazan, and did
some travelling in the interior. Study at Paris under Dr Charcot followed before
he returned to Australia in 1890, and for two years was resident surgeon at the
Ballarat hospital. Leaving the hospital in May 1893 he went to the Far East, and
in February 1894 began a journey from Shanghai to Rangoon. He went partly by
boat up the river Yangtse and rode and walked the remainder of the 3000 miles.
He completed the journey in l00 days at a total cost of £18, which included the
wages of two or three Chinese servants whom he picked up and changed on the way
as he entered new districts. He was quite unarmed and then knew hardly more than
a dozen words of Chinese. But he was willing to conform to and respect the
customs of the people he met, and everywhere was received with courtesy. In his
interesting account of his journey, An Australian in China, published in
1895, while speaking well of the personalities of the many missionaries he met,
he consistently belittled their success in obtaining converts. In after years he
regretted this, as he felt he had given a wrong impression by not sufficiently
stressing the value of their social and medical work.
After his arrival at Rangoon Morrison went to Calcutta where he became
seriously ill with remittent fever and nearly died. On recovering he went to
Scotland, presented a thesis to the university of Edinburgh on "Heredity as a
Factor in the Causation of Disease", and received his M.D. degree in August
1895. He was introduced to Moberly Bell, editor of The Times, who
appointed him a special correspondent in the east. In November he went to Siam
where there were Anglo-French difficulties, and travelled much in the interior.
Morrison was very doubtful about his first communication to The Times and
showed it to a friend who, in a letter to The Times about the time of
Morrison's death, spoke of it as a perfect diagnosis of the then troubled
condition of China, masterly in its phrasing, luminous in its broad conception
of the general situation". His reports attracted much attention both in London
and Paris. From Siam he crossed into southern China and at Yunnan was again
seriously ill. Curing himself he made his way through Siam to Bangkok, a journey
of nearly a thousand miles. In February 1897 The Times made Morrison
resident correspondent at Peking, and he took up his residence there in the
following month. There was much Russian activity in Manchuria at this time and
in June Morrison went to Vladivostok. He travelled over a thousand miles to
Stretensk and then across Manchuria to Vladivostok again. He reported to The
Times that Russian engineers were making preliminary surveys from Kirin
towards Port Arthur. On the very day his communication arrived in London, 6
March 1898, The Times received a telegram from Morrison to say that
Russia had presented a five-day ultimatum to China demanding the right to
construct a railway to Port Arthur. This was a triumph for The Times and
its correspondent, but he had also shown prophetic insight in another phrase of
his dispatch, when he stated that "the importance of Japan in relation to the
future of Manchuria cannot be disregarded". Germany had occupied Kiao-chao
towards the end of 1897, and a great struggle for political preponderacy was
going on. Morrison in his telegrams showed "the prescience of a statesman and
the accuracy of an historian" (The Times, 21 May 1920). In January 1899
he went to Siam and was able to point out that there was no need for French
interference in that country, which was quite capable of governing itself. Later
in the year he went to England, and early in 1900 paid a short visit to his
relations in Australia. Returning to the east by way of Japan he then visited
Korea before returning to Peking. The Boxer rebellion broke out soon after, and
during the siege of the legations from June to August Morrison as an
acting-lieutenant showed great courage, always ready to volunteer for every
service of danger. He was severely wounded in July and was reported killed. He
was afterwards able to read his highly laudatory obituary notice, which occupied
two columns of The Times on 17 July 1900. After a terrible siege the
legations were relieved on 14 August by an army of various nationalities under
General Gaselee. There was great uncertainty regarding the future of China in
the following months, and through The Times Morrison was able to bring
the changing positions before the British public. Russia and Japan united in
opposing any dismemberment of China, which was punished by the imposition of a
heavy indemnity. When the Russo-Japanese war broke out in February 1904 Morrison
became a correspondent with the Japanese army. He was present at the entry of
the Japanese into Port Arthur early in 1905, and represented The Times at
the Portsmouth, U.S.A., peace conference. In 1907 he crossed China from Peking
to the French border of Tonquin, and in 1910 rode from Honan across Asia to
Andijan in Russian Turkestan, a journey of 3750 miles which was completed in 175
days. From Andijan he took train to Leningrad, and then travelled to London
arriving on 29 July 1910. He returned to China and, when plague broke out in
Manchuria, went to Harbin, where a great Chinese physician, Dr Wu Lien-teh,
succeeded in staying the spread of a mortal sickness which seemed to threaten
the whole world. Morrison did his part by publishing a series of articles
advocating the launching of a modern scientific public health service in China.
When the Chinese revolution began in 1911 Morrison took the side of the
revolutionaries and the Chinese republic was established early in 1912. In
August Morrison resigned his position on The Times to become political
adviser to the Chinese government at a salary equivalent to £4000 a year, and
immediately went to London to assist in floating a Chinese loan of £10,000,000.
In China during the following years he had an anxious time advising, and
endeavouring to deal with the political intrigues that were continually going
on. He visited Australia again in December 1917 and returned to Peking in
February 1918. He represented China during the peace discussions at Versailles
in 1919, but his health began to give way and he retired to England well aware
that he had only a short time to live. He died on 30 May 1920 and was buried at
Sidmouth. He married in 1912 Jennie Wark Robin who survived him for only three
years. His three sons, Ian, Alastair, and Colin, all grew to manhood and
graduated at Cambridge. Morrison's remarkable library, which contained the
largest number of books on China ever collected, was sold to Baron Iwasoki of
Tokyo for £35,000 in 1917, with the proviso that serious students should have
access to it. In 1932 the inaugural "George Ernest Morrison Lecture in
Ethnology" was delivered at Canberra, a fund having been established by Chinese
residents of Australia to provide for an annual lecture in Morrison's memory.
Morrison was a tall, rather ungainly man, who apparently did not know what
fear was. His life was a crowded scene of adventure, but through all his
adventures he carried an inquiring mind that gathered experience and knowledge
from everything that happened. In this he was helped by his sympathy with human
nature in all its manifestations, his humour, his lucidity of thought, his love
of truth. All these things helped him to understand the oriental mind, and he
became far more than a mere reporter of events. With no secret service money to
help him he could look beneath the surface of the troubled conditions of the
time, and his intelligent anticipation of events to come gave him a remarkable
reputation. He began with a great belief in the mission of the British to
develop China, but as time went on his love for China developed. During his last
years his exceptional abilities were devoted to its interests, and to the end of
his days he was constructively planning for its future development. No country
has ever had a more devoted servant.
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