OUR HISTORY

BUILDING BRIDGES FOR 125 YEARS


"What China learns from the outside world is acquired largely through [the YMCA] men, and the relationship which our country will bear to others is being directly affected by the relationship which these students bear to the men of the Princeton Center in Peking."

-Lou Tseng-Tsiang, Chinese Minister of Foreign Affairs, 1920s

A BRIEF HISTORY OF PiA

In 1898, a group of committed Princeton undergraduates voted to raise $500 to support the YMCA in Tientsin (now Tianjin), China. That year, Robert "Pop" Gailey *96 boarded a steamer for China and thus started the program we now know as PiA. As Gailey's work expanded, he sought the assistance of other young Princetonians. Eight years later, Dwight Edwards *94 joined Gailey in Tientsin and together they established the first YMCA in Peking.

Fellows from 2019: Calvin Stahl, Tim Podgalsky, Luke Johnson, MacKensey King.

Over the next thirty years, more Princetonians would follow their lead, working on famine relief programs, organizing the country's first athletic associations, opening the Peking School of Commerce and Finance, and most importantly, establishing the Princeton School of Public Affairs at Yenching University in 1923 (after which the pre-PiA "Princeton in Peking" moniker was switched to the "Princeton-Yenching Foundation"). Some Princetonians like John Stewart Burgess '05, Sidney Gamble '12, Lennig Sweet '16, and Richard Ritter '17 spent considerably long periods in China, while others were "short term" men, spending one or two years working on projects. What they all had in common was their desire"to promote goodwill and understanding...and to facilitate in every way the free interchange of the best ideals in the civilizations of both the East and the West."

PiA TODAY AND BEYOND

Princeton in Asia today looks very different from the program that began in China one hundred and twenty five years ago. Our Fellows now work in a diverse range of focus areas at host organizations across Asia, and contact with Fellows is just an e-mail, text, or phone call away. However, there is a striking continuity to be found if you wade through the dusty boxes of letters and reports piled and filed in the PiA home office in the Louis A. Simpson International Building. Fellows remain committed to relationship-building, fostering understanding, and embracing the uncertainty and challenges that come with stepping into a new community and culture.

And most strikingly, the letters from the field still sound a great deal like the one written by Donald W. Caruthers '15:

"I shall always be extremely grateful for what my experience in China meant. There is a Chinese proverb, 'I live in a small house but my windows look out upon a very large world.' My four years there had much to do with the widening of my own personal world horizons.'"

A TIMELINE OF PiA

Princeton-In-Asia, a Century of Service: Reminiscences and Reflections Book By Melanie Kirkpatrick

DIVE INTO HISTORY

Princeton-In-Asia, a Century of Service: Reminiscences and Reflections

By Melanie Kirkpatrick ‘73 (Japan)

 

SHARE YOUR STORY


PiA’s work is informed and shaped by the stories of our community. PiA is creating a digital archive to organize and preserve the organization’s historic collection of documents, photographs, artifacts, oral histories, and other materials in a comprehensive online repository. We encourage our community to connect with us if you have documents, video footage, photographs, or other materials related to PiA that you would be interested in contributing to our digital archive, or if you would like to be interviewed for the oral history project. For more information and on other ways to share your PiA story, please follow the button below.