Holmes Hinkley Welch (1924-1981)
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Holmes Welch (1924-1981) was an important American scholar of Daoism and early 20th century Chinese Buddhism.
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During World War II, Welch served in the Russian sector of the State Department's Office of European Affairs.
Welch wrote a number of books that are highly respected in the world of scholarship on Chinese religion. He wrote his first book, The Parting of the Way: Lao Tzu and the Taoist Movement (1957) while completing both his B.A. and his M.A. at Harvard University.
After completing his degree, Welch moved to Hong Kong 香港 in 1957, where he served as a political officer in the office of the consulate general until 1959.
In the late 60's and early 70's, Welch wrote and edited five more books on Daoism and Chinese Buddhism, including his magisterial trilogy on 20th century Chinese Buddhism: The Practice of Chinese Buddhism: 1900-1950 (1967), The Buddhist Revival in China (1968), and Buddhism Under Mao (1972). During this time, Welch was a research fellow at the East Asian Research Center at Harvard, a lecturer at both Harvard and Yale, and eventually assistant director of Harvard's Center for the Study of World Religions.