Charles Edwin Draper (1879-1964), Methodist Episcopal Church Missionary, was born on November 9. 1879 in Colorado Springs, Colorado. He graduated from Purdue University in 1906 with a degree in Electrical Engineering. He married Mary Ethel Parks Draper on November 23, 1911 and they had four children named: C.R., Margaret, Betty, and John E. Draper, and they lived and worked throughout China, Singapore, Malaysia as missionaries and teachers in the early 20th Century. Draper attended the Hinghwa Conference in 1918 and worked in construction in Nanchang, China in 1922, before he became a Professor of Science at the Nanchang Academy in 1922. Later, he served as the Acting Registrar and was head of the Science Department at Nanchang Academy in 1923.
Charles E. Draper died on November 4, 1964.
Winslow Wilson (1912-1997), Methodist Episcopal Church minister, was born in St. Paul, Minnesota on May 6, 1912. His parents were devoted members of the Dayton's Bluff Methodist Episcopal Church. He lived in St. Paul through college where he attended Hamline University and served as a member of the Methodist Federation for Social Action. He then attended the Boston School of Theology, where he graduated in 1936 and was subsequently ordained into the Minnesota Conference. Wilson served as pastor at churches in Kellogg and Brownsdale, Minnesota, as well as Cumberland, Superior, Black Falls, and La Crosse, Wisconsin. He served as a District Superintendent in 1960-66 and again in 1972-75. Wilson also served on the Wisconsin Annual Conference Program Staff from 1968-72, along with The United Methodist General Board of Social Concerns. Wilson helped establish the Pine Lake Methodist Church Camp, a spiritual retreat in Wisconsin. As a conscientious objector, Wilson served a year and one day in the Federal Correctional Institution of Sandstone, Minnesota after he refused to register for the draft. Following his release he remained an active pacifist, participating in numerous protests against the Vietnam War. Wilson belonged to the International Fellowship of Reconciliation for more than sixty years and attained the level of 32nd degree Mason. Wilson died on May 17, 1997 at Meriter Hospital in Madison, Wisconsin after a brief illness.