Carleton Lacy had several pastorates in Illinois, Detroit and Wisconsin before he was appointed as a Methodist missionary to China in 1914.[4] He arrived in Shanghai in September 1914. After attending the Language School in Nanking, Lacy served as district superintendent in Jiangxi Province in 1916–1917 and 1919–1920, and president of William Nast College, Jiujiang (原南伟烈大学,现九江同文中学).
In 1941 Lacy was elected bishop of the China Central Conference and was assigned to Fuzhou.[1][5] When his episcopal area was occupied by Japanese troops he traveled extensively in inland China.[2]
Death
Carleton Lacy's tenure as bishop was set to end in 1949 but the advent of the Communist government made it impossible to hold a general conference or elections. He officially resigned and turned his authority over to Bishop Chen Wenyuan (陳文渊). In 1950 when all foreign missionaries were forced to withdraw from China. Lacy was the only Westerner in Fuzhou area denied an exit permit, detained under house arrest by the newly established regime.[2][6] During the closing months of his life he had been ill and only his faithful cook was allowed to see him.[4][6] Within weeks after his request was finally granted, he died of a heart ailment at Union Hospital, Foochow (福州協和醫院) on December 11, 1951.[4][7][8] Lacy was buried in the Foochow Mission Cemetery with an unmarked tombstone, and his cook was the only one permitted to attend his funeral.[6][9] In 1956 his remains were exhumed and paraded through the streets by Communist zealots.[original research?]
Family
George Carleton met Harriet Lang Boutelle, who had come to Canton as a YWCA secretary.[10] They married on June 26, 1918, in Chelsea, Massachusetts.[11]