{
    "gender": {
        "value": "M"
    },
    "summary_title": "Lorrain, Mr",
    "name": [
        {
            "last": "Lorrain",
            "title_prefix": "Mr",
            "type": "preferred name",
            "value": "Lorrain, Mr",
            "primary": true
        },
        {
            "type": "variation",
            "value": "Mr  Lorrain"
        },
        {
            "type": "natural order",
            "value": "Mr Lorrain"
        }
    ],
    "options": {
        "flag2": "N",
        "flag1": "N",
        "sort_name": "LORRAIN, MR"
    },
    "admin": {
        "processed": 1729028436461,
        "sequence": 7261289,
        "uid": "hmc-agent-2090",
        "added": 1664609238776,
        "stream": "collections-online",
        "id": "agent-2090",
        "source": "hmc",
        "uuid": "684111df-53a1-3670-b38e-2815be5fc30f"
    },
    "description": [
        {
            "type": "biography",
            "value": "The Lakher Pioneer Mission was established by Reginald Lorrain and his wife Maud at Serkawr in the South Lushai Hills, Assam, in 1907 to evangelise the tribes of the Chin, Arakan and Lushai Hills. At that time the people of this area were known to outsiders as Lakhers, but now describe themselves as Maras. The Lorrains were joined by a few assistant missionaries in the 1920s and 1930s. Only one of these, Albert Bruce Foxall, remained for more than a few years: he married the Lorrains\u2019 only daughter Louise Marguerite Tlosai and took the surname Lorrain-Foxall. Because the Mission was so small, it had to ordain local pastors and assistants as quickly as possible and by the 1970s there had formed an evangelical church independent of the Mission. The latter continued to be staffed by the Lorrain-Foxall family until 1977 when Bruce Lorrain-Foxall died and the Mission closed. [Source: Mundus database at School of Oriental and African Studies]."
        }
    ],
    "type": {
        "type": "person",
        "base": "agent"
    }
}