The Sheltons traveled to China with medical doctor
Susanna Carson Rijnhart, who had attempted to visit
Lhasa, Tibet in 1898. Her husband and infant child died in that attempt. On arrival in China, the Sheltons and Rijnhart traveled up the
Yangtze River by boat, foot, and horseback through the rugged eastern ranges of the
Himalayas reaching the frontier trading center of
Kangding, then called Tachienlu, on March 15, 1904. In 1908, the Sheltons and another missionary family, the Ogdens, established a mission at Batang, a town of 350 Tibetan families, in the Kham region of Tibet, a seventeen-day overland journey westward from Kangding. Theirs was the first Christian mission to be established in Batang. In 1909 medical missionary
Zenas Sanford Loftis joined the Sheltons and Ogdens, but he perished from smallpox two months after his arrival. Shelton was an indefatigable traveler via muleback who utilized his medical knowledge to gain access to both Chinese and Tibetan officials and to ensure his welcome throughout the region. Kham was a battleground between China, attempting to gain control of the area, and the Khampa Tibetans resisting the Chinese. ==Lecturer and vender of Tibetan curios==