Born in
Rangoon, he was the son of American Baptist missionaries Rev. Albert Ernest Seagrave and Alice Vinton. As such he represented the fourth generation of a mission tradition begun when his great-grandparents
Justus Vinton,
Calista Holman,
James Madison Haswell and Jane Mason, were sent to
Moulmain, Burma in 1834 and 1835 to establish a Baptist mission, work continued in subsequent generations by several family members, including his great-aunt, missionary and physician
Calista Vinton Luther. Seagrove's sisters followed in the family footsteps, with Rachel working as a teaching missionary in
Pegu and Grace becoming a medical missionary in
Moulmein. He walked back in to work in 1945. He served as chief medical officer for the
Shan States of Burma with the British military government from 1945-46. He chose to stand trial rather than be perceived as fleeing. He was sentenced in January 1951 to six years at hard labor, on charges that he wrote a letter that helped
Karen rebels arrest a government commissioner, and that he gave medical help to the Karen rebels. The sentence was later reduced to six months, and in November 1951 the verdict was overturned by Burma's three-man Supreme Court and he was declared not guilty. He suffered dysentery and malaria in part from his time in jail. Seagrave wrote six books:
Waste Basket Surgery, 1930;
Tales of a Waste Basket Surgeon, 1939/1942;
Burma Surgeon, 1943;
Adventure in Burma told in pictures, 1944;
Burma Surgeon Returns, 1946; and
My Hospital in the Hills, 1955; and he co-authored
The life of a Burma Surgeon with Chester Bowles, 1961. Gordon Seagrave died at his hospital at
Namhkam, Burma on 28 March 1965. ==References==