Tan Kah Kee
陳嘉庚
Born(1874-10-21)21 October 1874
Jimei, Amoy Concession[1]
Died12 August 1961(1961-08-12) (aged 86)
Other namesChen Jiageng
Occupations
  • Businessman
  • investor
  • philanthropist
Known forPhilanthropic work, setting up schools in China and Southeast Asia and helping to raise funds to support China in major events during the 20th century
Spouse4
Children17
ParentTan Kee Peck (father)
RelativesTan Keng Hian (younger brother)
Tan Keong Choon
Tan Kah Kee
Traditional Chinese陳嘉庚
Simplified Chinese陈嘉庚
Hokkien POJTân Kah-kiⁿ
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinChén Jiāgēng
Yue: Cantonese
JyutpingCan4 Gaa1-gang1
Southern Min
Hokkien POJTân Kah-kiⁿ

Tan Kah Kee (Chinese: 陳嘉庚; Pe̍h-ōe-jī: Tân Kah-kiⁿ; 21 October 1874 – 12 August 1961) was a Chinese businessman, investor, and philanthropist active in Southeast Asia, Hong Kong, Shanghai, Xiamen, and Guangzhou. A prominent figure in the overseas Chinese community in Southeast Asia during the 20th century, he was responsible for gathering much support from the community to aid China in major events such as the Xinhai Revolution (1911), the Kuomintang's Northern Expedition (1926–28), and the WW2 (1937–45). Apart from donating most of his assets and earnings to aid China in those major events from acquiring funds in Southeast Asia, Hong Kong, etc, Kah Kee established several schools in Fujian, including Xiamen University.

Life

Tan Kah Kee was born in Jimei, Xiamen, Fujian in 1874. In 1890, at the age of 16, he travelled to Singapore in the Straits Settlements to help his father, who owned a rice trading business. In 1903, after his father's business collapsed, Tan started his own company and built a business empire from rubber plantations, manufacturing, beverage, sawmills, real estate, import and export brokerage, ocean transport and rice trading. As he was proficient in Hokkien, he achieved much success doing business in Singapore because Hokkien was the lingua franca of overseas Chinese in Singapore throughout most of the 19th and 20th centuries. His business was at its prime from 1912–14 when he was known as the "Henry Ford of the Malayan community" and powerful business rivals for example Aw Boon Haw[2]

Tan had a leading role among the 110 founders of Tao Nan School in Singapore.[2] In 1919, he set up The Chinese High School (now Hwa Chong Institution) in Singapore. Earlier, in 1918, he established the Jimei Schools (now Jimei University) in Xiamen. Tan was also a member of the Anglo-Chinese College Council and had pledged S$100,000 to the proposed Anglo Chinese School College in 1919. However, when the proposal was turned down by the Government, he agreed to channel the $30,000 he had given to the Anglo-Chinese School fund for physics and chemistry. This helped to complete the Secondary School at Cairnhill in 1928.[3] In 1921, he set up Xiamen University and financially supported it until the Nationalist government of the Republic of China took over in 1937. In 1920, Tan arranged a marriage between his daughter, Tan Ai Leh, and Lee Kong Chian, his protégé and a businessman.

Tan was one of the prominent overseas Chinese to provide financial support to China throughout the WW2. He organised many relief funds under his name, one of which alone managed to raise ten million Straits dollars in 1937. He was also a participant in the Legislative Yuan of the Nationalist government in Chongqing. After the Japanese invaded and occupied Malaya and Singapore in 1942, they deemed these contributors "undesirable" and conducted systematic extermination of anti-Japanese elements in Singapore through the Sook Ching Massacre. Tan survived because he escaped from Singapore before it fell to the Japanese, and went into hiding in Malang, a town in East Java province, Indonesia. He strongly rejected proposals to attempt to negotiate with the Japanese and regarded such attempts as characteristic of a hanjian (a Chinese term for race traitor). He also attempted to dissuade any traitor from such activities. He exercised considerable effort against the governor of Fujian Province, Chen Yi, for perceived maladministration.[4]

In 1943, while he was in Java, Tan began writing his memoirs, The Memoirs of an Overseas Chinese of the Southern Ocean (南僑回憶錄; 南侨回忆录; Nánqiáo Huíyìlù), which later became an important document of the history of the overseas Chinese in Southeast Asia. In 1947 Tan founded the Chiyu Banking Corporation in Hong Kong, an intended to be a sustainable business with profits to be devoted to education in Xiamen and the rest of Fujian province in China.

After the Communist victory in China and the founding of the People's Republic of China in 1949, Tan tried to return to Singapore in 1950 but was denied entry by the British colonial authorities concerned about communist influence in Singapore and Malaya. He then moved permanently to China and served in numerous positions in the Chinese Communist Party.

Tan died in 1961 in Beijing and was given a state funeral by the Chinese government. In Singapore, the Tan Kah Kee Scholarship Fund, which later became known as the Tan Kah Kee Foundation, was established in memory of this philanthropy.

Personal life

Tan's sons were:

Tan's daughters were:

Many of his children maintained close relationship with or even married other prominent Chinese figures in Singapore. For example, Tan Ai Leh, his eldest daughter, was married to Lee Kong Chian; Tan Lay Ho was married to Lim Chong Kuo, the eldest son of respected merchant Lim Nee Soon.

Legacy

In recognition of Tan's contributions to education and society throughout his lifetime, there are places and establishments in China and Southeast Asia named after Tan or built to commemorate him, including: the Tan Kah Kee Memorial Museum in Tan's hometown in Jimei; the Tan Kah Kee Foundation, which offers postgraduate scholarships; the Tan Kah Kee MRT station along the Downtown MRT line in Singapore. The schools in the Anglo-Chinese School family have houses named after Tan. Chongfu School's Main Hall is named after him. Tan Kah Kee Hall at the University of California, Berkeley is also named after him.[5]

The asteroid 2963 Chen Jiageng is named after him.

See also

References

Footnotes

  1. ^ Charles Drage, Taikoo, London: Constable Publishers, 1970, p.59.
  2. ^ a b Brief history of Nan Chiau Archived 8 December 2015 at the Wayback Machine, The Herencia, Retrieved 12 December 2015
  3. ^ Tan Kah Kee House (TKK), Anglo-Chinese School (Independent), and Ai Tong School url=https://www.acsindep.moe.edu.sg/student-development/houses/tkk-house/
  4. ^ Boorman, Howard L. (1968). "Fei Hsiao-t'ung". Biographical Dictionary of Republican China. Vol. II. New York: Columbia University Press. p. 252.
  5. ^ "Tan Kah Kee Hall | College of Chemistry".

General references