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My grandfather HONG Hock How
曾學厚 was born on 23rd day of the
6th month of the 26th Year of the Emperor Guang Xu (July 19, 1900), in
the waning days of the Qing Dynasty in
Dong An Village, Taishan County, Guangdong Province
廣東省台山縣東安村. He spent his
boyhood years in the village, entering school at age 7 where he spent his
first four years memorizing books and learning how to write.
The Chinese Revolution of 1911
In 1911, the Chinese Revolution overthrew the Qing Dynasty, and the Republic
of China was established on January 1, 1912. The revolution signaled the end
of 2,000 years of dynastic rule in China and the start of China's early
republican period. The revolution accelerated the modernization of daily life
in China, and for Hock How, it meant his school was re-organized and divided
into different classes. He continued to study there until he was 15 years
old.
[Image]
Hock How, 1915
In February 1915, Hock How’s father,
Hong Chew Yook, returned to their village from America. At Hock How's grandmother's
insistence, he married NG Chau Hai, “a very pretty girl", in April 1915. Hock
How returned to America with his father on October 27, 1915. He was detained
on Angel Island while his citizenship status was investigated. After the
initial interrogation, Hock How's application was reject, and he faced
deportation. Chew Yook hired a lawyer who petitioned the Labor Department in
Washington DC. Eventually, his petition was granted, and on February 23, 1916,
Hock How was admitted to the U.S. as the son of a native-born citizen.
Once in Palo Alto, Hock How spent a month teaching himself to read English
with the help of friends and was eventually placed in 4th grade at
the Lytton Primary School. In 1918, his wife, NG Chau Hai, had a heart attack
and died while traveling to her younger brother’s wedding. According to Hock
How “that news knocked me off my feet, but thereafter I determined to put all
my energy into study.” He continued his studies at Palo Alto Union High School
and went on to qualify for admissions to Stanford University’s School of
Engineering.
From the time he started Primary School, Hock How worked for families as a
house boy, doing odd jobs in the house including cooking and cleaning. This
work earned him “a room in the back barn, breakfast, and evening meal, and $20
per month.” He first worked for Mr. Nagle, then Professor Fish, and finally
Mrs. J. F. Newsom at 1129 Cowper Street, Palo Alto, eventually earning $40 a
month.
[Image]
Palo Alto Union High School, Chemistry Class, 1921 Hock How
Row 2 Far Rt, Henry Cheu Row 3 Far Lf Courtesy of Brian Cheu
[Image]
Palo Alto High School Newspaper Clipping, 1922 Courtesy of
Brian Cheu
[Image]
Hock How, 1924
In 1924, he took a camping trip through the Northwestern U.S. and Canada. Then
in January 1926, “having no mind to study,” Hock How returned to China.
Traveling from Shanghai to Canton, Hock How barely missed taking a steamer
that was robbed en route. He unsuccessfully courted two girls in Canton, then
returned to the village where he married my grandmother CHU Tui Goon
趙翠娟 on May 1, 1926, when he was
26 years old and she 18. Tui Goon's family was from the nearby
market town of Doushan
斗山鎮. They stayed together in the village for two years and had their first
son, Larry, in 1928.
That same year, Hock How returned to school the Palo Alto.
The Great Depression and The Chinese Civil War (1929 - 1937)
At Stanford, where he was known as John Hock How, he to continue his studies,
completing his Bachelor of Arts degree in 1930 and a graduate Degree of
Engineer from the Electrical Engineering department in 1932. Hock How was
listed in the 1930 US Census as living at the Chinese Student’s Club House at
528 Salvatierra Street, Stanford, CA, where he was the club president.
Due to his school workload, Hock How did not work during his two years of
post-graduate studies. Even with his savings and help from his father he could
not cover the $320 per quarter tuition. Hock How signed a $2,000 promissory
note with Stanford University.
[Image]
Stanford Chinese Students' Club, June 1924, Club President, Hock How,
back row on left
Back Row: J. H. How, Y. F. Tsi, H. D. Cheu, C. S. Huang,
T. H. Tsui, C. C. Wu, H. C. Wong
Third Row: P. T. Sah, L. H. Bain, S. P. Tsao, S. L. Tan, Y. T. Hao,
T. H. Cheng, K. C. Shen, S. K. Wang
Second Row: W. K. Taam, E. Shen, R. C. Fang, N. Y. Yue, C. H. Chi,
K. C. Yang, C. K. Teng, L. K. Yang
Front Row: F Y. Chuck, E. C. Ping, Y. D. Hahn, D. K. Chang, T. K. Chuan
Absent: K. L. Chi, H. P. Huang
Two years into the Great Depression, there were few job opportunities for
Chinese, let alone college-educated ones, in America. So, Hock How returned to
Canton where he slowly worked his way up from teaching mathematics at Pui Ying
Middle School to being a full Professor of Electrical Engineering at National
Sun Yat Sen University. Hock How’s second son, Jack, was born in 1933.
The family moved to Canton in early 1934 when Larry was five and Jack was six
months old. During what Tui Goon called the "armed revolution of Chin Tai
Han," the family went to Hong Kong for several months. (I have not found any
other references to this revolution, but the timing coincides with the
Nationalists' fifth encirclement campaign against the Communists' Jiangxi
Soviet.) After returning to Canton, Paul and Lily were born. In 1936, Hock How
published two academic papers titled "200 volt Flash"
二百伏特閃動 and "Molybdenum as a
Talking Plate" 鉬,能言之金屬.
The Second Sino-Japanese War (1937-1941)
In 1938, war with Japan spread south from Manchuria and the University moved
to Ching Kong in Yunnan Province. In June 1938, when Lily was just six months
old, Hock How moved the family to Hong Kong
Hock How then went by himself to Rangoon, Burma, where he had been appointed
Head of the Works Department of the Rangoon Truck Assembly Plant by the
Chinese government. At the plant, Hock How's team assemble 2,000 Dodge trucks
then 500 Ford trucks which were built from complete knocked-down condition.
After the truck chasses and wooden bodies were assembled, they were loaded
with war materials and driven over the famous Yunnan-Burma Road to Chongqing, China. The plant completed both jobs within 16 months.
[Image]
1945 US Army Photo of Burma Road (US National Archives)
After living in Hong Kong for two years, Tui Goon and their children made
their way to Rangoon in 1940 traveling by boat for a month long journey via
Thailand and Singapore. Hock How and his partner Mr. Y. H. Kwong then tried to
form a trading company, known as Jing Hong Trading Corporation, which sold
International Harvester Trucks and farm equipment.
World War II (1941-1945)
On December 7, 1941, the Empire of Japan launched simultaneous aerial attacks
against Pearl Harbor, Guam, Hong Kong, the Philippines, Shanghai, Singapore
and Wake Island, and land invasions of Thailand and British Malaya. As Hong
Kong and Singapore fell in quick succession, and Burma was threatened, Hock
How decided to evacuate his family to Kunming. They escaped on the Burma Road
driving an “Austin 12” 12 HP passenger car with a hired driver following in a
truck loaded with family and company goods. According to Tui Goon they also
traveled with "a 3-ton truck loaded with steel bars for Chiang Kai Shek."
[Image]
Austin Heavy 12 coupe (c1928 model), Buckinghamshire, England via Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA 3.0
They left one week before the Japanese conquered Rangoon on March 7, 1942. Tui
Goon wrote, "The invading Japanese Army were close behind us, but we were
lucky and arrived in [Kunming] safely, although the trip took over a month on
the Burma Road."
[Image]
US Army Photo of the Hui Tong Suspension Bridge (US National Archives)
“The Yunnan-Burma Road was the backdoor to China. The Chinese Government
depended on this road for supplies during the years of 1939 to 1942. The
road distance from the Burma border to Kunming is only about 600 miles but a
portion of the road is narrow, dangerous, and goes over the Wai Tung
Mountains [Hui Tong Shan 惠通山], 12,000 ft. above sea level. It usually takes six days for the journey
over this distance....
“...Some people, who were slow and were unlucky and did not get over the Wai
Tung Suspension Bridge [Hui Tong Qiao 惠通橋] soon enough, were caught by the Japanese either as prisoners or had to
run away and walk over the Wai Tung Mountains.”
-- Hock How from his 1979 Autobiography
In Kunming, the boys went to school learning the Yunnan dialect, and Mary was
born. Hock How wrote that he did not do much during the war years, but somehow
made enough from “various deals on commissions” to live comfortably.
[Image]
Family in Kunming, Yunnan, c. 1944 Front L-R: Lily, Tui Goon w/
Mary, Hock How, Jack & Paul Back: Larry and Tui Goon's Nephew
Tui Goon recorded that in Kunming the family "lived on the Second (上二) street. Hock How had a jewelry store. Larry went to Wu Wha Middle School."
In 1945 when it seemed that the war was about to end, Hock How took Larry to
the United States, flying over the “Hump” to Calcutta. They stayed for four
months before they arranged to travel by freighter to Port Angels, Maine,
where they arrived in December. Hock How then enrolled Larry at the Hackley School in upstate Tarrytown, New York.
Return to Burma
Meanwhile Hock How and his old business partner, Mr. Kwong, opened an office
on Wall Street for Jing Hong & Co. Over the next year, the company
obtained the agency rights in Burma for International Harvester, Packard Motor
Company, Cummins Diesel Engines, and Austin cars for British Motors. Hock How
also returned to Stanford Univeristy to pay off his interest free promissory
note from 1932. In December 1946, Hock How flew on a cargo plane to Shanghai
then caught another airplane to Bhamo in northern Burma and a train to
Rangoon. There he opened an office and showroom for Jing Hong Trading
Corporation.
In 1947, Tui Goon returned to Rangoon by the Yunnan-Burma Road with the rest
of the family and their belongings in tow. Two years later, their son Jack
would recall that they traveled in the back of a canvas covered truck driven
by a man named Mr. Yee. They brought no furniture, only personal belongings,
suitcases, and clothing, and took 11-12 days to drive to Rangoon stopping over
at different places for the night.
The family lived on the first floor of a house at 101 Leeds Road in Rangoon.
Jack described that house as follows:
"It is a two story high wooden structure, Burmese style house. The house is
built behind the sidewalks on both Happing Road and Leeds Road leaving a
front yard along these streets and a lawn is enclosed by hedges. The
entrance to the house faces Happing Road and enters the parlor of the house.
As one is standing in the parlor looking outside, the right side of the
parlor is a dining room and the left side is the main bedroom and behind the
dining room is a small bedroom used by the servants. Behind the servants
room is the kitchen. Then bathroom is located behind the large bedroom
towards Leeds Street and the small storage room is located behind the large
bedroom but towards the parlor. Right behind the parlor is an empty space
used as a hallway to go from the storage room to the kitchen and servants
quarters."
Jack and Paul slept in the rear of the parlor while the Lily and Mary slept in
the bedroom with their parents. They had a pet Chow dog named Ahbo. The second
floor of the house was occupied by three native Burmese women, Daw May May and
her daughter who owned the house, and their servant. The kids addressed the
daughter as Mama.
[Image]
In front of their former home at 101 Leeds Road, in 2007. (L-R)
Jack, Mary, Paul, and Lily
The Chinese Communist Revolution in 1949
In 1949, as the Communist Revolution was sweeping over China, Hock How brought
Jack and Paul to San Francisco where Larry rejoined them. In January 1954, Tui
Goon followed with Lily, Mary, and Larry’s wife Marie. They bought the house
at 124 23rd Avenue in the Richmond district of San Francisco.
At some point during this time, Hock How started long-term relationship that
would last until his death and resulted in at least one son, Chester. Hock How
moved to Hong Kong in 1960 running his businesses in Burma from there.
The 1962 Burmese Coup d'état
In 1962, the Burmese Government was overturned in a coup d'état that began 26
years of one-party rule and political dominance by the army. The coup leaders
established a revolutionary council which promoted the Burmese Way to
Socialism. The new council nationalized all banks and private businesses, and
the family’s business was wiped out. At a time when Hock How should
have been looking forward to retirement, he now had to start all over.
Hock How branched out to other SE Asia countries, and by 1967, his company,
The China Engineers (Thailand) Ltd, represented American exporters, such as
John Deere Industrial tractors, Ingersoll-Rand air compressors, American Hoist
Co., Universal Engineering Co. However, the competition was keen, and the
company did not turn a profit until 1968.
Sunset Years
That same year, Hock How returned to live in Hong Kong full-time, and in 1969,
he joined the import-export firm, Deacon & Co. Ltd, as manager of their
Import Department. He wrote that “[my work] is much easier than my
work in Bangkok where my responsibility was much greater with company
financial worries. Here my work consists of writing a few letters a day,
calculating a few figures, costs of goods and pepping up the salesmen with
encouraging remarks, etc.”
[Image]
Hong Hock How, Chu Tui Goon, and Family, Foster City, CA, December 1973
Hock How maintained a vigorous lifestyle, waking at 6am and walking to the
park every day. “That gives me a lot of pep for the day,” he once wrote. In
his mid-seventies, he commented that he felt younger every day and that many
people said he looked like 55. He often wrote fondly about taking the
three-hour steamer ride to Macau to spend a quiet week or weekend. He resided
in a flat on Nathan Road in Tsim Sha Tsui, Hong Kong, across from Kowloon Park
and walking distance to the Star Ferry.
Hock How continued to work and live in Hong Kong until his death on June 24,
1979. He was buried in Hong Kong.
[Image]
Chu Tui Goon, March 21, 1987
CHU Tui Goon meanwhile stayed in San Francisco with her children and
grandchildren. She enjoyed taking the long bus ride from her home in the
Richmond District to San Francisco’s Chinatown to shop and meet up with
friends. She also spent much time babysitting her grandchildren, hosting or
attending weekly family gatherings, and traveling. She passed away on April
25, 2005, at the age of 95 and is buried at Skylawn Cemetery in San Mateo,
California.
HONG Hock How 曾學厚(July 19, 1900 - June 24, 1979)
- Married Name:
Hew Choon, Xiǎo Chuán 曉傳
- Also known as:
John Hock How
Married April 1915:
NG Chau Hai (Wu) (d.1918)
Married May 1, 1926:
CHU Tui Goon
趙翠娟 (Zhao) (December 9,
1909 - April 25, 2005)
Hock How and Tui Goon had five children:
Sons:
1. Larry Lan Fee (Lian Hui)
2. Jack Lan (Lian Zhuo)
3. Paul Lan (Lian Bo)
Daughters:
4. Lily (Hui Li)
5. Mary (Mei Li)
Hock How's other Son:
6. Chester
Sources:
HONG, Chu Tui Goon, Autobiography, August 1980.
HONG, Hock How. Autobiography, 7 Feb. 1979.
HONG, Steven. Conversation about Larry Hong's school in New York, 12 Jul. 2023.
US National Archives: Arrival and Departure Documents, Interview Transcripts,
and Affidavits
posted by Kenneth Hong at 12:00 PM on May 29, 2021
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