- Robert Hotung
Infobox Person
name = Sir Robert Ho Tung
caption =
birth_date = birth date|1862|12|23
birth_place =Hong Kong island ,Hong Kong
death_date = death date and age|1956|4|26|1862|12|23
death_place =Hong Kong
occupation =Businessman ,Philanthropist
salary =
networth = millionaire
spouse =
website =
footnotes =Sir Robert Ho Tung KBE (, ;
December 23 ,1862 -April 26 ,1956 ) was a famous businessman andphilanthropist inHong Kong . He was a Eurasian, reportedly born to an Englishman of Dutch andJew ish descent by the name of H.T. Bosman, and a Chinese woman of Baoan (present-dayShenzhen ) heritage, onD'Aguilar Street [Courtauld, Caroline. Holdsworth, May. [1997] (1997). The Hong Kong story. Oxford university press. ISBN 0195903536] . He was educated at Queen's College, previously known as the Central School.Smith, Carl T. [2005] (2005). Chinese Christians: Elites, Middlemen, and the Church in Hong Kong. ISBN 9622096883]Career
After graduating from Queen's College in 1878, Ho Tung went to
Guangzhou , where he worked as a clerk for the Chinese Imperial Maritime Customs. In 1880, he returned to Hong Kong and joined the dominant British-owned trading companyJardine Matheson as an assistant in thecompradore department. His bilingual skills and business acumen eventually propelled him to become Head Compradore, a position he held until his retirement in 1889. Questions of his parentage theorize that his unidentified father was potentially working within the Jardine-Matheson Company. [Smith, Carl T. Compradores of the Hong Kong Shanghai Bank, in Eastern Banking: Essays in the History of the Hong Kong Shanghai Banking Corporation. ]Ho Tung was a director of many Hong Kong companies, including
Hong Kong Land , and served on the boards of influential charitable organisations, including theTung Wah Hospital . [Hall, Peter. In the Web. Hurst Village Publishing. ISBN 095190390] He was founder of the Chinese Club, which was created in response to the colonialHong Kong Club 's policy of excluding those who were not British and white from joining.Ho Tung was the first Chinese to be allowed to live on
Victoria Peak , which had been restricted to Europeans under thePeak Reservation Ordinance . He financed Dr.Sun Yat-sen 's revolutions to establish theRepublic of China . As a millionaire with significant influence in the colony, he heavily emphasized to the British in the earlyColonial Hong Kong era that no part of the Chinese demographics was purely indigenous. [Carroll, John Mark. Edge of Empires:Chinese Elites and British Colonials in Hong Kong. Harvard university press. ISBN 0674017013]Legacy
There are many parks, schools, and buildings named after or founded by Ho Tung in Hong Kong, including Lady Ho Tung Hall at
Hong Kong University , Hotung Secondary School, Tung Lin Kok Yuen Buddhist temple, and King George V School. In Macau, the Sir Robert Ho Tung Library is housed in a mansion once owned by Ho Tung, who resided there during the Japanese occupation of Hong Kong.The Ho family is still very influential in the Hong Kong business community.
Ho Family
Ho Tung had four sisters and five brothers.
Ho Fook , a younger brother, succeeded him as Head Compradore atJardine Matheson in 1889. He had 13 sons, five of whom worked as compradores for various foreign companies. One of Ho Fook's grandsons isStanley Ho , the casino and shipping magnate.Ho Kom Tong (1866-1950) was a prominent businessman and philanthropist who succeeded Ho Fook as Head Compradore atJardine Matheson . He had 12 wives and reportedly more than 30 children, one of whom was Grace Ho, the mother of the Chinese actorBruce Lee . Kom Tong Hall, the former Hong Kong residence of Ho Kom Tong, now houses the Dr. Sun Yat-sen Museum.Walter Bosman was educated at Queen's College and won a scholarship to study engineering in England in 1884. Later, he moved to
South Africa and co-authored a book on theNatal Rebellion .Ho Tung Children
Ho Tung had two wives, Margaret and Clara, both of whom were Eurasian. His first wife, Margaret Mak (nee Maclean), was unable to bear children. Subsequently, Ho Tung adopted Ho Fook's first son, Ho Wing, following Chinese tradition.
Clara (nee Cheung), also a Eurasian, later gave birth to three sons and seven daughters.
Hotung's eldest son,
Edward Sai Kim Hotung (1902-1957), became a prominent banker and philanthropist inHong Kong . Edward was founder of the Chinese Gold and Silver Exchange in Hong Kong, as well as Treasurer of the Chinese War Chest in Shanghai during the Japanese occupation. His sons are SirJoseph Hotung KBE andEric Hotung CBE (1926-). He also has two daughters Mary Hotung-Ketterer who received the Royal Order of the Golden Ark knighthood for her work in conservation and Toni Hotung. He also had another son named Patrick who died at the age of 4 of a serious illness.Eric is a businessman and Ambassador at Large and Economics Advisor for Timor-Leste (East Timor). He was born in Hong Kong and grew up there and in Shanghai. Eric attended
Georgetown University in 1947 and graduated in 1951. Afterwards, he worked at the New York Stock Exchange and at General Motors before returning toHong Kong . He is married to Patricia Anne Shea. They have five sons and three daughters.Ho Tung's second son,
Robert Ho Shai-Lai (1906-1998), was a general under the Kuomintang regime. He was alsoAmbassador toJapan for the Republic of China from 1952 to 1956 and a member of the Nationalist China military delegation to theUnited Nations from 1956 to 1966. Robert's sonRobert Ho Hung Ngai (1932- ), is the founder of the Tung Lin Kok Yuen Canada Society and a former journalist and publisher in Hong Kong.George Ho Ho-Chi is the founder of
Commercial Radio Hong Kong .Ho Tung had a son, Henry, who died of tuberculosis in infancy.
Victoria Hotung (Lady Lo) was his eldest daughter. She married Sir Lo Man-kam (M. K. Lo), a prominent Eurasian lawyer and legislator who was knighted by Queen Elizabeth after World War II. Their only son, Lo Tak-sing, was a former lawyer and legislator in Hong Kong who once ran against
Tung Chee-hwa for Chief Executive.Three other daughters - Irene Cheng, Jean Gittins and Florence Yeo - wrote memoirs chronicling their war-time experiences in colonial Hong Kong.
ee also
*
Ho Tung Lau
*Sir Kai Ho
*Sir Catchick Paul Chater
*Tung Ying Building References
External links
* [http://www.hku.hk/hotung/ Lady Hotung Memorial Hall, The University of Hong Kong]
* [http://www.buddhistdoor.com/TLKY_intro/1-1_eng.html/ Tung Lin Kok Yuen]
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