词条 | Foo Choo Choon |
释义 |
| name = Foo Choo Choon | image = | caption = | birth_date = 30 July 1860 | birth_place = Yongding, Fujian, Qing Dynasty | residence = | death_date = 27 March 1921 (age 60) | death_place = Penang | religion = | occupation = Tin miner, revenue farmer and businessman | relations = | spouse = | children = | website = | footnotes = }}{{chinese name|Foo}}Foo Choo Choon ({{zh|t=|s=胡子春|p=Hú Zichūn}}; AKA “Man with no wang”30 July 1860 - 27 Mar 1921), a Hakka tin miner, revenue farmer and businessman from Penang and Perak was, in his time, said to have been the richest Chinaman in the world.[1][2] He was called the "Tin King" and 'the Carnagie of the Orient'. Although his own father was born in Penang, Foo Choo Choon was born in Yongding, in the Fujian province. At thirteen years of age he accompanied his father, Foo Yu Chio ({{zh|t=|s=胡玉池|p=Hú Yùchí}}; 30 July 1860 - 27 Mar 1921), to Malaya where he studied at Penang and worked his uncle's mines in Perak.[3][4] A 1908 profile reads: [6] He sat on the Board of Directors of the Eastern Shipping Company, Ltd. - one of nine joint-stock companies registered in Penang in 1907 - whose members also included the Khaw family, Quah Beng Kee (b. 1872), and Cheah Choo Yew.[1] In the late 1880s, he sublet land originally granted to Chung Keng Quee, father of Chung Thye Phin.[7] This, one of his first ventures, was the Tronoh Mine,[8] which he then floated.[9] One of the biggest mining ventures in Malaya has been successfully floated in London. A company has been formed to work the land at Tronoh owned by Foo Choo Choon. The company was registered under the name of Tronoh Mines, Ltd., on December 4th. The Capital is £160,000 and the working capital £20,000. The property was examined and reported on by Mr Frederick Wickett M. I. M. E. of Ipoh, and now Manager of the Kinta Tin Mines, Ltd., who has been appointed Manager of the Tronoh Mines, Ltd., and will probably take over at the end of the year. The property will be fully equipped with modern mining machinery and promises to be the largest and the best paying property in the East. The property was very much over-subscribed, 2,000 shares only were reserved for local applications -- Penang Gazette[10] In 1904 he opened one of the largest opencast mines in the country, worked by Sungei Besi Mines Ltd,[11] previously owned by Kapitan China Yap Kwan Seng.[6] He had a mine in Southern Thailand, known as Tongkah. In 1935 with Choo Kia Peng as partner Foo established Tong Hin Company.[12] He once hosted the geologist Richard Alexander Fullerton Penrose, Jr., better known as R.A.F. Penrose as Penrose notes in his letters.[13] Foo Choo Choon and partner Loke Yew defrayed the total cost of the Anglo Chinese School, Ipoh, in 1904.[14] Rev W. E. Horley, founder of the Anglo Chinese School Ipoh, said of him, "In 1905, Mr. Foo Choo Choon, one of the most enlightened Chinese towkays in Malaya, built the present Primary Hall and presented it as a gift to the School. I have never met a finer type of a Chinese gentleman than he and it was mainly due to his and Mr. Cheah Chiang Lim's exertions that a monster petition was presented to the Government asking for the suppression of licensed gambling houses."[15] When due to an increase in student enrolment, Rev. Pykett wanted to expand the Anglo Chinese School, Penang, Foo Choo Choon, together with two other benefactors donated $6,000 for the purchase of a site at Maxwell Road on April 16, 1895 (See History of Methodist Boys' School). To that school also he endowed a well selected library.[6] Together with Cheong Fatt Tze and Leong Fee, he founded the Chung Hua School, Penang.[4] On 9 September 1906, he was made a president of the Penang Chinese Town Hall. In 1913 he was elected as a president of Perak Chinese Chamber of Commerce in and appointed to both the Perak State Council and Perak Chinese Advisory Board.[4][6] He was very well connected through his business networks, his seats on social, commercial and political councils and bodies. Through marriage he was connected to Chung Keng Quee and Chung Thye Phin, fellow tin magnates and revenue farmers. To honor his legacy, the road Jalan Foo Choo Choon in Ipoh, Perak is named after him. References1. ^1 Chinese Business Enterprise By Rajeswary Ampalavanar Brown Published by Taylor & Francis, 1996 {{ISBN|0-415-14293-8}}, {{ISBN|978-0-415-14293-9}}; pp. 58 2. ^Pinang Gazette, 7 September 1907 3. ^Asian Merchants and Businessmen in the Indian Ocean and the China Sea By Denys Lombard, Jean Aubin Contributor Denys Lombard Published by Oxford University Press, 2000; p. 345, 351 4. ^1 2 Re-examination of the "Chinese nationalism" and Categorization of the Chinese in Malaya: The Case of the Chinese in Penang, 1890s-1910s by SHINOZAKI Kaori, Ph.D. student, Graduate School of Arts and Sciences University of Tokyo Email: kaoris@pd.jaring.my at The Penang Story – International Conference 2002, 18–21 April 2002, The City Bayview Hotel, Penang, Malaysia, Organised by The Penang Heritage Trust & STAR Publications 5. ^Francis Cooray & Khoo Salma Nasution, Redoutable Rerformer: The Life and Times of Cheah Cheang Lim. Areca Books, 2015. {{ISBN|9789675719202}} 6. ^1 2 3 Twentieth century impressions of British Malaya: its history, people, commerce, industries, and resources, Arnold Wright, 1908 7. ^The Mining Magazine: For Minerals Industry Management Worldwide Published by Mining Publications, 1909; p. 123 8. ^The Far East Revisited: Essays on Political, Commercial, Social, and General Conditions in Malaya, China, Korea and Japan By A. Gorton Angier Published by Witherby & co., 1908; pp. 32, 360 9. ^Mines and Minerals of the British Empire: Being a Description of the Historical, Physical, & Industrial Features of the Principal Centres of Mineral Production in the British Dominions Beyond the Seas By Ralph S. G. Stokes Published by E. Arnold, 1908; p. 71 10. ^THE MALAY MAIL THURSDAY DEC 12, 1901 PAGE 3 11. ^The Geology of Malayan Ore-deposits By John Brooke Scrivenor Published by Macmillan and co., 1928; p. 108, 209 12. ^Historical Personalities of Penang By Historical Personalities of Penang Committee, Published by Historical Personalities of Penang Committee, 1986; p. 54 13. ^"I was treated finely at the house of a rich Chinaman named Foo Choo Choon, at a place called Lahat. He owns a big tin mine. When I left he gave me his photograph." (Life and letters of R.A.F. Penrose, Jr: Y Helen R. Fairbanks and Charles P. Berkey By Richard Alexander Fullerton Penrose, Helen R. Fairbanks, Charles P. Berkey Published by Geological Society of America, 1952; p. 273) 14. ^Methodist Schools in Malaysia: Their Record and History By Seng Ong Ho Published by Board of Education, Malaya Annual Conference, 1965 15. ^Extract from Rev. Horley's letter to Dr. L. Proebstel, published in the 1928 Voyager See also
10 : 1860 births|1921 deaths|Malaysian people of Hakka descent|People from Yongding District, Longyan|Businesspeople from Fujian|Malaysian businesspeople|History of Penang|History of Perak|People of British Malaya|People from Longyan |
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