For the purposes of this listing, in the
case of Western or ‘foreign’ individuals, the surname is given first and in
capitals; Chinese and other Oriental individuals’ names have been left in their
more recognisable form (to Western readers) but with the family name
capitalised for reference, except in the case of individuals who are Manchu in
origin: such people never used their real names in adulthood and went by public
titles instead. Fictional characters are designated with an ‘F’.
BLAYNE,
Horvath (F) (c. 1925 – 1948?)
Born Horvath Waite, Blayne was adopted by
cousins in Boston after the destruction of his home town, Innsmouth. He became
a student of mythology and religion and focussed his studies on the
Indo-Chinese region and the islands of the Pacific. His lectures and researches
frequently took him to the major universities in Shanghai, Hong Kong and
Peking. After World War Two, he concentrated his efforts on the South Pacific
area and won accolades for his work on the ruins of Ponape.
The last sighting of Blayne was in
Singapore shortly before his rumoured departure on some secret government
business. His fate remains unknown.
BROADHURST,
Florence Maud (1899 – 1977)
“Both Europeans and
Americans love China because it is so completely flattering to the Anglo-Saxon
sense of racial superiority”
-Florence Broadhurst, from
a Vogue Magazine
interview, 1924
Florence Maud Broadhurst was born in
Australia in 1899. At the age of 17 she toured with Dame Nellie Melba and Sir
Robert Helpmann, singing under the assumed name of ‘Miss Bobbie Broadhurst’.
She soon switched careers and joined a dancing troupe, ‘The Smart Set Diggers’,
followed by ‘The Globetrotters’ and toured Southeast Asia, India and China into
the ‘20s.
In 1926, she settled in Shanghai and
founded the ‘Broadhurst Academy’, teaching ballroom dancing, etiquette and
deportment. Seven years later, she moved to London and assumed the name ‘Madame
Pellier’ under which she traded, running a couture dress shop. In 1949, she
returned to Australia with her second husband and began painting landscapes and
portraits, despite a lack of formal training. Eventually she moved into the
field of fabric and textiles printing, for which she is best known and in which
field her influence is compelling.
In 1977, still working at the age of 78,
she was brutally bashed to death in her workshop in Sydney. Evidence at the
scene showed that she knew her assailant but to this day, her murder remains
unsolved.
CHAN,
Charlie (F)
The literary creation of American writer Earl
Derr Biggers (1884 – 1933), Charlie Chan is a Sino-American police detective
connected to the Honolulu Police Force. In the early cases he is referred as
‘Sergeant’; however his rank increases by the end of the series to ‘Inspector’.
Born in China, he moved to Hawaii at an early age. Chan is a cheerful and
dapper character, fastidious of his appearance and ubiquitously dressed in a
white suit and hat. He is renowned for having a large family, headed by his
‘Number One Son’, and also for dropping Chinese aphorisms whenever appropriate.
His style of investigation is usually to disarm then outwit the villain,
leaving any physical effort in the capable hands of Number One Son. The novels
were written from 1925 to 1932; screen adaptations of these works and other
stories were made regularly from 1926 up until 1949, with another version
starring Peter Ustinov made in 1981. TV shows, comics, cartoons and spoofs have
been made right up to the present day, making him as enduring a character as
Sherlock Holmes or Hercule Poirot.
Chan’s adventures saw him travel all over
the world (with Number One Son carrying the luggage) so it is highly likely
that Investigators may encounter him on the trail of villainy in Shanghai,
should the Keeper feel it warranted.
CHIANG
Kai-shek (1887 – 1975)
“We write our own destiny. We
are what we do”
-Madame Chiang Kai-shek
Chiang Kai-shek began his career in 1918 when,
under instructions from Dr Sun Yat-sen he helped create and lead the Whampoa Military Academy in Kwangtung,
where Sun had established his new government, the Republic of China (ROC). Chiang served as the leader of this
institution, the purpose of which was to train soldiers with the ultimate aim
of marching on Peking, until the death of Sun in 1925, at which point he took
over as Generalissimo of the ROC as well as leadership of the Kuomintang (KMT).
Between 1925 and 1928, he led his Nationalist troops on the Northern Expedition to unify the country
and to eliminate the chaos caused by the Warlord Era, an endeavour from which
he emerged largely – although questionably - victorious.
In 1920 he met May-ling Soong and they began
a long courtship due to Chiang having to flee the country to Japan
intermittently and because of objections on her mother’s side. Chiang was
already married and also a Buddhist and May-ling’s mother insisted on seeing
proof of a divorce and Chiang’s conversion to Christianity before allowing the
nuptials to proceed. Chiang took his time in converting, telling May-ling’s
mother that religion “needed to be gradually absorbed, not swallowed like a
pill”. Inevitably, the two were wed on the 1st of December, 1927.
The ideological legacy that Sun Yat-sen left to
both the KMT and the Communist Party of
China (CPC) caused a wide rift between the two groups and Chiang grew to be
deeply suspicious of the Communists. During the Chinese Civil War (1927–1949) he turned his efforts to eliminating
the Communist presence within the country, an undertaking which distanced him
from both the Chinese and his troops, but which won him much popularity
overseas. During the Second Sino-Japanese
War (1937-1945), he again led his country to victory but at the expense of
his anti-Communist efforts, which led to his defeat in the Civil War in 1949.
He was forced to flee the country to Taiwan where he continued as President in
exile of the ROC and leader of the KMT until his death in 1975.
COPELAND,
Harold Hadley (F) (c. 1860 – 1926)
A noted anthropological researcher and co-founder
of the Pacific Area Archaeological Association (PAAA), of which he later became
the president. He began his studies in Cambridge, later graduating from
Miskatonic University. He travelled widely throughout Asia in the 1890s and his
published journals of these trips gained him some popularity. His early scholarly
writings include Prehistory in the
Pacific: A Preliminary Investigation with References to the Myth Patterns of
South-East Asia (1902), Polynesian
Mythology, with a Note on the Cthulhu Legend-Cycle (1906), The Ponape Scripture (1907) (his translation
of a document discovered in 1734), The
Ponape Figurine (1910) and The
Prehistoric Pacific in light of the Ponape Scripture (1911). This last work
met with considerable disfavour and he was forced to resign his presidency of
the PAAA as a result.
In 1913, Copeland took a different tack and set off
on an expedition to Central Asia, in search of the Plateau of Tsang. The Copeland–Ellington Expedition met
with disaster from the outset: Ellington died in mysterious circumstances after
only a few days and the group’s guides and bearers either deserted, or perished
from the harsh conditions. Three months later, Copeland was found raving in
Mongolia, claiming to have met with a Muvian wizard named ‘Zanthu’, who gave
him ten inscribed stone tablets. These tablets were in his backpack when he was
discovered, covered with ancient hieroglyphics.
After returning from his ordeal, Copeland spent the
next three years translating the tablets and published his findings as The Zanthu Tablets: A Conjectural
Translation; he was then confined to an asylum in San Francisco where he
slit his own throat shortly afterwards. His vast collection of papers and
Polynesian artefacts was left in his will to the Sanbourne Institute of Pacific Studies.
DU
Yue-sheng, aka ‘Big-Eared’ Du (1887 – 1951)
"Du himself was tall
and thin, with a face that seemed hewn out of stone, a Chinese version of the
Sphinx. Peculiarly and inexplicably terrifying were his feet, in their silk
socks and smart pointed European boots, emerging from beneath the long silken
gown. Perhaps the Sphinx, too, would be even more frightening if it wore a
modern top-hat."
-W H Auden & Christopher
Isherwood, Journey to a War (1938)
‘Big Eared’ Du
started life in poverty. Born in the Pudong across from the Bund in Shanghai,
he began his career as a street tough in the Green Gang. Rising up through the
ranks he quickly became the leader of this notorious outfit and set about
becoming the ultimate ruler of the Shanghai underworld.
With a
monopoly on opium distribution, protection rackets and a string of brothels and
gambling establishments, Du started a fruitful business relationship with the
head of the Police in the French Concession, ‘Pockmarked’ Huang Jinrong (some
say that Du was conducting an illicit affair with Huang’s mistress and that she
promoted the arrangement with Huang). Between them and the forces which they
controlled, they made Frenchtown the heart of opium distribution throughout the
20s and 30s.
Despite being
a criminal, Du was an unfailing patriot and parochially Shanghainese: the
occupation of the Old City by the Small
Swords in times past had been broken by Green Gang confederates and Du was
extremely protective of this part of the city. In later years, he ousted
Communist factions and had links with the highest levels of the Kuomintang,
including Chiang Kai-shek.
Throughout his
life he was an inveterate gambler and opium addict, prone to flashy displays of
his power: he often sent those who had crossed him a ‘made-to-measure’ coffin
and his catchphrase was “you have my word”. He bought police officers and
houses with equal ease: he lived in a magnificent mansion (now the Donghu
Hotel) with a bevy of wives and consorts and even owned a bank. The Central
Plaza building now on Yanan Lu near the Bund was once in his possession. In
1932 he was elected to the French Municipal Council and became a bona fide ‘pillar of society’.
During the war
with Japan he threw his not-inconsiderable weight behind the Chinese army,
relaying information and armaments to where they would do the most good. He
fled Shanghai to Hong Kong just before the Communist takeover in 1949 and lived
there until his death in 1951. If anyone could be said to epitomise the
lawless, glamorous life of Shanghai, it is Du Yue-sheng.
HUANG Jinrong, aka ‘Pockmarked’
Huang (1886 – 1953)
Due to the fact that municipal government
of the French Concession lay in the hands of the French Embassy in Indochina,
local matters were usually left in the hands of the gendarmes. This meant that many instances of corruption or
lawlessness went unpunished and examined by the French authorities. The gendarmerie was composed mainly of
Chinese nationals and their leader throughout the 1920s and -30s was the
sinister figure of ‘Pockmarked’ Huang Jinrong. Almost singlehandedly, Huang
organised the corruption of the French Concession police force into a smoothly-oiled
machine: opium dens and brothels paid the police a healthy cut of their profits
in return for the protection and non-interference of the Police; a cut of this
money went to the Concession premiers, who were quite happy to look the other
way and pocket the proceedings ... as long as the money kept coming.
Huang, like Du Yue-sheng had his
start in one of Shanghai’s notorious tongs, in his case the Red Gang of which
he became the leader. As part of a criminal master stroke, they paired up (some
say at the behest of Huang’s mistress with whom it was rumoured Du was having
an affair) and together they manipulated the drug traffic and vice of Shanghai
for mutual benefit, living large off the proceeds. Huang was rumoured to have
built and owned the Great World Amusement Centre on the border of the
Concession and the Settlement, a multiplex of drinking, dancing, restaurants,
ice-skating and opium-taking that further enhanced his economic capital.
INGRAM,
Isabel (1902 - 1988)
Along
with Reginald Johnston, Isabel Ingram was one of only two foreigners
allowed within the circle of the Ching Dynasty in its final days. The daughter
of missionary parents, she was born in Peking and attended Wellesley College in
the United States before returning to China in 1922 to become the tutor of the
Empress ‘Elizabeth’ Wan Rong, the Emperor Pu Yi’s first wife. After the
expulsion of the Emperor from the Purple Forbidden City she left to travel the
world and wrote, during this time, several scholarly papers on China for the Pennsylvania Museum Bulletin.
JOHNSTON,
Reginald (1874 - 1938)
Born in Edinburgh, Johnston joined the Foreign
Service in 1898 and was initially sent to Hong Kong, after which he was
despatched to the British leased territories in Weihaiwei in Shantung in 1906.
In 1919 he was appointed tutor to the Dragon Emperor, Pu Yi, who enjoyed
status as a non-sovereign monarch within the Purple Forbidden City in Peking.
Along with Isabelle Ingram he was one of only two foreigners to have
dwelled within the inner circle of the Ching Dynasty. He remained in touch with
the Emperor for many years afterwards, despite the embarrassment this connexion
caused after Pu Yi became the puppet ruler of the Japanese state of Manchukuo.
After Pu Yi was ousted from the Purple Forbidden
City in 1924, Johnston worked for the British China Indemnity Commission until
his appointment in 1927 to the governorship of Weihaiwei. He stayed there until
the territory’s return to Chinese authority in 1930, at which point he returned
to Britain, taking up a professorship in Chinese at the University of London, a
position which he did not enjoy and from which he retired in 1937. He acquired
an island in a Scottish loch on which he built a Chinese garden and died
shortly thereafter in Edinburgh. His 1934 book, Twilight in the Forbidden City, was the inspiration for Bernardo
Bertolucci’s film, The Last Emperor.
KEARNEY,
‘Peg-Leg’
“Strictly speaking, I am
only half American”
-‘Peg-Leg’ Kearney
An ex-arms salesman and, according to his own
account, a former admiral in the Chilean navy, ‘Peg-Leg’ Kearney was a
notorious gun-runner in Shanghai during the ‘20s and early ‘30s. He gained his
nickname due to the fact that he had had both legs amputated and replaced with
wooden ones, thus the wry quote above. Working with General ‘One-Arm’ Sutton, he conducted all his business transactions from a rickshaw. Along with
his economic activities, he also took the time to found a local branch of the
Ku Klux Klan known as the ‘San-K’.
KUNG
Hsiang-hsi (“H. H. Kung”) (1881 – 1967)
Kung Hsiang-hsi, a self-confessed 75th
generation direct descendant of Confucius, was educated at Oberlin and Yale and
became an important supporter of the Chinese Nationalist movement. His first
appointment after the establishment of the ROC was as Minister of Industry and
Commerce from 1928 to 1931; after this he joined the Central Executive
Committee of the Kuomintang. In 1933 he became the Minister for Finance and the
Governor of the Bank of China, positions which he held until 1945. His career
is littered with episodes displaying a questionable lack of judgement, leading
to economic chaos throughout his tenure. During this time he married Soong
Ai-ling following in the footsteps of both Sun Yat-sen and Generalissimo
Chiang Kai-shek in marrying into this influential family. He retired in
1945 and then went to live in the United States in 1949 after the fall of the
Nationalist government.
Lao
che (F)
An ex-comprador
gone bad, Lao Che is the quintessential Shanghai gangster, owner of several
Frenchtown nightspots and a successful air-freight company. With his two sons,
Kao Han and Chen, and a gang of well-armed hoodlums, he wheels and deals the night
away, to the tunes of Busby-Berkeley
cabaret shows.
Unknown to many, Lao Che has a mystical
side to his nature: he is proud of his Manchu roots and reveres his ancestors
deeply. To this end he has set out to collect artefacts and treasures connected
to the Ching Dynasty, obtaining them through trade, purchase or brute force,
whichever he feels best suits the occasion. To date, it is rumoured that he
possesses the ‘Eye of the Peacock’, a fabulous diamond, and is said to be on
the trail of the remains of the first Manchu leader, the divinely-appointed Nurhaci.
LITVANOFF,
Victoria (b. circa. 1893)
Victoria Litvanoff (aka Madame Ganette,
Victoria Seou, Madame Dafin Desmond, or Dauphine Desmond) was a heavy-set,
dark-haired woman of White Russian extraction. She arrived in China after the
death of her third husband: her first husband died on the Eastern Front during
World War One; her second, a Russian baron, was killed in the Russian
Revolution; the third, a Japanese Army captain, was killed in the Japanese
earthquake of 1923. She has lived all over China and Manchuria and moved to
Shanghai upon marrying her fourth husband, Nikolas Nikolayevitch Litvanoff, a
White Russian working as an electrical contractor. Victoria was in her forties
during the 1920s but she contrived to look much older.
Victoria Litvanoff posed as a
clairvoyant, working in a subdivided office which she shared with a Chinese
doctor named Liu Ding on Nanking Road. Her space in these premises was
decorated with curtains and various occult paraphernalia including a human
skull and crossed leg bones. Practicing clairvoyancy was illegal under
Settlement law but since she was a White Russian, she could not be tried under this
jurisdiction; there was no equivalent law under Chinese jurisdiction. When not
reading tea leaves, Mrs Litvanoff performed as an escapologist in local
theatres, but her stagecraft was lacklustre at best.
A more lucrative business for Mrs Litvanoff
was the blackmailing of her clients through the information she extracted
during her ‘séances’; as well, she did good business in kidnapping white women
who came to her and selling them to brothels. She also ran several brothels
herself in the French Concession before she missed a sizable payment to Huang
Jinrong and was shut down. She was wanted by both Settlement and
Concession police but was canny enough to jump from jurisdiction to
jurisdiction and slip through the tightening legal noose.
During one escape from the Concession
area, she fell down a flight of stairs and broke her hip; this left her with a
pronounced limp. During her recovery from this injury, she stayed at her
hideout in the Western Badlands: this house was on a side street under Chinese
jurisdiction but with one side facing the Municipality road. Victoria and her
husband rented it from Settlement owners by paying two month’s rent and paid
nothing thereafter: the location of the hideout meant that no-one could do
anything to evict them.
In 1928 having started another brothel,
Nikolas started an affair with one of the brothel girls and split from Mrs
Litvanoff. She initially tried to commit suicide but then decided to gain
revenge by reporting the couple to the police: the police were in no way
prepared to take her seriously. Nikolas in turn accused Victoria of being a
Bolshevik spy by means of an anonymous letter, a trumped-up charge that the
various police forces simply added to the pile of Victoria Litvanoff’s crimes.
Despite the outrageous instances of her
life recorded here, Victoria Litvanoff and her husband were actual people
living in Shanghai. They provide a good instance of the type of legal dance
that most criminals led at this time.
MAO Tse-tung (later MAO
Zhedong) (1893 – 1976)
Mao is perhaps one of the most
controversial political figures of China’s history, if not the most controversial. From 1927 through to 1949 he led the Communist Party of China (CPC) against
the Kuomintang in the Chinese Civil War,
finally achieving victory and ousting Chiang Kai-shek and the
Nationalist Party. After taking control of the country he then began a
systematic denigration and despoliation of the country and people, leading to
the deaths of tens of millions of citizens, one of the highest peace-time death
tolls the world has ever known.
While it is unquestioned that Mao
recreated China as a great world power, his half-baked socio-economic policies
(The Great Leap Forward, The Cultural Revolution) effectively
crippled his country repeatedly, forcing other leaders such as Deng Xiaoping to
step in and fix things. This inevitably led Mao to become paranoid about his
advisors’ intentions and to exile, kill or imprison them. Coupled with the
ruthless bloody-mindedness of his wife, Jiang Ching, aka ‘Madame Mao’, they
wreaked havoc in a country completely shut off from the scrutiny of the outside
world.
Mao’s tactical nous in the Chinese Civil War is generally upheld,
but equally, if Chiang Kai-shek hadn’t been distracted by the Second Sino-Japanese War, World War Two and the international
posturing in Central Asia, the outcome might well have been very different. In
the latter period of his rule, Mao faded into the background leaving others to
carry out his instructions; he died in 1976 leaving the Party in disarray. No-one
questions his abilities as a poet and calligrapher.
PLOWRIGHT,
Frederick Seddon, BSc (F) (c.1898 – 1953)
A well-known English photographer,
cinematographer and adventurer, Plowright’s photographs of largely unexplored territories across the
planet are world famous and his film of Francis Luttrell’s major earth-boring
explorations in Nevada in 1929 – To the
Ends of the Earth – forms part of the collection of the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York.
This last adventure was one of several – including von Hagenbeck’s mapping of
the Quartz Mountains in Outer Mongolia and The
Great Northern Expedition of 1933 under Scarsdale - during which he almost
lost his life. He certainly lost his sanity after this last sojourn.
A self-confessed dabbler in the more
outré areas of the sciences to which his degree gave him access, Plowright
settled upon photography as a rewarding outlet for his imaginative nature. In
1931 at the height of his fame he was contacted by Clark Ashton Scarsdale and
invited to embark upon The Great Northern
Expedition along with three others. The destination of this adventure was
not well-publicised and was deliberately falsified as an attempt upon the North
Pole; from Plowright’s writings it is now generally assumed to have been an
assault upon regions in Western China or Mongolia. Plowright was the apparent
sole survivor of this endeavour, having been discovered months later in the
sick-bay of a P&O liner in the Bay of Biscay with only a handful of his
personal effects to identify him. Plagued by frequent bouts of ill health thereafter,
Plowright dwindled in the care of friends, finally being consigned to an asylum
in Surrey where he succumbed in 1953.
Pu
Yi, ‘Mr Henry’, Last Emperor of China; Emperor of Manchukuo (1906 – 1968)
“Little Pu Yi, I have
decided that you will be the new lord of ten thousand years. You will be the
Son of Heaven.”
-Tsai-i, Dowager Empress
Pu Yi was the last Emperor of China, appointed by
the Empress Dowager Tsai-i, her last political manipulation before her death in
1908. Pu Yi was only two years old, the nephew of the previous emperor, at the
time of his ascension to the Dragon Throne. As the Manchu imperialist structure
self-destructed around him, lost inside the Purple Forbidden City, he was only
fated to ‘rule’ for three years.
The terms of the surrender after the Chinese
Revolution led by Sun Yat-sen, was such that Pu Yi was allowed to remain at
large within the Purple Forbidden City with a semblance of the old court
structures around him, complete with eunuchs and the wives and consorts of his
predecessor. He grew up learning the Chinese classics and the new Republican
Government engaged the services of Reginald Johnston to provide him with
a modern education. He took the English name ‘Henry’ but never learnt to speak
English. In 1923, even this pretence of rulership was too much for the new
government and Pu Yi was evicted from the Purple Forbidden City. He relocated
to the Japanese Concession in Tientsing.
The Japanese manipulated Pu Yi with offers of a new
title and, in 1932, set him up as leader of the puppet state of Manchukuo,
their name for the newly-invaded state of Manchuria. In 1934 they crowned him
Emperor of this, his ancestral homeland. However, the gifts they offered were
bitter fruit and in 1945, after the Japanese were defeated in World War Two, Pu Yi was imprisoned by
the invading Russian Army until 1950.
After this he was transferred to a Chinese prison
for almost ten years, under Communist control. He was released and spent the
last eight years of his life as a librarian and gardener. During the mid ‘60s
he was summoned for a private interview with Mao Tse-tung but nothing is
known of their conversation.
RUAN Lingyu (1910 – 1935)
“Gossip is a fearful thing.”
-Ruan Lingyu, her suicide
note
Born in Shanghai
in 1910 of Cantonese ancestry, Ruan Ling-yu was perhaps the greatest tragedienne produced by China in its
history of film-making, able to plumb depths of tragedy and transfer them to
the screen like no other. And she had plenty of tragedy in her life to inform
her skills: her father died when she was six years old and her mother abandoned
her in the city a year later.
She began
acting in plays at her school and made her first film at the tender age of 17.
She spent almost the entire following decade in the movie business, garnering a
reputation for being the greatest tragic heroine of the Chinese cinema of all
time. Amongst the two dozen or so movies she made, the standout films include Love and Honour, Night in the City and Three
Modern Girls.
She committed
suicide at just 25 years of age on March 8th, 1935 by taking an
overdose of sleeping pills. Her funeral procession on March 14th was
witnessed by tens of thousands of Shanghainese who lined the roads to see her
coffin pass.
SASSOON,
Sir Victor, ‘The Lame Sassoon’, (1881 - 1961)
“There is only one race
greater than the Jews, and that is the Derby.”
-Sir Victor Sassoon.
Great grandson of David Sassoon, Sir
Victor parlayed the family’s opium wealth into property speculation in the late
1920s and almost single-handedly revitalised the building industry in the city.
Over the next decade the skyline changed dramatically as skyscrapers rose
steadily from the Bund. Sir Victor’s residence was the Cathay Hotel, the
penthouse apartment of which was a green-lit pyramid with 360° views of the Bund
and the surrounding city and lined in oak panels like an English gentlemen’s
club. He was famous for holding extravagant parties here well into the night.
With the success of the Cathay Hotel,
Sassoon consolidated his good fortune by building other hotels and apartment
complexes, such as the Hotel Metropole, Hamilton House, Grosvenor House, Cathay
Mansions and Embankment Mansions, at one time the largest single building on
the coast of China. Apart from hotels his other passion in life was horse-racing
and his stud, the Woodditton in Cambridgeshire, boasted a series of remarkable
performances in its time.
Throughout his life, Sassoon walked with
two canes, a result of an injury sustained during World War One in which he served with the Royal Flying Corps. In later life he retired to Nassau in the
Bahamas, converted to Buddhism and married his long-time American nurse,
‘Barnsie’. The Sassoon Baronetcy of
Bombay, his official title, became extinct after his death.
Other famous members of the Sassoon
Dynasty include Siegfried Sassoon the World War One poet; Sir Phillip Sassoon,
Parliamentary Private Secretary to Prime Minister Lloyd George; and Vidal
Sassoon, the famous hairstylist of the 1960s.
*****
The
Soong Dynasty
“They’re all thieves, every
damn’ one of them”
-President Truman
From humble beginnings, the Soong family
rose to become the single most influential family in Shanghai, with
ramifications across the globe in the area of politics and economics. Their
true history has only recently been recorded, as the layers of scandal and intrigue
slowly peel away. With a couple of notable exceptions, they were notorious in
their corruption and their links to underworld crime – a true Shanghai legend.
SOONG,
Charles Jones (HAN Jiaozhun) (1866 - 1918)
Han Jiaozhun was born of Hakka descent on
the island of Hainan in Canton. At the age of eight he began working with his
extended family in the local chiu chao
brotherhood, sailing as far away as Indonesia for the purposes of trade and a
little piracy on the side. At nine years of age, he was adopted out to an uncle
who owned a tea dealership in Boston. Tiring of this life by the age of twelve,
he stowed away on a steam ship and was discovered by the captain who signed him
up as a cabin boy and named him ‘Charles Sun’ (from Jiaozhun).
With assistance from his captain, Charlie
(as he became known) converted to Christianity under the Methodist sect and won
a position to study theology at Trinity College (now Duke University). After
graduating from Vanderbilt University in 1885 he returned to Shanghai as a
Methodist missionary. Tensions with his Christian sponsors nagged at him from
the start: they insisted that he be put to work in areas where no white
preacher would venture, but this put him at odds with the Chinese who
distrusted this ‘pretend white man’. Charlie finally struck out on his own and
set up a business printing Bibles.
But Bibles were not his entire stock in
trade; early on in his Shanghai career and with a growing family, Charlie, used
his chiu chao connexions to join the
local triad, the ‘Three Heavenly Harmonies’. This organisation had strong links
to the notorious Red Gang of Shanghai and while working for them Charlie met
Sun Yat-sen who was also a member and who had fled trouble in Canton. Together they
decided to work towards Sun’s goal of ousting the Manchu overlords. They began
printing anti-Imperialist propaganda alongside scripture.
Charlie soon diversified: he became a comprador in a successful noodle factory
and began manufacturing cotton products and cigarettes. By this time he had
adopted the family name ‘Soong’ which he had appropriated from the dynastic
family of the same name, albeit with a different spelling. In time, Charlie
became Secretary for the Kuomintang
and Sun Yat-sen’s greatest supporter and financial provider.
Charlie’s chickens came home to roost,
however. A rift between Charlie and Sun occurred when the latter asked to marry
Charlie’s second daughter, Ching-ling. Charlie refused and their
relationship cooled. When Ching-ling and Sun eloped, Charlie walked away from
his involvement with Sun and his Revolutionary efforts. Not long afterwards,
Charlie died of suspected stomach cancer; this is now regarded as a euphemism
to hide the fact that he was poisoned, most likely by triad opponents.
NI
Kwei-tseng, Madam SOONG, ‘Mammy’ (1868 – 1931)
The daughter of Episcopalian Chinese
converts, ‘Mammy’ Soong was a perfect match for Charlie Soong. One of
three daughters, their mother had attempted to bind their feet at birth; Kwei-tseng
developed a bad fever as a result and had to be excused from the process. With
her marriage prospects thus reduced, her father opted to educate her instead.
After meeting Charlie at a prayer gathering soon after his return to Shanghai,
a marriage was quickly arranged between them: what better answer than to wed
the ‘unmarriageable Chinese girl’ to the ‘pretend white man’?
Ni Kwei-tseng remained much in the
background during the growth of her family and its machinations, but she was a
determined influence in all their lives. She was a staunch Christian and
forbade her children from dancing or playing cards. She held the whip hand over
Chiang Kai-shek in his attempt to marry Soong May-ling, refusing
to allow him to marry her unless he converted from his Buddhist faith (and shed
himself of his other wives and concubines). Her increasingly stern aspect was
most likely the result of her growing awareness of her husband’s links to crime
and the willingness of her children to partake of the same iniquity.
SOONG,
Ai-ling (or ‘Eling’), Madam KUNG, ‘Nancy’ (1890 – 1973)
“One loved money, one loved
power and one loved China”
-Modern Chinese saying,
referring to the Soong sisters
The three Soong daughters were a
remarkable trio, notable for their ambition and their strong wills. Ai-ling is
the one referred to in the above quote as the lover of money and she is the
most shadowy and disturbing of the three.
By far the most homely of the three
girls, Ai-ling showed an uncanny aptitude for finance from a young age. She
would sit quietly in Charlie’s offices and watch as he conducted deals
with his business partners. Her first position after leaving school was to work
as Sun Yat-sen’s secretary. She left this position after meeting H. H. Kung whom she later married. As a financial partnership, this arrangement
went from strength to strength.
At this time Du Yue-sheng had
consolidated his hold of the Shanghai underworld and was a force with which to
be reckoned. Ai-ling took the opportunity to introduce her new husband to him
and they became an integral link in his power base. In her position as H. H.
Kung’s wife she listened in on many high level economic discussions and used
this knowledge to influence the stock exchange, making huge profits for herself
in return. She is known to have engineered the deaths of many rivals and opponents,
earning the sobriquet of ‘the most hated woman in China’.
During the Second World War while H. H. Kung desperately attempted to prop up
the failing Chinese economy by printing paper money, Ai-ling was put in charge
of a 30,000-strong force of soldiers whose role was to replace existing silver
currency with the worthless paper cash. At one time she attempted to pay her
and her husband’s yearly protection fee to Du Yue-sheng with this money and
they were sent a gaudy coffin along with a complete troupe of mourners. ‘Correct’
payment was made shortly thereafter.
The Kung’s other ‘triumph’ was the
arranged marriage of Chiang Kai-shek to Soong May-ling. In this
they had to overcome the objections of Madam Soong but eventually they
were successful. For their efforts they were placed in high positions within
the Kuomintang and solidified the Green Gang’s connexions both to the
government and to the social elite of Shanghai.
Ai-ling fled to America in 1949 taking a
huge fortune with her, largely stolen from the copious amounts of foreign aid
sent to China from the US. She died in New York at the age of 83.
SOONG,
Ch’ing-ling, Madame SUN Yat-sen, ‘Rosamond’ (1893 – 1981)
In each family there is the inevitable
black sheep: Ching-ling is notable for being the only Soong child who didn’t delve in the corrupt underworld
of Shanghai to get ahead. A romantic and an idealist from an early age,
Ching-ling fervently followed the efforts of Sun Yat-sen in his attempts to
throw off the shackles of Imperialism. When the opportunity came to marry him –
even against her father’s wishes – she leapt at the chance. After his death in
1925, she carried on his teachings and strove to create a new Chinese Republic.
Unfortunately, she was hampered by the
efforts of her brother-in-law, Chiang Kai-shek, whose obsession with
Communist elements within the Kuomintang whittled away her comrades and support
base. But for their common family ties, it is probable that Chiang would have
eliminated Ching-ling as well, but the bonds of sisterhood tied his hands. This
being said, Ching-ling was forced into exile on several occasions, studying in
Moscow (where she found the prevailing Communism not to her liking) and also in
Berlin. She railed against the abuses of power which she saw taking place in
her homeland and was scathing about her family’s involvement in them.
After Mao’s rise to power, she was
appointed Vice Chairman of the People’s Republic of China, second only to Mao
himself. Later on, from 1968 to 1972, she became Co-chairman of the Republic
and thus the third non-royal woman to become the Chinese head of State, after
her sister May-ling and Jiang Ching, leader of the Gang of Four and
Director of the Cultural Revolution.
In 1981 she briefly became the Chinese President.
It is of interest to note that Ching-ling
never became a member of the Communist Party (despite rumours of a deathbed
‘conversion’ during which she could not have been sensible). Throughout her
life she was a fervent believer in a democratic Chinese Republic, even moreso
than its founder, Sun Yat-sen. While criticised by some for not speaking out enough
against the excesses of the Communist regime, she remains an ideological beacon
for the Chinese people.
SOONG,
T. V. (Tse-ven) ‘Paul’ (1894 – 1971)
Charlie Soong’s first-born son, T.
V., like all of his siblings, was sent to America for his education. He
graduated from Harvard and received a PhD in Economics from Columbia
University. Returning to China he assumed the position of Governor of the
Central Bank of China under the Kuomintang. He later became the Minister of
Finance from 1928 to 1931, and again from 1932 to 1933. He also served as
Minister for Foreign Affairs (1942-5) and president of the Executive Yuan,
1945-7). He also headed the Chinese delegation on International Organisation,
later the United Nations, in April
1945.
A hallmark of all T. V.’s endeavours
throughout this period, is a great striving to reform the economic climate of
China in tandem with major head-butting with his family. The Kungs and
the Chiangs often refused to let such idealism get in the way of their
individual quests for money and power and periodically pulled the rug out from
under him; Chiang Kai-shek is known to have slapped T. V.’s face in public
during a particularly hysterical argument. In the end, T. V. bowed to their
Machiavellian scheming and became little more than a gofer, ready to jump in
and do whatever was required of him.
T. V. was instrumental in setting up an
American Volunteer Flying Group – ‘The Flying Tigers’ - out of Shanghai under
ace Claire Chennault, a unit which was later incorporated into the US Air
Force. The first wave of fighter planes for this group was provided by Du
Yue-sheng out of his own pocket. The resources of the Green Gang also
ensured that T. V. was the first to see correspondence – including US State
Department memos – before anyone else. As a result, T. V. was listed at one
time as the richest man on Earth, valued at over a billion dollars in personal
wealth.
After the defeat of the Nationalist
forces T. V. moved to New York and remained an influential member of the China
Lobby. During his high-flying career with the Kuomintang he managed to raise
3.8 billion dollars of American aid for China and embezzled more than half of
it, salting it away in the pockets of himself and his brothers and sisters. While
on business in San Francisco in 1971, he choked on his meal and died of a
massive stroke.
SOONG,
May-ling, Madame CHIANG Kai-shek (1897 - 2003)
“Madame Chiang was a close
friend of the United States throughout her life, and especially during the
defining struggles of the last century. Generations of Americans will always
remember and respect her intelligence and strength of character.”
-George W. Bush
Soong May-ling was the youngest daughter
of Charlie Soong and Ni Kwei-tseng and the most headstrong. By
far the most highly-strung of the Soong offspring, she was plagued by screaming
nightmares as a child and by severe bouts of urticaria throughout her life,
resulting in painful rashes across her body whilst under stress. The most
spoilt child of the brood, she was called ‘Little Lantern’ in reference to her
plump form when young.
As she grew up, following her sisters to
school in Macon Georgia in the US, she became vivacious and quick-witted,
excelling in English which she spoke with a decided southern drawl. She rapidly
became the ‘public face’ of the Soongs and devoted her life to the management
of their image both in China and abroad. Marrying Chiang Kai-shek as
part of a delicate negotiation by her sister Ai-ling and H. H. Kung, she became his supporter and champion par excellence.
An instance of her public relations
skills can be seen in the famous photograph of herself, Chiang, Franklin D.
Roosevelt and Winston Churchill at the Cairo Summit in 1940: in the foreground
Chiang and FDR seem to be swapping an amusing anecdote; behind them, Madame
Chiang is laughing delightedly, seemingly in response to a dry quip from
Churchill. In fact, Chiang Kai-shek could not speak English and Churchill was
angered by the Chiang’s presence at the talks and refused to acknowledge them
at all. The photo opportunity was an elaborate staging, meant to convey a sense
of co-operation and ease amongst these world leaders. Madame Chiang worked
tirelessly to create the impression that Chiang Kai-shek was a world leader on
par with Roosevelt, Churchill and Stalin.
One of the most important weapons in her
arsenal was TIME publisher, Henry Luce, who had grown up in China, the child of
missionaries and who was ever after blinkered in regard to the true state of
things in that country, particularly about the Chiangs. He relentlessly
published glowing tributes to the Soongs and their efforts, sacking reporters
who dared to cast shadows on their lustre. May-ling appeared twice on the cover
of the magazine – once dubbed ‘The Dragon Lady’ – and featured often in lists
of the ‘10 Most Influential Women in the World’ throughout the 50s and 60s. The
Dragon Lady quip, meant to be a reference to Tsai-i, the Dowager Empress, had
unforeseen repercussions as Madame Chiang was caricatured as ‘The Dragon Lady’ in
the popular newspaper cartoon Terry and
the Pirates.
Politically, May-ling had a busy career.
She was Chiang Kai-shek’s interpreter and everything that went to him passed
through her. She formed the New Life Movement, dedicated to reforming China in
the wake of the ousting of the Imperial leadership and was a member of the
Legislative Yuan from 1930 to 1932; she took over from T. V. Soong as Secretary
General of the Aeronautical Affairs Commission and ran the ‘Flying Tigers’ from
1936 to 1938, when they were absorbed into the USAF; in 1945 she became a
member of the Executive Committee of the Kuomintang. Her influence and
involvement in all areas of Chinese government led Gen. Joseph Stilwell to
remark (and it was not kindly meant) that “she ought to be appointed Minister
of Defense”.
In 1943 she made a memorable trip to the
US and her presence drew crowds of up to 30,000, although often she was
elsewhere while her Chinese maid acted as a stand-in. She was petulant and
behaved like a spoilt rock star during most of this visit, but nevertheless
managed to successfully voice her appeal for assistance to China in the form of
foreign aid donations and she became the first Chinese national and the second
woman to address Congress. The funds generated by her speeches and articles as
well as the rallies she ‘attended’ were huge and were largely purloined by her
brother T. V. Soong.
In later life, after the Communist
takeover and Chiang’s philandering while in exile in Taiwan, Madame Chiang
assumed a prominent role by chairing committees in many high profile
international aid efforts, usually focussed on China. She ended her days in a
private apartment in Long Island, New York and, when news of her death was
broadcast, many people were surprised to find that she had still been alive.
SOONG,
T. L. (Tse-liang) (c.1898 - ?)
The younger two Soong children –
Tse-liang and Tse-an – were the most inscrutable. Born last and in the
period when Madame Soong’s stern character was asserting itself, these
two were reclusive and close-mouthed. Like the other children, they were
educated overseas and returned to Shanghai as wheeling, dealing financiers. Like
T. V., they were able to be moved about the economic playing board of
China according to the whims of Chiang Kai-shek, H. H. Kung and
Du Yue-sheng; unlike their older brother however, they lacked any
idealism in the area of economic reform for their homeland. What they lacked
here however, they made up for in loyalty to the Kuomintang and the Green Gang.
Not much is known about T. L., other than
that he fled to the US after the Communist takeover and became a New York
businessman. It is believed that he aided the Federal Treasury in the ‘50s but
that agency claims not to know about him at all.
SOONG,
T. A. (Tse-an) (c.1900 – 1969)
Like his brother T. L., T. A. was
a good soldier for the twin causes of the Kuomintang and its Green Gang engine.
At one time he was handed complete control of the National Salt Monopoly, a
tariff on this commodity which generated millions of Chinese dollars; an army
of soldiers dedicated to protecting this revenue was controlled by T. A.’s
wife.
Before the Communist takeover he
transferred himself and his wealth to Hong Kong, where he became the chairman
of the Bank of Canton until his death from apoplexy in 1969.
*****
SUTTON, General Francis Arthur ‘One-Arm’ (1884-1944)
A British gun-runner and adventurer,
Sutton organised the smuggling of weapons and other contraband into and out of
Shanghai throughout the ‘20s and early ‘30s, working mainly with the American
‘Peg-Leg’ Kearney. He lost a hand during the fighting at Gallipoli and
thus gained the nickname ‘One-Arm’. He began life as an engineer, building
railroads in Argentina and Mexico prior to World
War One; later, he spent time gold-mining in Siberia, during which he
became an advisor to several Chinese warlords, earning the rank of General in
the Chinese Army. He speculated heavily in railroad building in Canada but lost
everything in the Great Crash of
1929. Afterwards, he returned to China as a war correspondent in 1931 and began
exploring mining options in Korea, while running armaments on the side. His
golf clubs accompanied him everywhere he went, labelled as “Theodolite; Legs Of”. There are reports
of him running guns as late as 1941 from Shanghai to Chungking, shortly before
his expulsion by the Japanese. He fled to Hong Kong where he later died as a
prisoner of war.
*****
Nice job you've done here. Regards from France.
ReplyDeleteA presentation of fact and slanted opinion,... this was total bullshit. A great dis-service really.
ReplyDeleteI'm sorry you think so. I've tried simply to collate consensus opinion about these people from a range of period and later sources, and - necessarily - some points of view are going to be biased. So yes, this is a presentation of fact, along with some very slanted opinion. Still, in case you've missed the point here, this is a site devoted to roleplaying not historical fact (although the two tend to blur). You should probably be looking elsewhere for history, not a gaming blog.
DeleteCheers!