The Remarkable Life of Wong Chin Foo
USINFO | 2013-08-05 17:30

 
Wong Chin Foo Chronology
 
1839-1842
Britain provokes and wins First Opium War with China; forces the opening of five ports to foreign trade and missionary activity.
 
1847
Wong Chin Foo is born in Jimo, Shandong Province, China to a well-to-do family.
 
1850-1871
Taiping Rebellion is fought against the Qing Dynasty. Rebels gain control of much of southern China before being defeated.
 
1856-1860
Britain and France win Second Opium War and force more concessions from China, including opening of diplomatic missions and additional ports.
 
1860
Wong arrives with his father, in reduced circumstances, in Zhifu (now Yantai), Shandong, which opens to foreign commerce that year.
 
1861
Wong is taken in by Southern Baptist missionary Rev. J. Landrum Holmes and wife Sallie. Rev. Holmes is murdered soon afterward.
 
1862
Relocates to Dengzhou (now Penglai). 
 
1867
Baptized in Dengzhou. Accompanies Sallie Holmes to America.
 
1868
Studies at Columbian College Preparatory School, Washington, DC. Begins lecturing on Chinese culture.
 
1869-1870
Studies at Lewisburg Academy, Lewisburg, Pennsylvania. 
 
1870
Returns to China. 
 
1871
Marries Liu Yushan in Dengzhou.
 
1871-1872
Appointed interpreter in the Imperial Chinese Maritime Customs Service in Shanghai and then in Zhenjiang, Jiangsu Province. Excommunicated from the Shanghai Baptist church. 
 
1873
Son Wang Foo Sheng is born. 
 
Flees China after Qing government pursues him for revolutionary activities. 
 
Begins multi-year, cross-country lecture tour of the United States.
 
1874
Admitted to U.S. citizenship at Grand Rapids, Michigan.
 
Declares himself China’s first Confucian missionary to the United States.
 
A Manchu prince demands his extradition to China, but is rebuffed by the American chargé d’affaires in Beijing.
 
1877
Meets Madame Helena Petrovna Blavatsky, founder of the mystical Theosophical movement, and addresses members of her society in New York.
 
1879
Settles temporarily in Chicago. Enemies attack him and seek to have him kidnapped and deported. 
   
Cuts off hair queue and permanently adopts Western dress.
 
1880
Opens a tea shop in Bay City, Michigan. 
 
1882
The Chinese Exclusion Act, which establishes a 10-year moratorium on immigration of Chinese laborers and prohibits naturalization of Chinese, is signed into law.
 
1883
Publishes the  Chinese American, Manhattan’s first Chinese newspaper. Believed to be the first time the term is used.
 
Charges a fellow Chinese with attempting to assassinate him and causes his arrest. He, in turn, is sued for criminal libel.
 
Challenges San Francisco anti-Chinese demagogue Denis Kearney to a duel.
 
1884
Introduces Americans to “chop suey” for the first time in an article in the Brooklyn Daily Eagle.
 
Convenes first meeting of “naturalized Chinamen” in New York - America’s first gathering of Chinese-American voters.
 
1887
Publishes essay, “Why Am I A Heathen?” in  North American Review, causing a firestorm of criticism and spurring a rebuttal.
 
Travels to Canada and protests payment of a $50 head tax. 
 
Bests Denis Kearney in face-to-face debate in New York.
 
1888
Threatens to sue the Canadian government for  $25,000.
 
Publishes the  New York Chinese Weekly News, an illustrated weekly. 
 
Publishes “The Chinese in New York” in  Cosmopolitan magazine.
 
President Grover Cleveland signs the Scott Act, banning entry of Chinese laborers and prohibiting those in America from returning if they depart.
 
Establishes the Chinese Citizens’ Union in New York City.
 
1891
Refused a U.S. passport, despite his naturalization papers. 
 
Acquitted of trumped up  charges of illegal voter registration.
 
1892
U.S. Congress passes the Geary Act, which extends the Chinese Exclusion Act for 10 years and requires Chinese to register under penalty of imprisonment and deportation.
 
Establishes the Chinese Equal Rights League to demand repeal of portions of the Geary Act.  
 
1893
 
Testifies before the U.S. Congress in favor of a bill to repeal the citizenship portion of the Geary Act. Believed to be the first instance of a Chinese testifying before the Congress.
 
Publishes the  Illustrated Chinese Weekly News, a.k.a. the  Chinese American, in Chicago with the goal of “Americanizing” local Chinese.
 
Appointed Chinese Inspector in New York.
 
1895
Briefly goes into the herbal medicine business in Atlanta.
 
1896
 
Holds inaugural meeting of the American Liberty Party, whose platform seeks enfranchisement of “Americanized” Chinese.
 
Publishes first edition of the semi-monthly Chinese News in Chicago. 
 
Probably meets Dr. Sun Yat-sen in Chicago.
 
Dr. Sun, released from incarceration in London, releases letter from Wong confirming support for his movement in America.
 
Announces that Chicago is to become headquarters of a Chinese revolutionary junta.
 
Inaugurates short-lived Temple of Confucius in Chicago.
 
1897
 
Named Commissioner of Chinese Exhibits for the Trans-Mississippi International Exposition in Omaha, Nebraska.
 
Organizes mass meeting in Chicago to push for citizenship rights for "Americanized" Chinese.
 
1898
 
Departs the U.S. for Hong Kong.
 
Returns to China for family reunion. Dies of heart failure in Weihai, Shandong.

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