Wang Zhengting
Wang Zhengting (Chinese: 王正廷; pinyin: Wáng Zhèngtíng; Wade–Giles: Wang2 Cheng4-t'ing2, known in English as Chengting Thomas Wang or C. T. Wang; 7 September 1882 – 21 May 1961) was a diplomat in the Republic of China (ROC). Wang was born in Fenghua, Zhejiang, and his father was an Anglican minister just outside Shanghai, where Wang attended mission schools before entering the preparatory school for the Peiyang University. After teaching in the Provincial High School in Changsha, Hunan. Wang studied in Tokyo, where he was secretary of the Chinese YMCA, then in 1907, went to the United States to study law at the University of Michigan. He soon transferred to Yale University, graduating in 1910 and being elected to Phi Beta Kappa. He returned to Shanghai in June, 1911, and took another position with the YMCA before being recruited to join the new Republican government in Beijing, then in Sun Yat-sen's opposition government in Canton.[1]
He represented the interim Canton government in China's delegation, headed by Lu Zhengxiang, at the Paris Peace Conference, 1919 after World War I.[2] He and V.K. Wellington Koo (Gu Weijun) played prominent roles in presenting the case for returning Shandong to China and in the decision not to sign the Treaty of Versailles because it stipulated the transfer of German rights in Shandong to Japan. He served as foreign minister, minister of finance, and acting premier for various short periods of time from 1924–1928, before serving as foreign minister until 1931. He also founded a Shanghai brokerage house; was chairman or board member of mining, cotton milling, and railroad companies; and was Chairman of the Far Eastern Olympics. As foreign minister, Wang negotiated a settlement with Japan over the Jinan Incident of 1928; with Soviet Russia over the Chinese Eastern Railway in Manchuria; treaties restoring Chinese territory in British Weihaiwei and French Tonkin; and tariff autonomy or commercial agreements with more than a dozen countries, including Japan.[3]
In spite of these successes in nationalist diplomacy, however, after the Mukden Incident of 1931, in which Japan seized control of China's Northwest provinces, student protestors blamed Wang for China's ineffective response. Wang was attacked and hospitalized, and withdrew from public office for a time. Wang was Ambassador to the United States 1936–38. In February 1938, he hosted a party at the Chinese Embassy in Washington DC which was attended by Yale Class of 1910 classmate Henry Roe Cloud (the first Native American to attend Yale). Cloud describes his reunion in detail and the letter is part of the Ravi D. Goel Collection on Henry Roe Cloud (MS 2008). Manuscripts and Archives, Yale University Library. (See also Yale Manuscripts and Archives April 2015 blog, "Party Diplomacy: The Ravi D. Goel Collection on Henry Roe Cloud."). He served in various minor government and party capacities during the war, but in 1949 stayed in Hong Kong rather than go to Taiwan with Chiang Kai-shek's government.[4]
References
- ↑ Howard Boorman, ed. Biographical Dictionary of Republican China Vol III (New York: Columbia University Press, 1970), pp. 362-363
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- ↑ Boorman, ed. Biographical Dictionary Vol III p. 363.
- ↑ Boorman, ed. Biographical Dictionary Vol III p. 364
Literature
- Stefan Huebner, Pan-Asian Sports and the Emergence of Modern Asia, 1913-1974. Singapore: NUS Press, 2016, chapter 1-3 (on Wang, modernization policy, Chinese nationalism, the YMCA, and sporting events).
Political offices | ||
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Preceded by | Premier of the Republic of China 1922–1923 |
Succeeded by Zhang Shaozeng |
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- Articles containing Chinese-language text
- Premiers of the Republic of China
- 1882 births
- 1961 deaths
- University of Michigan alumni
- Yale University alumni
- Republic of China politicians from Zhejiang
- Chinese Christians
- YMCA leaders
- Chinese Protestants
- Ambassadors of the Republic of China
- Ambassadors of China to the United States
- Politicians from Ningbo