Raymond Young, 19051958 (aged 53 years)

Name
Raymond /Young/
Type of name
immigration name
Given names
Raymond
Surname
Young
Birth
Adoption
China Government/Dynasties
Qing or Ching or Manchu Dynasty
from 1636 to 1912 (aged 7 years)
Note: Source citation: Qing Dynasty Wikipedia
Note: 2nd foreign dynasty to rule China—Unlike the Mongols however, the Manchu adopted Chinese dress and customs. However, they did force men to wear the queue. Neo-Confucianism was made the official doctrine, demanding loyalty to the emperor, but Chinese culture was preserved and Chinese were excluded only from the very senior court positions. Increasing European trade causedforeign powers divide China into spheres of influence. The Boxer uprising caused the downfall of this last dynasty. source
Chinese American Events
1906 San Francisco earthquake
April 18, 1906 (aged 1 year)
Note: Public birth records were destroyed in the subsequent fire, which allowed a new opportunity for Chinese to claim American citizenship.
27th President of the United States
William Howard Taft
March 4, 1909 (aged 4 years)
28th President of the United States
Woodrow Wilson
March 4, 1913 (aged 8 years)
Birth of a brother
August 25, 1918 (aged 13 years)
Global conflict
World War I
from July 28, 1914 to November 11, 1918 (aged 13 years)
Note: Source citation: World War One Wikipedia
29th President of the United States
Warren G Harding
March 4, 1921 (aged 16 years)
30th President of the United States
Calvin Coolidge
August 2, 1923 (aged 18 years)
31st President of the United States
Herbert Hoover
March 4, 1929 (aged 24 years)
Chinese American Events
Tong Wars
from 1800 to 1930 (aged 25 years)
Note: Source citation: Tong Wars Wikipedia
Note: These started as conflicts between clans and sensationalized by American media as gang and turf urban warfare.
Economic
1929 Great Depression
from 1929 to 1930 (aged 25 years)
Note: Source citation: Great Depression Wikipedia
Note: Worldwide economic downturn.
Birth of a brother
July 21, 1931 (aged 26 years)
Chinese Conflicts
Mukden Incident
from September 18, 1931 to February 18, 1932 (aged 27 years)
Note: Source citation: Mukden Incident Wikipedia
Note: Imperial Japan starts to subjugate Manchuria for natural resources and living space. Japan wanted a Great Britan like empire calling it the Greater East Asia Co-Prosperity Sphere. The Japan's defeat to the Soviet during the Battles of Khalkhin Gol set the stage for the Japan's Pearl Harbor attack and war with the United States.
32nd President of the United States
Franklin D Roosevelt
March 4, 1933 (aged 28 years)
Chinese American Events
Chinese Exclusion Act
from May 9, 1882 to 1943 (aged 38 years)
Note: An official act legalizing discrimination against Chinese in the United States. Poster: 'Chinese Must Go'.
Note: Source citation: Chinese Exclusion Act Wikipedia
33rd President of the United States
Harry S Truman
April 12, 1945 (aged 40 years)
Chinese Conflicts
Second Sino-Japanese War
from July 7, 1937 to September 9, 1945 (aged 40 years)
Note: Some historians consider this the true start of World War Two. Japan's attempt to conquer China, after subjugating Manchukuo.
China Government/Dynasties
Republic of China
from 1912 to 1949 (aged 44 years)
Note: Source citation: Republic of China Wikipedia
China Government/Dynasties
People's Republic of China
1949 (aged 44 years)
Chinese American Events
McCarthyism
from 1940 to 1950 (aged 45 years)
Note: Source citation: McCarthyism Wikipedia
Note: An example of memes and slogans during this time was 'better dead than red' and the Domino theory
World Conflict
Attack on Pearl Harbor
from December 7, 1941 (aged 36 years)
Note: Source citation: Attack on Pearl Harbor Wikipedia
Note: The date the United States enters WW2.
Global Conflict
World War II
from September 1, 1939 to September 2, 1945 (aged 40 years)
Note: Source citation: World War Two Wikipedia
Note: Western world's time period for World War II.
Chinese American Events
Internment of Japanese Americans
from February 19, 1942 to March 20, 1946 (aged 41 years)
Note: Another example of anti-Asian sentiment in the United States.
Chinese Conflicts
Chinese Communist/Kuomintang Civil War
from August 10, 1945 to December 7, 1949 (aged 44 years)
Note: This represented the defeat and withdrawal of the Kuomintang to Taiwan by Mao Zedong
34th President of the United States
Dwight D Eisenhower
January 20, 1953 (aged 48 years)
Chinese American Conflicts
Korean War
from June 25, 1950 to July 27, 1953 (aged 48 years)
Note: Source citation: Korean War Wikipedia
American Conflicts
Vietnam War
from November 1, 1955 to April 30, 1975 (on the date of death)
Note: Source citation: Vietnam_War Wikipedia
Chinese Events
Cultural Revolution
from 1949 to 1976 (17 years after death)
Note: The wanton distruction of Chinese clan genealogy documents along with cultural relics by the Red Guards made tracing Chinese Americans family heritage even harder. This represented Mao Zedong' s attempt to regain local control of China.
Note: Source citation: Cultural Revolution Wikipedia
American INS program
Chinese Confession Program
from 1956 to 1965 (6 years after death)
Note: A program of the Immigration and Naturalization Service allowing reconciliation of the illegal entry status of paper sons. This caused much fear and distrust among the Chinese American population. The number of participants were less than initially predicted.
Death of a father
Death of a mother
Death of a father
Death of a father
Death of a mother
Death
June 28, 1958 (aged 53 years)
Family with parents
father
mother
himself
14 years
younger brother
13 years
younger brother
younger brother
Private
Family with adoptive parents
adoptive-father
adoptive-mother
sister
Private
brother
sister
himself
Birth
Death