SUI Shee, 18541911 (aged 57 years)

Name
/SUI/ Shee
Surname
SUI
Name suffix
Shee
Name
/WONG/ Shee
Surname
WONG
Name suffix
Shee
Birth
Marriage
Residence
Zhongshan, Guongdong, China
Latitude: 22.5222 Longitude: 113.37
Event
California Gold Rush
from January 24, 1848 to 1855 (aged 1 year)
Note: Source citation: California Gold Rush Wikipedia
Chinese Conflicts
Taiping Rebellion
from December 1850 to August 1864 (aged 10 years)
Note: Source citation: Taiping Rebellion Wikipedia
Note: The bloodiest civil war in history with upwards to 70 million killed, between the Qing empire and a theocratic Christian based society. The Qing had to seek help from France and the United Kingdom. This weakened the central Qing government and saw the rise of warlords.
Chinese Conflicts
Punti–Hakka Clan Wars
1855 (aged 1 year)
Note: Source citation: Hakka Punti Clan Wars Wikipedia
Chinese Conflicts
Red Turban Rebellion
from 1854 to 1856 (aged 2 years)
Note: Source citation: Red Turban Rebellions Wikipedia
15th President of the United States
James Buchanan
March 4, 1857 (aged 3 years)
Chinese Conflicts
Second Opium War
from October 8, 1856 to October 24, 1860 (aged 6 years)
Note: The contestants were the Qing empire against a consortium of American and European powers. Again the Qing were defeated and lost port cities to the control of the western powers.
Note: Source citation: Second Opium War Wikipedia
16th President of the United States
Abraham Lincoln
March 4, 1861 (aged 7 years)
17th President of the United States
Andrew Johnson
April 15, 1865 (aged 11 years)
18th President of the United States
Ulysses S Grant
March 4, 1869 (aged 15 years)
Event
First transcontinental railroad
from 1863 to May 10, 1869 (aged 15 years)
19th President of the United States
Rutherford B Hayes
March 4, 1877 (aged 23 years)
Birth of a son
Address: NARA 1906: Sun Mun Tung 申明亭 village
Village Database:
中興鄉 Chung Hing Heung
Market(s) 沙溪 Sar Kai Shā Qī saa1 kai1
Note: another birthday
20th President of the United States
James A Garfield
March 4, 1881 (aged 27 years)
21st President of the United States
Chester A Arthur
September 19, 1881 (aged 27 years)
22nd President of the United States
Grover Cleveland
March 4, 1885 (aged 31 years)
Birth of a son
about 1888 (aged 34 years)
23rd President of the United States
Benjamin Harrison
March 4, 1889 (aged 35 years)
Birth of a daughter
1893 (aged 39 years)
24th President of the United States
Grover Cleveland
March 4, 1893 (aged 39 years)
Chinese Conflicts
First Sino-Japanese War
from July 25, 1894 to April 17, 1895 (aged 41 years)
Note: Source citation: First Sino Japanese War Wikipedia
Note: This conflict represented failure of the Qing dynasty's military modernization versus Imperial Japan Meiji Restoration's military advancement. The result was ceding of Taiwan and Korea to Japan.
25th President of the United States
William McKinley
March 4, 1897 (aged 43 years)
Chinese Conflicts
Boxer Rebellion
from November 2, 1899 to September 7, 1901 (aged 47 years)
Note: Source citation: Boxer Rebellion Wikipedia
Note: An anti-foreigner rebellion of Chinese peasants and eventually the Qing empire against a consortium of western and Japanese troops.
26th President of the United States
Theodore Roosevelt
September 14, 1901 (aged 47 years)
Death of a brother
1905 (aged 51 years)
Birth of a granddaughter
1905 (aged 51 years)
Chinese American Events
1906 San Francisco earthquake
April 18, 1906 (aged 52 years)
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 55 years)
Death of a granddaughter
about 1910 (aged 56 years)
Birth of a grandson
between September 11, 1910 and January 1, 1912 (9 months after death)
Zhongshan, China
Latitude: 22.52 Longitude: 113.3708
Note: 11 SEP 1910

11 SEP 1910
01 JAN 1912

China Government/Dynasties
Qing or Ching or Manchu Dynasty
from 1636 to 1912 (0 after death)
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
Tong Wars
from 1800 to 1930 (18 years after death)
Note: Source citation: Tong Wars Wikipedia
Note: These started as conflicts between clans and sensationalized by American media as gang and turf urban warfare.
Chinese American Events
Chinese Exclusion Act
from May 9, 1882 to 1943 (31 years after death)
Note: An official act legalizing discrimination against Chinese in the United States. Poster: 'Chinese Must Go'.
Note: Source citation: Chinese Exclusion Act Wikipedia
Death
about April 1911 (aged 57 years)
Family with parents
brother
brother
Private
brother
Private
herself
Family with YOUNG ChawSun
husband
YOUNG ChawSun 楊楚生 1906
楚生
18541913
Birth: 1854申明亭, 香山, 广东, China
Death: February 15, 1913
herself
Marriage MarriageChina
son
-7 years
son
YOUNG ShenWan 楊参雲 (1921)
18801948
Birth: September 11, 1880申明亭, 香山, 广东, China
Death: September 22, 1948Los Angeles, CA, United States
14 years
daughter
daughter
Birth
Name
Death