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Mei Yiqi
Mei Yiqi or Mei Yi-chi (Chinese: 梅貽琦; 29 December 1889 – 19 May 1962), courtesy name Yuehan (Chinese: 月涵), was an esteemed Chinese educator who served as the President of National Tsinghua University between 1931 and 1948, making him the university's longest serving president. He also served two separate terms as Ministry of Education of the Republic of China, from 1948 to 1949 and from 1958 to 1961.
Mei was born in Tianjin on 29 December 1889, to a merchant family. His father Mei Bochen (Chinese: 梅伯忱) was a small merchant. His ancestral home in Wujin District, Changzhou, Jiangsu Province. In 1904, at the age of 15, he attended Nankai School, becoming a student of Zhang Boling. He completed secondary study at Baoding Higher School. In August 1909, he was sent to the U.S. as one of the first group of Boxer Indemnity Scholarship Program students. He received his bachelor's degree in electrical engineering from the Worcester Polytechnic Institute.
He returned to China after graduation in 1914 and worked at YMCA in Tianjin for a year. In autumn of that same year, he became an instructor in physics and mathematics at National Tsing Hua University (now Tsinghua University), where he was elected President in 1931. Under Mei's leadership, the University retained and recruited a host of top talents to its faculty. As of 1946, nearly half of the faculty members held PhD degrees, and over 90% studied abroad, including graduates from Harvard, MIT, Cornell, Chicago, and Columbia of the United States. Mei valued liberal education as much as science and technology, a perspective shaped by his observation of the U.S. education system.
In 1937 after the Japanese invasion, most of the faculty and students in Beijing fled southwest. On 4 May 1938, the National Southwestern Associated University opened in Kunming, Yunnan, a merger of Peking, Nankai, and the National Tsing Hua University. Mei was appointed the chief administrator. Mei’s leadership and generosity helped to keep the school alive through the dark years of the Sino-Japanese war. He oversaw the rebuilding and reopening of the campus in Beijing on 10 October 1946, and served as president until 12 December 1948.
In December 1948, he flew out of Beijing on a Kuomintang plane as the civil war heated up. He was appointed Ministry of Education of the Republic of China, but held the position for only one year. After the defeat of the Kuomintang by the Communists in Chinese Civil War in 1949, Mei left China and spent six years in the US, working with the China Foundation (中华文化教育基金会) who managed the Boxer Indemnity fund that supported 4000 Chinese students financially.
Mei became the first president of the National Tsing Hua University in Hsinchu in 1955, and was appointed Minister of Education of Taiwan in 1958. In February 1962, he was elected an academician of the Academia Sinica.
On 19 May 1962, he died of cancer at National Taiwan University Hospital, in Taipei, Taiwan.
Mei married Han Yonghua (Chinese: 韓詠華) in 1919 in Tianjin. The couple had one son and four daughters: Mei Zutong (Chinese: 梅祖彤), Mei Zufen (Chinese: 梅祖芬), Mei Zuyan (Chinese: 梅祖彥), Mei Zubin (Chinese: 梅祖彬) and Mei Zushan (Chinese: 梅祖杉). Mei Yiqi was the brother of Mei Yi-pao (Chinese: 梅貽寶), and uncle of Mei Tsu-lin.
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Mei Yiqi
Mei Yiqi or Mei Yi-chi (Chinese: 梅貽琦; 29 December 1889 – 19 May 1962), courtesy name Yuehan (Chinese: 月涵), was an esteemed Chinese educator who served as the President of National Tsinghua University between 1931 and 1948, making him the university's longest serving president. He also served two separate terms as Ministry of Education of the Republic of China, from 1948 to 1949 and from 1958 to 1961.
Mei was born in Tianjin on 29 December 1889, to a merchant family. His father Mei Bochen (Chinese: 梅伯忱) was a small merchant. His ancestral home in Wujin District, Changzhou, Jiangsu Province. In 1904, at the age of 15, he attended Nankai School, becoming a student of Zhang Boling. He completed secondary study at Baoding Higher School. In August 1909, he was sent to the U.S. as one of the first group of Boxer Indemnity Scholarship Program students. He received his bachelor's degree in electrical engineering from the Worcester Polytechnic Institute.
He returned to China after graduation in 1914 and worked at YMCA in Tianjin for a year. In autumn of that same year, he became an instructor in physics and mathematics at National Tsing Hua University (now Tsinghua University), where he was elected President in 1931. Under Mei's leadership, the University retained and recruited a host of top talents to its faculty. As of 1946, nearly half of the faculty members held PhD degrees, and over 90% studied abroad, including graduates from Harvard, MIT, Cornell, Chicago, and Columbia of the United States. Mei valued liberal education as much as science and technology, a perspective shaped by his observation of the U.S. education system.
In 1937 after the Japanese invasion, most of the faculty and students in Beijing fled southwest. On 4 May 1938, the National Southwestern Associated University opened in Kunming, Yunnan, a merger of Peking, Nankai, and the National Tsing Hua University. Mei was appointed the chief administrator. Mei’s leadership and generosity helped to keep the school alive through the dark years of the Sino-Japanese war. He oversaw the rebuilding and reopening of the campus in Beijing on 10 October 1946, and served as president until 12 December 1948.
In December 1948, he flew out of Beijing on a Kuomintang plane as the civil war heated up. He was appointed Ministry of Education of the Republic of China, but held the position for only one year. After the defeat of the Kuomintang by the Communists in Chinese Civil War in 1949, Mei left China and spent six years in the US, working with the China Foundation (中华文化教育基金会) who managed the Boxer Indemnity fund that supported 4000 Chinese students financially.
Mei became the first president of the National Tsing Hua University in Hsinchu in 1955, and was appointed Minister of Education of Taiwan in 1958. In February 1962, he was elected an academician of the Academia Sinica.
On 19 May 1962, he died of cancer at National Taiwan University Hospital, in Taipei, Taiwan.
Mei married Han Yonghua (Chinese: 韓詠華) in 1919 in Tianjin. The couple had one son and four daughters: Mei Zutong (Chinese: 梅祖彤), Mei Zufen (Chinese: 梅祖芬), Mei Zuyan (Chinese: 梅祖彥), Mei Zubin (Chinese: 梅祖彬) and Mei Zushan (Chinese: 梅祖杉). Mei Yiqi was the brother of Mei Yi-pao (Chinese: 梅貽寶), and uncle of Mei Tsu-lin.
