Yet Soo War Way Lee
Yet Soo War Way Lee
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Yet Soo War Way Lee

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Yet Soo War Way Lee

Yet Soo War Way Lee (Chinese: 葉繡華維利; born Yett Soo War; 6 August 1852 - 21 August 1909), also known as Yett Way Lee and Y. S. W. Way Lee, was a Chinese-Australian merchant who lived in Adelaide, South Australia.

Yett Soo War was born in King Shan (Chinese: 京山; pinyin: Jīngshān), a village of Tungkun, Guangdong. He was the only child of Yett She Clum, a rice-miller, and Cau She Ho King. His great-grandfather was reportedly an admiral in the Imperial Chinese Navy. As a young man, he married and had a son, Yett King Sum. Before his emigration, Yett had adopted the courtesy name Way Lee, which he used in business, often compounding it with his birth name, using "Way Lee" as a surname in Australia.

Way Lee migrated to Australia in 1874, joining his uncle Way Kee on George Street in Sydney, in the colony of New South Wales. He spent the next two years studying, first in Sydney and later Brisbane, in the colony of Queensland. In 1880, Way Lee settled in Adelaide, in the colony of South Australia, taking English classes at the City Mission of Adelaide.

Having maintained work with his uncle, by 1878, Way Lee had established an importing firm, Way Lee & Co. in Hindley Street, Adelaide. The company dealt in tea, porcelain, fireworks, Chinese medicines and general bric-a-brac. He expanded its operations across regional Australian with branches in Wentworth and Wilcannia in New South Wales, Quorn and Hawker, and further interests in the Daly River, Northern Territory and Millicent, South Australia.

Way Lee had one of the government contracts to supply the Ghan railway from Port Augusta to Hergott Springs/Maree. He partnered with several other Chinese merchants, including Hu Ting, to deliver food and other supplies to the expanding railway in the late 1880s.

Way Lee and other Chinese Australian merchants of the time formed the Chinese Empire Reform Association, of which he was president.

Way Lee was a leader of the South Australian Chinese community, actively participating in community events, including hosting Chinese New Year dinners and providing support for disaster relief efforts in China. He advocated for the rights of Chinese residents of Australia, focusing on education, living conditions, and opposing opium trafficking.

He and Hu Ting authored at least one letter to the editor during the height of the anti-Chinese immigration debates in South Australia in the 1880s, and advocated to remove laws or rules that limited the ability of Chinese individuals to travel freely between the colonies.

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