William Henry Donald
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William Henry Donald (born 22 June 1875, Lithgow, New South Wales, died 9 ovember 1946, Shanghai) was an Australian newspaperman who worked in China from 1903 until World War II[1][2].
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[edit] Early Life in Australia
WH Donald began his career as a journalist at the Lithgow Mercury, the local paper of his hometown. He then worked as journalist/editor at the Bathurst National Advocate, the Sydney Daily Telegraph and the Melbourne Argus. In 1901 he was head-hunted to Hong Kong to work for the China Mail. [3].
[edit] The Donald of China
He became a successful journalist at the China Mail, culminating in his resignation as Managing Editor in 1908 to write about history of the press in China and Hong Kong. In 1911, he moved to Shanghai, where he became a key editor to the economical monthly Far Eastern Review. At the same time he befriended Charlie Soong, the wealthy publisher and father of the Soong sisters. He resigned from Far Eastern Review after the managing editor George Rea pushed for a more pro-Japanese line for the journal. While in Hong Kong, he made the decision for not learning the Chinese language, and found this to his favour for the Chinese knew that with him they were assured of the privacy of their conversations[4]. He became a friend and advisor to Sun Yat-Sen and to Generalissimo and Mme. Chiang Kai-shek[5]. He was also an advisor to Zhang Xueliang, the general who kidnapped Chiang Kai-shek at Xian in December 1936; some years before the kidnapping, Donald had arranged a cure for Zhang's drug addiction[6].
[edit] Xi'an Incident
In order to force the issue to establish an united front against the Japanese invasion, Young Marshall Zhang Xueliang kidnapped Generalissimo Chiang Kai-shek in the infamous Xi'an_Incident. Donald was the special envoy to Xi'an sent by Madame Chiang to negotiate for Chiang's release. It was Donald's finest hour. He played a pivotal role in convincing his old friend Zhang Xueliang and CCP to release Chiang. After several rounds of negotiations, Chiang was released to a plane bound for Nanjing escorted by Zhang. When the plane arrived in Nanjing Zhang was immediately arrested and was incarcerated, staying in prison in China and, later, Taiwan, for more than fifty years.
[edit] Later Life
Donald left Chiang Kai-shek's headquarters at Chungking in May 1940, after a disagreement with the generalissimo over Chinese policy towards Germany. At this time, the British ambassador described him as a 'garrulous old man'. However in early 1942, after touring the Pacific in 1940-41, he set out, at Madame Chiang's request, to return to China.
The Japanese invaders in China had dubbed Donald "the evil spirit of China." for his role in advising the Chinese government in their efforts against the invasion. They had offered growing rewards for his capture, dead or alive. Once they had almost got him, when Zero fighters attacked his plane over China -- but his pilot escaped into a cloud bank. In February 1945, it turned out that they had held him for more than three years, without knowing it, in one of the Manila prison camps. Donald had been a prisoner since February 1942, when the Japanese arrested him at Manila when he was on his way back to China from New Zealand via the Philippines. During his captivity, he had used a false name to fool his captors[7].
After a brief visit to New York City in 1945, Donald returned to Shanghai, where he died in 1946. He was farewelled in a state funeral by the government of Republic of China.As he lay dying in 1946, Donald dictated his recollections to Earl Albert Selle, who produced a biography called Donald of China[8].
A collection of his correspondence between 1942 and 1946 is held by Columbia University Library
[edit] References
- ^ Winston G. Lewis (1981). "Donald, William Henry (1875-1946)". Australian Dictionary of Biography 8: 317-318.
- ^ Earl Albert Selle (1948). Donald of China.
- ^ Frank Bren. "The Chinese Life of W.H. Donald".
- ^ Frank Bren. "The World's Press on Donald".
- ^ Jonathan Fenby (2004). Chiang Kai Shek: China's Generalissimo and the Nation He Lost. ISBN 0786714840.
- ^ "Obituary: Zhang Xueliang", The Independent, 2001-10-16.
- ^ "Hard to get", TIME, 1945-02-19.
- ^ Jonathan Fenby. "BUILDING A LIBRARY: Twentieth-century China", The Independent on Sunday, 2003-12-07.