Tung Chao Yung

Tung Chao-yun
Tung Chao-yung
董浩雲/董浩云
Born 1912 (1912)
Ningbo, Zhejiang Province, China (current Zhoushan)
Died 15 April 1982 (1982-04-16) (aged 70)
Hong Kong
Occupation Founder of Orient Overseas Container Line
Children Tung Chee Hwa
Tung Chee Shing
Tung Chee Ping
Tung Siu-ping
Tung Yi-ping
This is a Chinese name; the family name is Tung.

Tung Chao Yung (traditional Chinese: 董兆榮; simplified Chinese: 董兆荣; pinyin: Dōng Zhàoróng) better known as 董浩雲, Chinese: 董浩云; pinyin: Dōng Hàoyún, born 18th of the eighth lunar month in 1912 (September 28[1]); died 15 April 1982), also known as C. Y. Tung, was a Chinese shipping magnate, the founder of the Orient Overseas Line (now Orient Overseas Container Line or OOCL). He was the father of Tung Chee Hwa, the first chief executive of the Hong Kong S.A.R..

At the peak of his career, he owned a shipping fleet with over 150 freight ships; his fleet's cargo capacity exceeded 10 million tons. He was one of the world's top seven freight moguls; he was often called the Onassis of the Orient.

Tung believed in the importance of education. In September 1970, he bought the famous ocean liner RMS Queen Elizabeth to convert it into a floating university S.S. Seawise University to keep the World Campus Afloat program alive. On 9 January 1972, the ship caught on fire during refurbishing and sank into Hong Kong's harbour. The wreckage of the ship was featured in the James Bond movie, The Man with the Golden Gun. He did not give up the plan because of this setback. He bought a smaller ocean liner Atlantic to complete the plan. He cooperated with various universities (e.g. University of Pittsburgh) to run the academic sea programme with the Institute of Shipboard Education entitled Semester at Sea.[2][3]

Politically Tung was aligned with Kuomintang regime of the Republic of China on Taiwan; indeed the company emblem of the OOCL is a plum blossom, the national flower of the Republic of China. After his death, however, the OOCL went into financial trouble, and it was the government of the People's Republic of China which rescued the company from the brink. This paved the way for C.Y.Tung's son, Tung Chee Hwa, to become the Chief Executive of the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region of the People's Republic of China in 1997.

References

  1. Academia Sinica Chinese-Western Calendar Converter.
  2. Wessel, Rhea (November 10, 2006). "Business Schools Set Course For Charted Waters" (PDF). Wall Street Journal. Archived from the original on November 10, 2006. Retrieved May 19, 2009. Mr. Tung was one of the founding fathers of shipboard education -- the practice of turning vessels into floating universities that carry students from one port to the next, from one experience to the next.
  3. "Media Kit". Semester at Sea. Retrieved 2009-05-19.

External links

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