Yau Tsit Law Explained
Yau Tsit Law (1888-1961) was a Chinese Christian educator, and one of the first Chinese women to graduate from Mount Holyoke College.
Early life and education
Yau Tsit Law attended the True Light Seminary in Canton, where her mother was the principal.[1] In 1912 she traveled to the United States for college, one of the first women sent by the Chinese government for an American college education.[2] She graduated from Mount Holyoke College in 1916,[3] and pursued graduate studies at Columbia University.[4]
Career
After she returned to China, Yau Tsit Law taught and was principal of the True Light Middle School of Hong Kong.[5] Beyond school work, she was the general secretary of the YWCA in Guangzhou. In that capacity, she attended the first Institute of Pacific Relations conference in July 1925, held in Honolulu, Hawaii.[6] She gave a talk there, on "Canton Women in Business and the Professions".[7] [8] In 1927 she was appointed dean of women at Lingnan University.[9]
Yau Tsit Law was awarded an honorary doctorate by Mount Holyoke College in 1937,[10] at its centennial celebration.[11] One of Law's students at True Light Seminary, Jane Kwong Lee, served as coordinator of the Chinese YWCA in San Francisco, California, from 1935 to 1944.[12]
External links
Notes and References
- https://books.google.com/books?id=ve7OAAAAMAAJ&dq=Yau+Tsit+Law&pg=PA474 "Who's Who at the Annual Meeting?"
- https://www.newspapers.com/clip/15136024/yau_tsit_law_1912/ "First Women Students from China Arrive"
- M. I. Han, "Mt. Holyoke" Chinese Students Monthly (November 1916): 64.
- Edith R. Peyser, "The Spiritual Freight of Miss Yau Tsit Law" World Outlook (July 1917): 15.
- http://www.tlmshk.edu.hk/about4.php About True Light: History
- Karen Garner, Precious Fire: Maud Russell and the Chinese Revolution (University of Massachusetts Press 2003): 73.
- Yau Tsit Law, "Canton Women in Business and the Professions" News Bulletin (Institute of Pacific Relations) (December 1926): 11-12.
- https://www.newspapers.com/clip/15135911/yau_tsit_law_1925/ "China is Filled with Optimism for Future, Says Woman Delegate"
- https://www.newspapers.com/clip/15135983/yau_tsit_law_1927/ "Dean of Chinese College"
- Mount Holyoke College Archives, Honorary Degrees by Name.
- Louis M. Lyons, "Rights Denied, Women Charge" Daily Boston Globe (May 9, 1937): B1.
- Judy Yung, Unbound Voices: A Documentary History of Chinese Women in San Francisco (University of California press 1999): 229.