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Lim Boon Keng

Lim Boon Keng (b. 18 October, Singapore 1869 - d.1957) was a pioneer Straits Chinese who actively sought to improve the status of the Chinese in Malaya through education and social activism. He held top positions in the Legislative Council and liased actively with the Manchu government.

By Vernon Cornelius
Published: June 12, 2008
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Early Life
Lim was a third generation Baba (or Peranakan) born in Singapore, the second son of Lim Thean Geow. He was orphaned as a teenager with the death of his father when he was only 16. His mother had died when he was just 10. He was brought up by his grandparents instead who placed him in the clan temple to master the Chinese Classics.

Education
He was first educated in English at the Government Cross Street School, and later at Raffles Institution, marking his academic brilliance by becoming the first Chinese to win the Queen's Scholarship in 1887. His scholarship took him to study medicine in Edinburgh University, guided by the best in the medical arena with many of his lecturers becoming leaders in specific branches of medicine. He graduated in August 1892 with an MB C. M. (Bachelor of Medicine and Surgery) gaining first class honours.

Career
Medical Work
1892 : Research student in the Pathology Department, Cambridge University.
1893 : Returned to Singapore due to financial difficulties. He established a private practice in Telok Ayer Street. He had avoided the government service observing that few locals could obtain positions higher than that of assistant medical officer.
1896 : Conducted a local health survey with Dr Janz, the results of which indicated that cholera led to a high proportion of deaths in Singapore.
Early 1900s: Opened up the Kiu Su Tong Dispensary, later renamed the Sincere Dispensary at Raffles Place with Dr Murray Robertson and Dr S. C. Yin, his brother-in-law. He relinquished his partnership in 1906 to serve the Manchu government.
1907 - 1910 : Volunteered to lecture on Pharmacology and Therapeutics at the King Edward Medical School.


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Books / Journals

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Felix Cheong Seng Fei (b. 1965, Singapore - ) is a poet and a recipient of the National Arts Council (NAC) Young Artist Award for Literature in 2000. He has published three volumes of poems. These are Temptation and Other Poems (1998), I Watch the Stars Go Out (1999) and Broken by the Rain (2003). Cheong is also an active promoter of the Singapore literary arts scene. He currently works as a freelance writer for local newspapers and publications like Today, The New Paper, and The Edge, as well as an instructor for creative writing workshops. Cheong is also the chief editor for art-e, an ezine by the LaSalle-SIA College of the Arts.
 

 

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Felix Cheong graduated with a Bachelor of Arts (Honours) in English Literature from the National University of Singapore in 1990. During his undergraduate years, he was actively involved in varsity literary activities as the vice-president of the Literary Society. Several of his poems won prizes at university writing competitions. After graduation, Cheong worked as a producer with the Television Corporation of Singapore (TCS) and later as a studio director and training manager with the CNBC. In February 2001, he embarked on a creative writing programme with the University of Queensland on a bursary awarded by the NAC. He graduated with a Masters of Philosophy in Creative Writing in June 2002.

 

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Articles

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Cheong displayed an affinity with words at an early age, having had several of his writings published in his primary school magazines. He continued to write during his college days but only turned to serious writing when he entered university. After dabbling with poetry for a period of 15 years, Cheong published his first work Temptation and Other Poems in 1998. The publication brings together a collection of poems that reflects his Catholic faith, love and those dedicated to his wife and mentor, Lee Tzu Pheng. In the following year, he released his second work I Watch the Stars Go Out, which continues the religious questionings in Temptation and Other Poems. Here, he reflects on his family

 

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His father had set up a provision shop located at the junction of Bonham Street and Boat Quay, supplying beef, bread and vegetables. Hoo Ah Kay inherited the business after his father's death. The company, Whampoa & Co., had adopted the name of his birthplace and as Hoo Ah Kay grew in fame, his company's name became synonymous with his own. By 1840, Whampoa & Co., then located at Telok Ayer, had established itself as a shipchandler to the British Royal Navy. There were only three other shipchandlers in 1854 - W.S Duncan,

 

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However, to the society at large, it was his Whampoa House with its expansive gardens which he was more well-known for. This home was opened to the public during Chinese New Year and became a popular place for gatherings during that festive season. When he died, his remains were shipped on 31 May 1880 and buried on Danes Island opposite Guangdong.

 

 
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