Hanhun Li and Chu Fang Wu papers, 1926-1998

Hanhun Li and Chu Fang Wu papers, 1926-1998

Summary Information

At a Glance

Call No.:
MS#1818
Bib ID:
12307289 View CLIO record
Creator(s):
Li, Hanhun, 1895-1987; Wu, Chu Fang
Repository:
Rare Book and Manuscript Library
Physical Description:
19 linear feet (13 record storage cartons and 8 volumes)
Language(s):
English , Chinese .
Access:
You will need to make an appointment in advance to use this collection material in the Rare Book and Manuscript Library reading room. You can schedule an appointment once you've submitted your request through your Special Collections Research Account.

THIS COLLECTION IS CLOSED/RESTRICTED UNTIL 2027.

This collection is located off-site. You will need to request this material at least three business days in advance to use the collection in the Rare Book and Manuscript Library reading room.

Description

Summary

The Hanhun Li and Chu Fang Wu papers consist of diaries, writings, publications and incoming correspondence of Hanhun Li and his wife Chu Fang Wu, dating from 1926 to 1998.

Arrangement

Arranged in three series.

Using the Collection

Restrictions on Access

You will need to make an appointment in advance to use this collection material in the Rare Book and Manuscript Library reading room. You can schedule an appointment once you've submitted your request through your Special Collections Research Account.

THIS COLLECTION IS CLOSED/RESTRICTED UNTIL 2027.

This collection is located off-site. You will need to request this material at least three business days in advance to use the collection in the Rare Book and Manuscript Library reading room.

Terms Governing Use and Reproduction

Reproductions may be made for research purposes. The RBML maintains ownership of the physical material only. Copyright remains with the creator and his/her heirs. The responsibility to secure copyright permission rests with the patron.

Preferred Citation

Identification of specific item; Date (if known); Hanhun Li and Chu Fang Wu papers; Box and Folder; Rare Book and Manuscript Library, Columbia University Library.

Related Material

Chinese oral history project collection, Rare Book and Manuscript Library, Columbia University. Finding Aid. This collection contains administrative information related to the project, including the interviewee files relating to Li Hanhun's interviews.

Reminiscences of Han-hun Li, 李漢魂口述回憶錄.

Accruals

Materials may have been added to the collection since this finding aid was prepared. Contact rbml@columbia.edu for more information.

Immediate Source of Acquisition

2016.2017.M065: Source of acquisition--Virginia Cheng Li. Method of acquisition--Gift; Date of acquisition--11/2/2016.

2016.2017.M122: Source of acquisition--Virginia Cheng Li. Method of acquisition--Gift; Date of acquisition--2/24/2017.

About the Finding Aid / Processing Information

Columbia University Libraries, Rare Book and Manuscript Library

Processing Information

Papers processed, Michael Wang and Patrick Lawlor 11/2/2016. Papers (Series III) processed Chengzhi Wang 2/28/2017. Box 13 was added to the collection in October 2018 by Yingwen Huang during the processing of the Chinese oral history project collection.

Revision Description

2017-01-17 File created.

2019-02-21 Restrictions added, bio note updated. kws

2019-05-20 EAD was imported spring 2019 as part of the ArchivesSpace Phase II migration.

Biographical / Historical

Chu Fang Wu (1911-1999) was born into a feudal family at the time of China's transition from Empire to Republic. Being the only child of a father who had little interest in a daughter and a mother who died during her infancy, her life story was one of relentless striving for a place in society for herself and for those she was in a position to help, especially children and women. As a teenager, she defied the wishes of her father and insisted on getting an education. When Republic of China General Han Hun Li, a commander of the famed Fourth Army, was stationed in Ichang, Hubei where she resided in 1929, he proposed to her, asking her what she would wish as his wife; "obtaining a college education" was her reply. She recorded her life with him in war-time China, and afterwards in America, in a diary from 1939 to 1987.

As a young army officer's wife, she organized literacy and home economics classes for other officers' wives while her husband was chief civil-military administrator in Shaoguan, Guangdong. With a third child on the way, she entered the Sun Yatsen University College of Agriculture in Guangzhou (Canton) with the inaugural group of eight female students, receiving her bachelor's degree in 1941.

The Sino-Japanese War exploded in 1937. With her husband recalled to active duty, Chu Fang Wu began organizing the officers' wives to raise funds in Hong Kong for medical supplies and winter wear for the soldiers in the frontline. (His wife's relief activities at the front where Li was fighting was noted in Frieda Utley's book China at War.).

As the wife of the Governor of Guangdong (1939-1945), she led the rescue operation of over 20,000 refugee children from occupied territories and war zones. Seven Children's Homes and Schools were established in succession to accommodate the refugee children, ages 6-18, each nurturing and educating over 1,000 children at any given time. Also founded were a normal school, vocational high schools, and the Lixin High School for gifted students. Factories were established to accommodate those older than 18 years. The children called her Mother, even decades later when many of them have become professors, journalists, engineers, teachers, military officers, in China, Taiwan, and abroad.

She also founded the Women's Brigade, which accommodated over 1,000 young women who lost their soldier husbands in service of their country. The women learned literacy, farming, and cottage industry skills, and received military training towards civil defense.

Chu-Fang Wu was also an elected member of the first National Assembly of the Republic of China.

After the Communist takeover of China in 1949, General Li and Mrs. Li settled in New York City. Having scarce financial resources to support the four children they brought with them and then a fifth born in America, she resolved to take up one of the few career options open at that time to Chinese immigrants with limited English, that of a restaurateur. She first learned the mechanics of operating a restaurant in a "chop suey house" type of place, the Good Will, in NYC's Washington Heights, which she went into with several partners experienced in the business. Then in 1955 she opened her own restaurant in White Plains, NY, China Garden, by which she eventually broke new ground in Chinese cuisine in America. By means of innovative menus and presentations, and by working personally to educate customers to the appreciation of gourmet Chinese dining, she brought this restaurant to great heights of recognition in the New York City area.

Li Hanhun (7 October 1895-30 June 1987) was a Chinese (Kuomintang) general of the Republican era. His name in traditional Chinese is 李漢魂, simplified Chinese李汉魂, his courtesy name Bohao (伯豪), and his assumed name Nanhua (南華). These names are variously used in writings by him, and to or on him.

At age 17 Li joined the Revolutionary Alliance, the Society chiefly instrumental in overthrowing the Manchu Dynasty and establishment of a republican government in China in 1911. He became a career military officer on graduating from the Boading Military Academy in the Academy's sixth graduating class in 1919. He was a division commander in the famous Fourth Army that helped eliminate the power of warlords and unify the nation in the late 1920's.

General Li played significant roles in the defense of China throughout the Sino-Japanese War. As that War was brewing in 1936 and factions within the Kuomingtang were in power struggles verging on civil war, Li gave up his commission with one faction leader, while issuing a universal call-out to all Chinese forces to unite under the leadership of Chiang Kai Shek in resistance against Japan. In 1938, as commander of the 64th Army, he led the battle of Luowangzhai, which halted the Japanese effort under the notorious general Kenji Doihara to gain control of China's major railroads; Doihara barely escaped capture, abandoning his sword and medals.

From 1939 to 1945, General Li served as Governor of war-torn and partially occupied Guangdong Province, during which he devoted himself to good governance and war relief efforts. As part of the latter efforts, he collaborated with and supported his wife Wu Chu Fang (吴菊芳) in a range of enterprises to mitigate the problems of war-displaced refugees.

In 1947 after the War had ended, Li was granted permission for two years of medical leave to the United States, and a study tour to the Americas and Europe to observe post war reconstruction accompanied by his wife Wu Chu Fang. Li returned to China in 1947, participated in the national election in which he was elected to the National Assembly, and also served as Minister of Interior during the brief acting-presidency of Li Zongren. When the Communists took over the mainland at the end of that year, General Li Hanhun emigrated to the United States to rejoin his family there.

Though his career in public life in China had mainly been in military service and War zone governance, General Li Hanhun was self-described as a reluctant warrior in his own writings and in his life-long devotion to Buddhism and Chinese classical learning. He was the principal facilitator in the 1934 restoration, under the abbot Xuyun, of the sixth century Nanhua Temple in Shaoguang, Guangdong, the largest Buddhist temple in Southwest China. Li's calligraphy on pillars and doorways of that Temple are still displayed today. At times referred to by his associates and contemporaries as (Confucian) scholar-general (儒將), General Li's selected writings of essays, poetry, history, diaries and autobiography have now all been published.

In 1968, General Li presented to Dr. Grayson Kirk, president of Columbia University, a collection of 6,000 rare books, "considered one of the most comprehensive collections on Chinese civilization and culture in existence outside of China today" according to the University's press release. General Li's books covered "all aspects of Chinese civilization - Confucian classics, history, philosophy, the fine arts, military science and belles-letters".

From his return to the States in 1949 onward, General Li and his family lived in the New York City area for the remainder of his life. Together with his wife Wu Chu Fang, they operated a series of three Chinese restaurants, the one in White Plains, the China Garden, being particularly successful and famous in its time. General Li died in New York in 1987 and was buried in the Kensico Cemetery in Valhalla, New York. The family history, against a backdrop of world events, is recounted in the book by his daughter Virginia Cheng Li: From One Root Many Flowers: A Century of Family Life in China and America.

Subject Headings

The subject headings listed below are found in this collection. Links below allow searches for other collections at Columbia University, through CLIO, the catalog for Columbia University Libraries, and through ArchiveGRID, a catalog that allows users to search the holdings of multiple research libraries and archives.

All links open new windows.

Genre/Form
Diaries
Name
Chiang, Kai-shek, 1887-1975
China. Lu jun -- Officers
Huang, Qixiang, 1898-1970
Place
China -- Politics and government -- 1912-1949
Subject
Governors -- China

Series I: Chu Fang Wu


Diaries:


Box 4

Light Brown Cover Book, 1937


Box 9

Small Brown Book, 1938


Box 4

Light Brown Cover Book, 1939


Box 4

Light Brown Cover Book, 1940


Box 3

Black Cover Book, 1941


Box 3

Black Cover Book, 1945


Box 2

Blue Cover Book, 1946


Box 3

Brown Cover Book, 1947


Box 3

Blue Cover Book, 1947


Box 2

2 Red Cover Books, 1948-1949


Box 3

9 Red Cover Books, 1961-1969 Note: Missing 1960, 1961-1969, 1960


Box 2

10 Red Cover Books, 1970-1979


Box 1

10 Red Cover Books, 1980 -- 1989, 1980, 1989


Box 4

No Cover, 10/21/1981


Box 4

4 Red Cover Books, 1990-1998


Box 4

5 Black/Blue Cover Books, 1990-1998


Address Book:


Box 12

Address Book -- Small Red Book


Published Book:


Box 4

Wu New Woman's Movement

Series II: General Han Hun Li


Diaries:


Box 12

Monks Diary-山居日誌南華 1925-Beige Cover Original


Box 9

1926(1)-Small Red (copy)


Box 9

1926(2)-Small Red (copy)


Box 9

1926(3)-Small Red (copy)


Box 9

1927-Small Green (copy)


Box 5

Blue Cover Book (copy), 1928-29


Box 11

1930十九年之一部-Blue Cover (copy)


Box 9

1931/1932-Green (copy)


Box 8

1933A-Green (copy)


Box 9

1934-Green (copy)


Box 9

1935-Green (copy)


Box 9

1936-Green (copy)


Box 9

1937A-Green (copy)


Box 9

1937B-Green (copy)


Box 8

1938B-Green (copy)


Box 8

1939/1940-Green (copy)


Box 8

1941/1942-Green (copy)


Box 12

1942 Book Review Diary 讀書摺記 -- Black Cover Original, 1942


Box 8

1942-Green (copy)


Box 8

1943A-Green (copy)


Box 8

1943B-Green (copy)


Box 8

1944A-Green (copy)


Box 8

1944B-Green (copy)


Box 8

1945A-Green (copy)


Box 8

1945B-Blue (copy)


Box 8

1946A-Green (copy)


Box 8

1946B-Green (copy)


Box 9

1948B-Blue (copy)


Box 12

1949-Columbia University (copy)-Gray Cover (copy) with Original Comments at the End


Box 7

Brown Cover Book, 1950


Box 7

Brown Cover Book, 1951


Box 7

Brown Cover Book, 1952


Box 9

1953-Small Brown Book


Box 9

1954-Small Brown Book


Box 7

Red Cover Book, 1955


Box 7

Red Cover Book, 1956


Box 5

Red Cover Book, 1957


Box 6

10 Red Cover Books, 1958 -- 1968, 1958, 1968


Box 11

1960-Red Cover


Box 7

Red Cover Book, 1969


Box 5

10 Red Cover Books, 1970-1979


Box 7

6 Red Cover Books, 1980-1986


Box 7

1 Blue Cover Book, 1980-1986


Box 4

Moving to Chinatown Dairy, 1986


Box 10

Li Han Hun 夢回集 Original-1


Box 10

Li Han Hun 夢回集 Original-2


Box 10

Li Han Hun 夢回集 Original-3


Box 10

Li Han Hun 夢回集 Original-4


Box 10

Li Diary-上集第一冊 Published, 1975


Box 10

Li Diary-上集第二冊 Published 1975 1982 Edition, 1975, 1982


Box 10

Li Diary-下集第一冊 Published, 1977


Box 10

Li Diary-下集第二冊 Published, 1977


Box 11

Li Han Hun 夢回集 Original-5A


Box 11

Li Han Hun 夢回集 Original-5B


Box 11

Li Han Hun 夢回集 Original-6


Box 11

Li Han Hun 夢回集 Original-7


Box 12

Li Han Hun 夢回集 Original-8


Box 13

Inventory of diaries


Box 13

Diaries, photocopies, 1926-1946


Published Books:


Box 4

Li South America Trip


Box 4

Li Europe Trip-Gift to Virginia C. Li


Box 4

Li Public Speaking Volume 1


Box 4

Li 岳武穆年譜-Blue Hard Cover Book-Gift to Virginia C. Li


Box 4

Li 岳武穆年譜-Purple Cover Book


Box 4

Li 4th Meeting Report


Box 4

Taiwan Contacts-Small Brown Book


Handwritten Books:


Box 9

Handwriting Brown Book, 1975-1981


Box 4

Li 佛 Writing-Small Brown Book


Box 4

Li 佛 Writing-Small, 2 Pages


Box 4

Li Writing-Small Black Notes


Box 4

Li Writing-Family Birthday Small Notes


Box 13

Autobiography in Chinese, original draft with appendix, photocopy, 1949


Letters:


Box 12

Li Han Hun Letters to Wu Chu Fang 1929-32


Box 12

Li Han Hun Letters to Wu Chu Fang, 1949


Box 13

Incoming letters to Li Hanhun, photocopies, 1929-1950


Clippings:


Box 12

Li Han Hun and Wu Chu Fang China Visits-Newspaper Clippings, Cards, etc.


Box 8

1949 Li Newspaper Clippings-Red, 1949


Notes:


Box 12

Notes 1945 1947-"The Chait-Li's" Black Cover Original, 1945


Box 12

Notes 1980 -- No Cover, 1980


Box 12

Li or Wu -- Learning English Notes -- Small Brown Book


Contacts and Addresses:


Box 12

Contacts -- Small Black Book

Series III: Hanhun Li Albums


Albums:


Album 1

Celebrating General Li's 80th birthday, by his colleagues in the Guangdong, winter 1974


Album 2

Correspondence from Ju Theng to Gereral Li 18 letters plus Li's own prefaces and postscripts


Album 3

Cebebrating Gereral Li's 80th birthday, by Lin Ying Lin, 1974


Album 4

Correspondence from Chiang Kai-shek; Wang Zhaoning; Chen Zitung; Huang Qixiang; Shi Yancheng; Chen Yuanying; Pan Xiaopan; Nengci


Album 5

Correspondence from Chen Gengbai; Tan Boyn; Wang Yachen; Sun Mujia; Zhan Liwu; and others. Many photographs inserted.


Album 6

Correspondence from Dai Zitas; Zeng Qi; Wu Zaimin; Zhang Junli; Shi Yancheng; Li Xiangen; Chen Huanzhang and other colleagues and friends


Album 7

Correspondence from Zeng Qi; Luo Yiqun; Yang Xiji; Huang Zhonghe; Jiang Kongyin; Huang Kutong; Zhu Haohuai


Album 8

Correspondence from Layperson Cen Xuelu; Mr. Zhao Hengti; Layperson Yu Shizhai; Mr. Qian Jieping; Master Benji