Eugene
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Eugene Chen (1878-1944), a successful lawyer in Trinidad

Joint letter on national crisis, October 1938

Open Letter to national government, October 1938

Open Letter to Chamberlain, November 1938

Letter on shape of Asia, December 1939

Letter on Russia and Germany, July 1940

Diary entry, December 1942

Diary entry, June 1943

In the summer of 1917, Eugene was appointed by Sun Yatsen as his adviser on international affairs, and Eugene began to formulate the "Russia-oriented" policy.

Photo from "Sun Yat-sen and the Nationalist Revolution"

ISBN 957-05-0931-7 (628)

Some surviving Peking Gazette copies:

Peking Gazette 1917-04-17

Peking Gazette 1917-05-18

Peking Gazette 1917-05-23

Peking Gazette 1917-05-29

Eugene (front role, second from right) then editor of the Shanghai Gazette, was one of Sun Yatsen's representatives on the Chinese delegation to the first meeting of the League of Nations in Geneva in 1920. Wellington Koo, future ambassador to the United States, sits to his right.

Soong Qinling (Madame Sun Yatsen) and Eugene Chen in Moscow, 1927

Georgette Chen, Eugene's second wife, after death of Agatha Alphosin (Ganteaume)

 

Eugene & Georgette, late 1930s

Eugene Chen's grave stone in Ba Bao Shan

(Mountain of Eight Treasures) Revolutionary  Martyr Cemetery in Beijing