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  1. Wong Nai Siong ( simplified Chinese : 黄乃裳; traditional Chinese : 黃乃裳; Pe̍h-ōe-jī : N̂g Nái-siông; Bàng-uâ-cê: Uòng Nāi-siòng) (1849–22 September 1924) was a Chinese revolutionary leader and educator from Minqing county in Fuzhou, Fujian province, China.

  2. Wong Nai Siong (黄乃裳; 1849–1924), also known as Huang Jiu Mei (黄九美) or Huang Mu Hua (黄慕华), was a member of the Chinese Revolutionary Alliance and editor of Jit Shin Pau, a local newspaper. Born in Fujian, China, Wong came from a poor family where he grew up helping out at his family’s farm.

  3. Wong Nai Siong (黄乃裳; 1849–1924), also known as Huang Jiu Mei (黄九美) or Huang Mu Hua (黄慕华), was a member of the Chinese Revolutionary Alliance and editor of Jit Shin Pau, a local newspaper. Born in Fujian, China, Wong came from a poor family where he grew up helping out at his family’s farm.

  4. Wong Nai Siong is probably one of the best-known pioneers to arrive in Sibu, Sarawak, from China. Wong was born on July 25, 1849 in Fujian province in China. In 1866, missionaries from the United States belonging to the Methodist Episcopal Mission came to his village.

  5. Aug 7, 2019 · Wong Nai Siong is perhaps one of the most famous Chinese pioneers to arrive in Sibu. Born on July 25, 1849 in Fuzhou, Fujian Province of China, Wong was the eldest of four sons. His father was Wong King Po who worked as a farmer (although some records stated that he was a carpenter).

  6. Jul 4, 2002 · A man, by name Uong (Wong) Nai Siong, a scholar and teacher of the missionaries who came to Foochow, was a reader of American history. It occurred to him that poor Christian Chinese might emigrate as poor Englishmen had done under the same conditions when the Mayflower sailed.

  7. IN 1901, Rev Wong Nai Siong led the first batch of 72 Foochows to Sibu. Another two groups followed the next year, bringing the total number of pioneering immigrants to 1,118.

  8. Mar 18, 2022 · Wong Nai Siong, a Chinese Revolutionary leader responsible for leading the Fuzhou migration to Sibu, decided after travelling for 13 days down the Rejang River that Sungai Merah was the most suitable place to start a new settlement due to its strategic riverbank location.

  9. Wong Nai Siong Memorial Garden. When Wong Nai Siong lead the Foochow settlers from China to Sibu, this was the site they landed on. Now, it is a landscaped area lush in vegetation.

  10. Wong Nai Siong ( simplified Chinese: 黄乃裳; traditional Chinese: 黃乃裳; Pe̍h-ōe-jī: N̂g Nái-siông; Bàng-uâ-cê: Uòng Nāi-siòng) (1849–22 September 1924) was a Chinese revolutionary leader and educator from Minqing county in Fuzhou, Fujian province, China.