Jeme Tien Yow

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Jeme Tien Yow bigraphy, stories - Chinese engineer

Jeme Tien Yow : biography

26 April 1861 – 24 April 1919

Jeme Tien Yow ( 26 April 186124 April 1919) was a distinguished Chinese railroad engineer. Educated in the United States of America, he was the chief engineer responsible for construction of the Imperial Peking-Kalgan Railway (Beijing to Zhangjiakou), the first railway constructed in China without foreign assistance. For his contributions to railroad engineering in China, Jeme is still known as the "Father of China’s Railroad".

Later Life

Jeme died in Hankou in 1919 at the age of 58, and was buried at the Qinglongqiao railway station, where the Peking-Kalgan (Beijing-Zhangjiakou) railway crossed the Great Wall and the rugged mountains north of Beijing. A museum was also established nearby to commemorate his achievements.

Career

The Qing government officials found the behavior of these foreign-educated students to be "un-Chinese". They had adopted many Western practices such as playing baseball and wearing shirts and pants instead of traditional robes and had their queues cut off. Instead of utilizing their talents to the fullest, the government sent them all, including Jeme, to work as translators or as officers in the newly-formed Imperial Navy. Jeme was sent to the Fujian Arsenal at Fuchow. A few years later, in 1884, the Imperial Navy at Fuchow was destroyed during the Sino-French War.

In 1888, Jeme was finally able to realize his dream of becoming an engineer. Viceroy Li Hongzhang in Peking was constructing a railroad that would link Tientsin to the coal mines in Tangshan. A British engineer, Claude W. Kinder, was hired as the chief engineer of the railroad. Through connections with his old schoolmates working in Peking, Jeme joined Kinder as an intern engineer. He was soon promoted to engineer, and later the district engineer. The railway that he worked on was later extended to become the Peking Mukden Line. He spent 12 years on various sections of this line before his next major assignment.

In 1902, Yuan Shikai decided to build a special line for Empress Dowager Cixi so she could visit the tombs of her royal ancestors. Kinder was the original candidate for chief engineer, however the French were unhappy that an Englishman was assigned to the position. Eventually, Jeme got the assignment as the chief engineer of the stub line. He managed to construct the railroad within budget and to a very tight schedule. The Empress was pleased and permission was given to construct more railroads in China.

In 1905, the Imperial Qing government decided to build a railroad that would link the capital of Peking to the important trade city of Kalgan to the north. This railway would be of strategic importance to the government. The decision was therefore made that the railway would be built without foreign assistance. Capital would come from the government, and no foreign engineers were to be hired. Jeme was once again appointed as chief engineer of the railway. In the beginning, some people were skeptical that the government would be able to construct the railroad all by itself in the rugged mountains north of Peking. However Jeme showed he was an able engineer and completed the work two years ahead of schedule and under budget. He included a zig zag section near the Qinglongqiao (Ching-lung-chiao) railway station to overcome the steep gradient. When excavating the Badaling railway tunnel, he accelerated construction by drilling a vertical shaft into the path of the tunnel. This doubled the number of digging teams that could be employed. He was also said to be a technical advisor for the construction of the Lo Wu Bridge built in 1906 as part of the Kowloon-Canton Railway.

Background

Jeme Tien-yow was born in Nam-hoi prefecture (now Liwan District, Guangzhou) in Guangdong of China. His family came from Wuyuan County in Hui Prefecture (徽州婺源縣, which was then located in Anhui Province but is now in Jiangxi Province). In 1872, as a twelve-years-old, he was chosen by Qing imperial officials to be sent to the United States as part of the Chinese Educational Mission. Together with thirty children of similar age, he arrived in Connecticut. After studying at a primary school in New Haven, he then entered a secondary school there, and in 1878, was admitted to Yale University. His major was Civil Engineering, with an emphasis in railroad construction, and received his bachelor’s degree in 1881. He was considered lucky, because only a few months after his graduation, the Qing government decided to recall all students studying in the United States. Of those who were sent abroad, only he and another student were able to complete their college degrees.

The statue of Jeme Tien Yow, in [[Zhangjiakou south railway station.]] Jeme Tien Yow’s former residence in Canton (Guangzhou)

Recognition

Jeme was subsequently elected a member of the North British Academy of Arts in 1909. He was a founding member of the China Institute of Engineers, and was awarded an honorary doctorate by the University of Hong Kong in 1916.