Lost Opportunities: The Case of a Chinese Merchant of Late Colonial Sydney
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Choy, Darryl Low
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Centre for the Study of the Chinese Southern Diaspora, The Australian National University
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Open Access
Abstract
This paper provides an insight into the life and times of a Chinese merchant in the Australian
colonies during the second half of the nineteenth century. Having served as a non-commissioned officer in
the Ever Victorious Army under Lieutenant Colonel (later Major General) Charles ©Chinese© Gordon during
the Taiping Rebellion, Kum Tiy arrived in Sydney around 1864©1865. With a number of partners, he
immediately set up the merchant business of Sun Kum Tiy & Company in Lower George Street in the
Rocks, Sydney. In time, his merchant empire was expanded to include some thirteen branches in New
South Wales, fifteen in Victoria, two in Queensland, nine in New Zealand and one in the Pacific Islands,
including a trading vessel. He was to become one of Sydney©s and New South Wales©s wealthiest and
most influential merchants of the late colonial period.
The Sun Kum Tiy Australian story provides further insight into the business of Chinese merchants
operating in an overseas location during the nineteenth century. It acknowledges the connections of the
merchant class with clan and district/county based associations, their entrepreneurial activities, their
philanthropic activities, their leadership in the local Chinese diaspora and their standing within the wider
European community. The paper concludes with a consideration of the motives that led Kum Tiy to
abandon his financial and social successes in New South Wales during the late 1880s and early 1890s
and return to China, which, on all accounts, represented opportunities lost, both for him and his would-be
adopted country of twenty-five years.
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Chinese Southern Diaspora Studies
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