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News Shared: Former US Ambassador buried in Hangzhou, China 46 years after his death

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  • News Shared: Former US Ambassador buried in Hangzhou, China 46 years after his death

    According to Xinhua News, John Leighton Stuart, the former US Ambassador to China, finally got his last wish fulfilled 46 years later after his death. On November, 17th, 2008, his ash was re-interred in Hangzhou, China, his birthplace. The epitaph reads: John Leighton Stuart, 1876-1962, the first president of Yanching University. Stuart was a Christian, a missionary, and an educator.

    John Leighton Stuart was born in 1876 in Hangzhou, China. His parents were missionaries coming from the US. When he was 11 years old, he went to Virginia for study. In 1904, he came back to Hangzhou as a missionary of the American Presbyterian Mission. In 1919, he was appointed the first president of Yanching University. He made great contribution to the development of the university. He advocated academic freedom and encouraged the students to be both Chinese and internationalized. He was appointed the US Ambassador to China between 1946 and 1949. John Leighton Stuart declared himself to be more Chinese than American. He lived more than half of his life in Hangzhou, China. He can speak fluent Hangzhou dialect. As the political situation between the Chinese Communist and the Chinese Nationalist tightened, he declared that he was saddened by the split that would lead to the ongoing conflict between Mainland China and Taiwan, and as a diplomat, he had tried to stop it. He once wrote: “The Chinese knew of my love for their country, my concern for their welfare ... but I failed them.” He left China and went back to the US in August, 1949 before the establishment of People’s Republic of China. Mao Zedong wrote an article: Farewell, Stuart mocking his departure. In the article Mao wrote Stuart’s leaving China symbolized the complete collapse of the US’s invasion plan. The article became a must-read of the Chinese students. Stuart died on Sep. 19th, 1962 in Washington. In his will, he asked to be buried in Hangzhou. But the request was not accepted because of the sensitive political situation.

    As the China-US ties strengthened day after day, now 46 years later after his death, John Leighton Stuart finally made his wish come true. Officials of China and the US attended the funeral. Clark T. Randt, Jr., the present US Ambassador to China watched the re-interment. He remarked that Stuart would feel heartily happy in heaven if he learned that nowadays China and the US were in such a good relationship.
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