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Post by NZBC on Feb 10, 2011 22:29:09 GMT 12
home.earthlink.net/~wtong/tongroots.htm Historical Roots of the Tong & Yan Clans By William Kiejan Tong Chicago, Illinois, U.S.A. I originally wrote this article in 1995 for the Chicago chapter of the Tong-Yan Family Association, for the benefit of our American-Born Chinese ("ABC") cousins, based upon historical information told to me by my father, Jerry Tze Yuen Tong, who translated some of the information from our family genealogy book, which dates back some 60 or 70 years and was authored in part by his grandfather (my great-grandfather), Tong Yi Yuan. For the benefit of readers, "Toysan" is the Cantonese pronunciation ("Taishan" in Mandarin) of the county/district in southern Guangdong (Kwangtung) province in China, on the west side of the Pearl River delta, across from the city of Guangzhou (Canton). The local dialect is a variant of Cantonese, with a number of differences in pronuciations, vocabulary, and tones. The Toysan dialect was brought overseas by Chinese immigrants and established in many Chinatowns across North America, where it is still spoken.
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Post by NZBC on Feb 10, 2011 22:30:24 GMT 12
THE TONGS OF BOSTON, USA, and GIMGAI, CHINA By E. Y. Tong, Seattle, USA home.earthlink.net/~wtong/Boston_Gimgai_Tongs.htm The Tong clan (see note 1 below) was one of these groups which, according to its recorded genealogy, can trace back to Kaifeng Prefecture in Henan (pronounced Ho-Nahn, “south of the river”) Province in northern China, not too far from present-day Beijing.
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