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Anna Chennault |
Viewing: April 6, 2018 (Friday) from 6:00 to 8:00 p.m. Service: April 7, 2018 (Saturday) at 9:30 a.m. Location: St. Stephen Martyr |
ANNA CHENNAULT (1923–2018) In 1951, Anna settled with her husband in Monroe, Louisiana. They had a second home in Taipei, Taiwan to which they traveled each Chinese New Year with daughters Claire Anna (b. 1949) and Cynthia Louise (b. 1950). Anna’s book A Thousand Springs describes her decade of marriage to the general as her happiest years.After her husband’s death in 1958, Anna moved to Washington DC.She was an astute and determined woman with a large vision of meaningful purpose for her life.She was first employed at Georgetown University on a Chinese to English machine-translation project. Beginning in the 1960s, she worked as a contract negotiator and/or executive consultant to U.S. companies seeking to expand business in Asia (such as the cargo carrier Flying Tiger Line, the Northrop Corporation, and Fleishman Hillard). While struggling to advance herself, as a young widow, into male-dominated spheres, she was grateful for the advice and support of her late husband’s friend James A. Noe (d. 1976), and that of her longtime companion Thomas G. Corcoran (d. 1981), who had been instrumental in Roosevelt’s authorization in early 1941 of an “American Volunteer Group” to be trained by Chennault in China. Anna was a top fundraiser for the Republican Party. She served as vice chairman of its National Finance Committee during Richard Nixon’s 1967–68 presidential campaign. During this period, her communication at Nixon’s request of a message to the South Vietnamese government has been the focus of many news articles. She was again active in the election campaigns of Ronald Reagan. Foremost among her good friends in congress were Senators John Tower, Strom Thurmond, and Ted Stevens. During Democratic Party administrations, John F. Kennedy met with her and gave his encouragement to the Chinese Refugee Relief organization that she co-founded to aid refugees who fled to Hong Kong during the Cultural Revolution. Her last presidential appointment was by Bill Clinton, to serve as International Chairman of the Franklin Delano Roosevelt Memorial Commission. She returned to China in 1981 by invitation of Deng Xiaoping. The trip was the occasion also of a reunion with her great-uncle, Liao Chongzhi (d. 1983), then Minister of the Office of Overseas Affairs. In 1989, Anna led the first large delegation of business leaders from Taiwan to the PRC, followed by a second tour around China the next year. While a firm advocate of the “One-China Policy,” she worked tirelessly to foster trade and investment across the straits. From the 1990s on she was no longer active in politics, although she continued to write columns for newspapers in China and Taiwan. She last traveled to Asia in fall 2015, to attend celebrations of the 70th anniversary of the victory in the War of Resistance (1937-1945). She accepted medals of honor, on behalf of her late husband, from the presidents of both China and Taiwan. An important mission of her later life was to encourage international understanding by establishing scholarships for teachers and students. Many of the awards she funded were specifically for the fields of Chinese studies, international studies, journalism, and teacher education. She was a devout Catholic, and until disabled by a stroke last December, attended the Sunday Mass. In addition to her loving daughters Claire and Cynthia (Pierre Sikivie) and grandsons Paul and Michael Sikivie, Anna leaves behind sisters Cynthia Lee, Sylvia Wong, and Loretta Fung; nephews Jon-Claire Lee, Cecil Fong, Herman Fong, Larry Wong, Christopher Wong, and Larry Fung; nieces Roberta Wong, Arlene Fung, Ramona Fung, and Ida Fung; godson Sammy Tse, and goddaughter Nancy Yang. Anna was predeceased by sisters Constance Fong and Theresa Kwan. Friends may call at DeVol Funeral Home, 2222 Wisconsin Ave. NW on April 6, from 6 to 8 pm (complimentary valet parking). A funeral Mass will be held April 7, 9:30 am, at the Church of St. Stephen Martyr, 2436 Pennsylvania Ave. NW., Washington DC 20037-1717. In lieu of sending flowers to the funeral home, donations may be mailed to the Church of St. Stephen Martyr. |
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