Tan Lark Sye
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Tan Lark Sye | |
|---|---|
Tan in 1950 | |
| Born | 7 June 1897 |
| Died | 11 September 1972 (aged 75) |
| Known for | Founder of Nanyang University |
| Relatives | Tan Eng Joo[1] |
| Tan Lark Sye | |||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Traditional Chinese | 陳六使 | ||||||||||
| Simplified Chinese | 陈六使 | ||||||||||
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Tan Lark Sye (simplified Chinese: 陈六使; traditional Chinese: 陳六使; pinyin: Chén Liùshǐ; Pe̍h-ōe-jī: Tân La̍k-sài; 1897–1972) was a prominent Chinese businessman and philanthropist based in Singapore.
Career
In Singapore, Tan worked in one of Tan Kah Kee's factories, and within half a year he was promoted to a responsible position in Tan Kah Kee's Khiam Aik (Qianyi) company. Not long afterward, he left the company to set up a rubber enterprise with the help from his brothers, but the enterprise lost half its capital in a year.
Tan then ran it alone and after several years, he built up his Aik Hoe (Yihe) rubber company and became one of the leading rubber industrialists of the region. He expanded his business to all parts of Malaya, Thailand and India and diversified into insurance, paper and cement industries. His career as an industrialist peaked in the 1950s, when his company reaped huge profits from the rising price of rubber.
Later life
Tan was stripped of his Malayan citizenship in Singapore in 1963 by the Malaysian Federal Government as a suspected communist, and remained stateless since then. Tan died in 1972 in Singapore at the age of 76, leaving behind 11 sons and 3 daughters.[2][3]