Tay Seow Huah

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Born1933 (1933)
Died19 September 1980(1980-09-19) (aged 46–47)
SpouseCecilia Cheong Keong Hin
Children2
Tay Seow Huah
Personal details
Born1933 (1933)
Died19 September 1980(1980-09-19) (aged 46–47)
SpouseCecilia Cheong Keong Hin
Children2
Alma materUniversity of Malaya in Singapore (BA)
Chinese name
Traditional Chinese戴少華
Simplified Chinese戴少华
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinDài Shǎohuá
IPA[tâɪ.ʂàʊ.xwǎ]

Tay Seow Huah PJG (c.1933– 19 September 1980) was a Singaporean senior civil servant who served at various times as Director of the Special Branch, Director of the Security and Intelligence Division,[1] Permanent Secretary for Home Affairs and Permanent Secretary for Defence, prior to his retirement in 1976. He then taught history at the University of Singapore.[2]

Tay was born in Penang, and he attended the University of Malaya in Singapore to study history. Tay graduated with a Bachelor of Arts.[3]

Career

Tay was awarded the Eisenhower Fellowships in 1971. He was Acting Permanent Secretary of Home Affairs around 1971 and was involved in the Laju incident.[4][5]

In February 1973, Tay was appointed as deputy chairman on a public inquiry committee into juvenile crime, assisting chairman Tan Boon Chiang.[6]

On 1 April 1976, Tay retired from the civil service on medical grounds.[3][7]

Personal life

Tay was married to Cecilia Cheong Keong Hin,[8] and they had two children—Joanne Tay and Simon Tay.[9]

In 1974, after being hospitalised in Tan Tock Seng Hospital due to a cardiovascular disease, Tay went to the United States to seek medical treatment.[7]

On 19 September 1980, Tay died.[10][11] He was undergoing an operation in a London hospital to remove a brain tumour, and fell into a coma.[12][13]

Legacy

In December 2000, the Tay Seow Huah Book Prize was set up by his children, relatives, friends, and former colleagues, including President S. R. Nathan.[9]

In 2024, his son released a memoir about him:

  • Tay, Simon (3 October 2024). Enigmas: Tay Seow Huah, My Father, Singapore's Pioneer Spy Chief. Singapore: Landmark Books. ISBN 978-981-188-806-9.[14]

Awards and decorations

References

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