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Wing Lock Wei
Country (sports)Republic of China
Born(1892-05-00)May 1892 [1]
Republic of China [1]
Died21 September 1935 (1935-09-22) (aged 43)
Greenwich Village, United States
Turned pro1914 (amateur tour)
1931 (pro tour)
Retired1935 (due to death)
Singles
Grand Slam singles results
Wimbledon2R (1920)
Olympic Games1R (1924)
Doubles
Grand Slam doubles results
US Open3R (1917)
Olympic Games1R (1924)
Team competitions
Davis CupQF (1924) (America)

Wing Lock Wei (Chinese: 榮落韋, Mandarin pronunciation: [wȉːŋ lɔ̀ːk weɪ]; May, 1892 – September 21, 1935) was a Chinese tennis player, cricket player and billiards player in the 1910s-20s.[1] He was a one-time Chinese national tennis champion and was mainly successful in doubles tournaments.[1] He represented China in various international team competitions including the Olympics, Far Eastern Games and was the captain of the first ever Chinese Davis Cup squad.[1]

Early years and family[edit]

Sir Boshan Wei-Yuk, Wing-Lock's father

Wing Lock Wei was born in May 1892 to Huang Yuqing and Sir Boshan Wei Yuk Senior Chinese Unofficial Member of the Executive Council of Hong Kong. [1] He attended to the St. Stephen's College in Hong Kong. [1] At this time he practised tennis and cricket, and had an associate degree in arts. [1] He then went on to graduated at the University of Hong Kong in 1916 as a Bachelor of Science. [1] He took up billiards and was already the college team captain in tennis and cricket. [1] He then moved to the United States and began his scholarship at the Union College. [1] From 1917 onwards he continued his studies in the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and the Harvard University simultanously.[1] He further traveled to Cambridge to enter the King's College as a research student.[1] He won his first billiards title there at an intercollegiate challenge.[1]

Tennis career[edit]

Personal life[edit]

He married Annie Ng Quinn, daughter of an Australian merchant Thomas Ng Quinn. [1] He started working in a banking house in Hong Kong before being promoted the director of the Union Bank of China in 1921. [1] He also worked for the Oriental Commercial Bank of Shanghai. [1] In 1925 he published his best seller book The Theory of Mah Jong. [1]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r Joe Mitchell Chapple (May 8, 1925). "Face to face with famous folks". Evening Independent. XVIII (159). St. Petersburg, Florida, United States: Willis B. Powell: 13. Retrieved April 9, 2013.

External links[edit]

{{Persondata | NAME = Wei, Wing Lock | ALTERNATIVE NAMES = | SHORT DESCRIPTION = Tennis player | DATE OF BIRTH = May, 1892 | PLACE OF BIRTH = [[China]] | DATE OF DEATH = September 21, 1935 | PLACE OF DEATH = [[Greenwich Village]], [[United States]] }} {{DEFAULTSORT: Wei, Wing Lock}} [[Category:1894 births]] [[Category:1935 deaths]] [[Category:Chinese male tennis players]] [[Category:Alumni of the University of Hong Kong]] [[Category:Unsolved deaths or murders]] [[Category:Death in New York]]