Betty
Lee Sung
Betty Lee Sung currently serves as Chair of the Asian American/Asian Research
Institute. She is a Professor Emerita and Former Chair of the Department of Asian
Studies, City College of New York
Prof. Betty Lee Sung is a leading authority on the Chinese in
the United States. Her first book, Mountain of Gold (1967), was
a pioneering chronicle of the history of the Chinese in America.
Its publication led to an invitation to initiate Asian American
Studies at the City College of New York in 1970. Again, these courses
were the first of their kind in the Eastern United States.
Prof. Sung followed with seven other books on Chinese Americans.
In 1994, she completed a database of the Chinese immigrant records
in the New York Region National Archives. The database will enable
scholars to recreate the early history of the Chinese in this country
and serve as a source for genealogical research.
Born in the United States on October 3, 1924 to poor Chinese
immigrant parents from Guangdong, Prof. Sung has gone through the
full gamut of struggles, discrimination, experiences, and achievements
of Chinese Americans. She grew up in Washington, D.C., but during
the depression years her father took the family back to his hometown,
Toishan. She returned to the United States shortly before Guangdong
fell into Japanese hands during World War II.
Prof. Sung has been the recipient of many research grants and
awards. Her book Manpower and Employment book won an outstanding
book award in 1976. Her first book, Mountain of Gold, is a classic
in Asian American Studies. Not only did she teach, research and
write, Prof. Sung is also an advocate for Chinese American interests.
She is active in many organizations, and she speaks out against
discrimination and injustice toward Chinese Americans. She has
been honored by many organizations like the Cosmopolitan Lion's
Club, the Organization of Chinese Americans, the Asian American
Higher Education Council, among many others. In 1996, she was awarded
an honorary Doctor of Letters from the State University of New
York Old Westbury, and she gave the commencement address.
Prof. Sung is married to Charles Chung, formerly with the United
Nations. In addition to all her professional achievements, she
and her husband have brought up eight children, who have given
them thirteen grandchildren.
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