Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Hotel accommodation - The Story of Unintentional Master: Where are the descendants of Huang Xing today? The ending of revolutionary pioneer Huang Xing's Five sons and Four daughters

The Story of Unintentional Master: Where are the descendants of Huang Xing today? The ending of revolutionary pioneer Huang Xing's Five sons and Four daughters

Huang Xing has five sons and four daughters: the eldest son Huang Yiou, the second son Huang, the third son Huang, the fourth son Huang, the fifth son Huang Nai, the eldest daughter, the second daughter and the third daughter He.

The eldest son: Huang Yiou. 19 10 Spring to19/kloc-0 February, Huang Xing ordered him to travel between Japan and Hong Kong to prepare for the Guangzhou New Army Uprising and Huanghuagang Uprising. Through the relationship between Miyazaki Hayao, a Japanese friend, and Tibet, he shipped a batch of guns and ammunition from Japan to Hong Kong and stayed in the Coordination Department of the Hong Kong delegation. 19 1 1 In March, he was hired by Coach Office of Guangzhou Police, and the position was vacant. He used his legal identity to carry out anti-Qing propaganda and delivered weapons to the secret contact point in Guangzhou. He took part in the Huanghuagang Uprising and survived the battle, becoming one of the few survivors. Later, he was sent back to Hunan by the League to carry out revolutionary activities, under the pseudonym of Huang Zuguang, and organized a "wild ball meeting" with revolutionary colleagues in Changsha to unite comrades and incite an uprising under the pretext of practicing baseball. He was wanted for the incident and went to Japan again. During the Wuchang Uprising, he returned to China on the orders of his father, took part in the battle to recover Shanghai, traveled between Zhenjiang and Hangzhou, contacted his comrades-in-arms, formed the Jiangsu-Zhejiang Allied Forces, and served as the deputy commander of the vanguard of the Shanghai Army. In order to cooperate with Wuhan and contain the Qing army, he led the Shanghai army and attacked Nanjing with the people's army of Zhejiang, Jiangsu and Wu. In the battle, he took the lead in bravely killing the enemy and was praised by people.

In June, 1977, 1 1, he was elected as the vice chairman of Hunan CPPCC. From 65438 to 0978, he served as the temporary leader of Hunan Provincial Committee of China Revolution. 1979 was elected as a member of the Central Committee of the Chinese Revolutionary Committee. 1980 Chairman of Hunan Provincial Committee of Chinese Revolutionary Committee. He is currently a member of the Fifth National Committee of China People's Political Consultative Conference, a member of the Second and Third People's Committees of Hunan Province, and a member of the Standing Committee of the First, Second and Third CPPCC of Hunan Province. 198 1 year 1 month 12 died in Changsha at the age of 89.

The second son: Huang, formerly known as Huang Houduan, was born in Changsha, Hunan, and was the second son of Huang Xing. From 65438 to 0925, Huang studied at Imperial University in Kyoto, Japan. After graduation, Nanjing National Government was established. He returned to work with the desire to revitalize China and benefit the people. The Nanjing National Government appointed him as Director of the Customs Department of the Ministry of Finance, Director of the Political Department of the Eleventh Army of the National Revolutionary Army, Minister of Railways, Minister of Interior and Chief Counsellor.

1965-438+0940 When the National Government conducted the population census, Huang served as the director of the Family Management Department and the director of the Statistics Department of the Ministry of the Interior. Due to the social unrest at that time, a large area of land fell into the hands of the Japanese aggressors and was unsustainable. Many colleagues think that the census can only be a rough assessment. However, Huang attached great importance to this and distributed the statistical tables to all provinces, cities and counties as much as possible. For areas without statistical data, the population can be estimated according to the salt consumption in this area, because a person's daily salt consumption can be estimated. After this step-by-step statistical accounting, the national household registration statistics were finally completed, and the book Household Registration Statistics was written, which determined that the population of China at that time was 45 million, and this figure continued until the national liberation.

Wu Zi: Huang Nai, formerly known as Huang, is an expert in Braille and Esperanto in China. The son of Huang Xing, a native of Changsha, Hunan, was a pioneer of China's national revolution. 1937, joined the China * * * production party. He used to be the director of the enemy situation research office of the Eighth Route Army General Political Department and the director of the international department of Xinhua News Agency. After the founding of People's Republic of China (PRC), he served as Director of the Department of Education for the Blind and D.

Eldest daughter: Huang Zhenhua, a member of the front desk "Legislative Yuan" leading group, 1989 returned to the mainland and died in the Soviet Union three years later. Successively: Bachelor of Science, Master of Arts, University Professor, Inspector of Ministry of Education, Dean of College, Editor of Ministry of Education, Counselor and Examiner of Executive Yuan, Member of National General Mobilization Conference, Principal of Private Primary and Secondary Schools, Convenor of Education Committee of Legislative Yuan, Member of Deliberation Committee, Member of Disciplinary Committee, Member of American Party Department in Nanjing and Chongqing, Head of Central Young Women Summer Training Group, Instructor, and Member of Party Department of Legislative Yuan.

Daughter: Huang Wenhua, born in Japan, one of the founders of Malaysian communist party, and her husband: Huang Wenshan.

Three women: husband Xue, historian, professor of political science at Stanford University, good at studying the Revolution of 1911.

Son Huang, wife, eldest daughter

Fourth son: Huang, wife: Cheng Qian's daughter Cheng Bode.