Background
Tan was born in a poor Hoklo family in Fujian, China.
陈六使, 陳六使
Businessman chairman philanthropist
Tan was born in a poor Hoklo family in Fujian, China.
He migrated to Singapore at 18. 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. 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. Tan was an activist, and like other entrepreneurs of his time, he believed in the value of education.
As chairman of the Chinese Chamber of Commerce in the 1950s, he fought for citizenship for Chinese people in Singapore and for the Chinese language to be one of Singapore"s official languages. As chairman of the Hokkien Huay Kuan (Hokkien clan association), he developed many schools under the auspices of the association: Kong Hwa School in Guillemard, Tao Nan School in Marine Parade, Nan Chiau School in River Valley and Chongfu Primary School in Yishun.
He also contributed to financing the Jimei schools founded by Tan Kah Kee.
In 1957 he donated considerable sums to Thailand"s Hokkien clan association to build overseas Chinese schools. His contributions to education, however, were not confined to Chinese schools. In 1949, when the University of Malaya was set up, Tan donated South$300,000, and between 1950 and 1960 he contributed to the building of schools of different language mediums.
Tan"s most outstanding contribution, however, was the initiating of the founding of Nanyang University in 1953, which was later merged with University of Singapore (partially funded by Lim Boon Keng and Lee Kong Chian) to form the now National University of Singapore.
He donated South$5 million to its building fund, as well as 523 acres (212 km2) of land for its campus on behalf of the Hokkien Huay Kuan. Between 1953 and 1963, he was Chairman of Nanyang University"s Executive Committee, and was in charge of various aspects of the university by building, teaching staff, research facilities, library, student welfare and others
Tan was, however, stripped of his Malayan citizenship in Singapore in 1963 by the Malaysian government (Singapore was part of Malaysian Federation 1963-1965) as a suspected communist. Tan died in 1972 in Singapore at the age of 76.
In 1974, a Tan Lark Sye scholarship was set up, and in 1998 the Tan Lark Sye professorship in Chinese language and culture was established to honour Tan.
Places named after Tan Lark Sye
Tan Lark Sye Library, New Era University College, Malaysia.