Tan Boo Liat


Tan Boo Liat was a wealthy Singapore philanthropist. He was the son of Tan Soon Toh, grandson of Tan Kim Ching and great-grandson of Tan Tock Seng.
Educated in Singapore, Tan was a member of the Singapore Volunteer Infantry and was among the contingent present at King Edward's coronation. As a descendant of the illustrious Tan Tock Seng family, he was the leader of the Hokkien Chinese community in Singapore, and chairman of the Po Chiak Keng Committee of Management, which the temple was built as the Tan clan ancestral temple and association. He was also a strong supporter of Dr. Sun Yat-sen, being a member of the Singapore T'ung Meng Hui along with Lim Boon Keng and Dr. S. C. Yin and a president of the Singapore Kuomintang. He headed the Fukien Protection Fund together with Tan Kah Kee collecting $130,000 during a nine-month campaign.
Tan was a trustee of the Anglo-Chinese School's Boarding School. Together with Lim, Sir Song Ong Siang and a few other Straits-born Chinese leaders, he initiated the Singapore Chinese Girls' School. He also proposed the establishment of the Tao Nan School
File:Danish Seamen's Church 3, Nov 06.JPG|thumb|The former Golden Bell Mansion on Mount Faber, which is now occupied by the Danish Seamen's Church
Tan had a stable of a dozen racehorses. In 1898 his famous horse, Vanitas won the Viceroy's cup in Calcutta, India, the first time that a horse from the Straits Settlements or the Federated Malay States won this trophy, earning Tan Boo Liat $100,000.
Tan had strong commercial links to Thailand and was honoured by the King of Thailand, two of the things he had in common with his famous grandfather Tan Kim Ching. In 1920 he was awarded the title Phra Anukul Sayamkich.

Personal life

Tan's sister, Lilian Tan Luck Neo, married Seow Poh Leng and later died of Influenza during a flu epidemic in Singapore. Tan's daughter, Polly Tan Poh Li, rhwn married the widowed Seow.
Tan owned Golden Bell Mansion on Pender Road at the Mount Washington side of Mount Faber, Singapore. Sun Yat-sen stayed there on 15 December 1911 as did his wife and daughters. After his death in Shanghai in 1934 the house was sold. It is currently occupied by the Danish Seaman's Mission.