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s:b_sung [2024/10/20 10:19] – created sallyrs:b_sung [2024/11/11 21:50] (current) sallyr
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-Bruce Sung (1916 – 2005) >+Bruce Sung (1916 – 2005)
   
 Bruce Sung was born and raised in Vancouver’s Chinatown. His father, Lambert Sung, was a scholar and linguist in China before he immigrated to Canada in 1909.((“Visionary Innovator Bruce Sung.” Hidden Histories Society Yukon, 2024 website: Bruce Sung | Hidden Histories Society Yukon (hhsy.org) )) It was during the head tax era, but he didn’t have to pay it because he was working as a translator with the Chinese Consulate.((Sissi De Flaviis, “Story of Chinese-Yukon man who opened territory’s first supermarket highlights Asian Heritage Month.” //CBC News,// 24 May 2022.))  Bruce Sung was born and raised in Vancouver’s Chinatown. His father, Lambert Sung, was a scholar and linguist in China before he immigrated to Canada in 1909.((“Visionary Innovator Bruce Sung.” Hidden Histories Society Yukon, 2024 website: Bruce Sung | Hidden Histories Society Yukon (hhsy.org) )) It was during the head tax era, but he didn’t have to pay it because he was working as a translator with the Chinese Consulate.((Sissi De Flaviis, “Story of Chinese-Yukon man who opened territory’s first supermarket highlights Asian Heritage Month.” //CBC News,// 24 May 2022.)) 
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 Sung was contracted by Brodie Hicks at United Keno to run the Elsa kitchen. The employed kitchen cooks had become problem drinkers, but there was never a drunk or missing-in-action cook after Sung and his camp manager Jimmie Wong took over. Sung’s company took over all the housekeeping details of the camp. The mining company did not have success growing vegetables at Elsa so they put in three large greenhouses near their coal mine at Tantalus Butte on the Yukon River. Sung’s company was entrusted with operating them, and he selected an experienced Chinese gardener who planted all three with Bok Choy. It was a tasty vegetable but not well-received by the miners.((Brodie Hicks, “Yukon Days 1947 – 1953.” Unpublished memoir, nd: 18-20.)) Sung was contracted by Brodie Hicks at United Keno to run the Elsa kitchen. The employed kitchen cooks had become problem drinkers, but there was never a drunk or missing-in-action cook after Sung and his camp manager Jimmie Wong took over. Sung’s company took over all the housekeeping details of the camp. The mining company did not have success growing vegetables at Elsa so they put in three large greenhouses near their coal mine at Tantalus Butte on the Yukon River. Sung’s company was entrusted with operating them, and he selected an experienced Chinese gardener who planted all three with Bok Choy. It was a tasty vegetable but not well-received by the miners.((Brodie Hicks, “Yukon Days 1947 – 1953.” Unpublished memoir, nd: 18-20.))
   
-In Whitehorse, Sung leased the Tourist Services restaurant and operated as Columbia Caterers. In 1954, he bought out the Tourist Services partners. Sung made a deal with Poole Construction, who was building the Whitehorse Rapids Dam, and they built a modern supermarket on the Tourist Services property in 1957.((Linda Johnson ed., //At the Heart of Gold: The Yukon Commissioner’s Office 1898-2010//. Legislative Assembly of the Yukon, 2012: 96-103.)) The new supermarket opened in 1962 with Jim Smith as the manager.((Hougen Group of Companies, “Other News from 1962.” 2019 website: http://hougengroup.com/yukon-history/historical-facts/other-news-from-1962/)) Sung was an absentee boss, operating out of Vancouver. The Sung organization bought all the supplies through their wholesale outfit, Pacific Produce. The store made more money in a day than they had in a month before the dam construction. The well-established and well-funded Northern Commercial Company was no competition and went out of business in Whitehorse.((Linda Johnson ed., //At the Heart of Gold: The Yukon Commissioner’s Office 1898-2010.// Legislative Assembly of the Yukon, 2012: 96-103.))+In Whitehorse, Sung leased the Tourist Services restaurant and operated as Columbia Caterers. In 1954, he bought out the Tourist Services partners. Sung made a deal with Poole Construction, who was building the Whitehorse Rapids Dam, and they built a modern supermarket on the Tourist Services property in 1957.((Linda Johnson, //At the Heart of Gold: The Yukon Commissioner’s Office 1898-2010//. Legislative Assembly of the Yukon, 2012: 96-103.)) The new supermarket opened in 1962 with Jim Smith as the manager.((Hougen Group of Companies, “Other News from 1962.” 2019 website: http://hougengroup.com/yukon-history/historical-facts/other-news-from-1962/)) Sung was an absentee boss, operating out of Vancouver. The Sung organization bought all the supplies through their wholesale outfit, Pacific Produce. The store made more money in a day than they had in a month before the dam construction. The well-established and well-funded Northern Commercial Company was no competition and went out of business in Whitehorse.((Linda Johnson, //At the Heart of Gold: The Yukon Commissioner’s Office 1898-2010.// Legislative Assembly of the Yukon, 2012: 96-103.))
  
 By 1965/66, Sung was ready to get out of the grocery business in Whitehorse and sold out to Kelly Douglas who built the Quanlin Mall and used a large building across Ogilvie Street as their warehouse.((Carole Bookless, “The Whitehorse Style Part II: Benchmarks and Landmarks.” NRI and Heritage Branch. December 2001: 10, 89-90.)) Bruce Sung also leased the Whitehorse Inn for five years, ending in 1965.(//(Whitehorse Star// (Whitehorse), 15 May 1965.)) Bruce Sung never moved to the Yukon as a permanent resident but he spent more than three decades operating a wide range of enterprises including Tourist Services, Northern Caterers, General Catering Services Ltd., and Dianne Hotels.((“Visionary Innovator Bruce Sung.” Hidden Histories Society Yukon, 2024 website: Bruce Sung | Hidden Histories Society Yukon (hhsy.org) )) By 1965/66, Sung was ready to get out of the grocery business in Whitehorse and sold out to Kelly Douglas who built the Quanlin Mall and used a large building across Ogilvie Street as their warehouse.((Carole Bookless, “The Whitehorse Style Part II: Benchmarks and Landmarks.” NRI and Heritage Branch. December 2001: 10, 89-90.)) Bruce Sung also leased the Whitehorse Inn for five years, ending in 1965.(//(Whitehorse Star// (Whitehorse), 15 May 1965.)) Bruce Sung never moved to the Yukon as a permanent resident but he spent more than three decades operating a wide range of enterprises including Tourist Services, Northern Caterers, General Catering Services Ltd., and Dianne Hotels.((“Visionary Innovator Bruce Sung.” Hidden Histories Society Yukon, 2024 website: Bruce Sung | Hidden Histories Society Yukon (hhsy.org) ))
  
s/b_sung.1729444799.txt.gz · Last modified: 2024/10/20 10:19 by sallyr