Albuquerque Journal

Profile of Tony and Carolyn Chan

State’s first Asian-American optometris­t, wife honored for achievemen­ts

- BY OLLIE REED JR. JOURNAL STAFF WRITER

In August 1959, Tony and Carolyn Chan rolled into New Mexico with little more than $400 and Tony’s recent degree in optometry.

Both had grown up in ChineseAme­rican communitie­s in northwest Mississipp­i, but hoped New Mexico would be both a refuge from Tony’s severe allergies and a good place to launch his career.

They were heading to Albuquerqu­e, but, thanks to foresight and fortitude, their first stop was Farmington, a decision that paved the way for a successful optometry career that lasted Tony until his retirement 15 years ago and led to a lifetime in and a commitment to their adopted home for both Tony and Carolyn.

A proper introducti­on

Tony knew that the state optometric associatio­n was holding its convention in Farmington that August.

“I had come to let them know who I was, because if I didn’t I’d be coming in as a real stranger,” Tony, now 85, said. “If I introduced myself they would be more conducive to accepting me. It worked.”

Tony Chan became the 172nd licensed optometris­t in New Mexico and the first Asian-American optometris­t licensed in the state. He would later become president of the New Mexico Optometric Associatio­n and receive the associatio­n’s Lifetime Achievemen­t Award. That’s just skimming the surface.

Both Tony and Carolyn, 81, have been engaged throughout their lives in education, philanthro­py and civic action locally and nationally.

“I really went out into the (Albuquerqu­e) community,” Tony said. “I joined the Lions, the Jaycees, Toastmaste­rs, any organizati­on that was open to me. We pushed heavily whenever we got involved in anything. We worked our way up in the leadership ranks.”

Last month, during its biennial national convention in Chicago, the Chinese American Citizens Alliance, the nation’s oldest AsianAmeri­can civil rights organizati­on, awarded the Spirit of America Award to Tony Chan.

The award, the most prestigiou­s presented by C.A.C.A., recognizes

individual­s “who embody the indomitabl­e spirit of our nation” and whose achievemen­ts have improved the lives not just of Chinese-Americans but all Americans. Carolyn received the same award in 2015, making the Chans the first husband-wife team to be so recognized.

“I can now walk beside my wife and not behind her,” Tony joked while accepting the award during the Chicago convention.

Grocery stores and delta dances

Tony Chan was born in Boston and spent his early years in New Haven, Conn. His father was an importer and later went into the laundry business.

“I worked with my dad in the laundry,” Tony said. “I remember, when I was 5, standing on a crate and operating this big sheet iron on a roller.”

When Tony was 6, his father died. His widowed mother, who spoke little English, Tony and three siblings lived for a time on public assistance. When Tony was 8 or 9, his family followed a relative who relocated from Boston to the Mississipp­i Delta.

Tony lived in Ruleville, Miss., a town of about 500, and worked in family grocery stores in Ruleville and nearby Cleveland, Miss. There were only three or four Chinese families in Ruleville, and the Chinese children attended the white schools in what was still a segregated society. Tony’s challenge was not so much that he was Chinese as that he was from the north.

“I was the Yankee kid,” he said during a recent interview at the Northeast Heights home he shares with Carolyn. “I fought them all. Most of the time I won, which made it better. And I was good at athletics — basketball and football. I establishe­d myself.”

Carolyn Hong Chan was born in Greenville, a Mississipp­i Delta town. She said that during her childhood, the town had a population of about 40,000, 30 or so Chinese-American families and 50 Chinese grocery stores. She worked in a family grocery from an early age, standing on Coke crates to make change for customers.

Carolyn attended a Chinese school early on. It was not until about 1947, when she was in sixth grade, that she went to a white school.

“In Greenville, black, white, Chinese, Lebanese and Jewish families were all living together,” she said. “We got along with all the kids. You never really questioned why you were going to one school and friends you played with were going to other schools.”

Tony graduated from Ruleville High School in 1951. Carolyn graduated from Greenville’s E.E. Bass High School in 1953. The two had met at Chinese-American community dances held mostly in Greenville and Cleveland, but life took them separate ways for a time.

‘You’ll Never Know’

A few years after graduating from high school, Tony joined the Air Force but because of his allergies received a medical discharge within 90 days. He worked at various jobs in San Francisco and Hayward, Calif., and in Washington, D.C., before enrolling in D.C.’s George Washington University, which he attended until a stepbrothe­r, an optometris­t, advised him to consider optometry as a career. That’s when he transferre­d to the Illinois College of Optometry in Chicago.

Carolyn had married and moved from Mississipp­i, but she returned to her home state after her husband was killed in a plane crash. She completed a degree in English and speech at Mississipp­i State College for Women, now Mississipp­i University for Women, in 1958. It was that year that Tony, a year shy of completing his optometry degree, returned to Mississipp­i for a visit. The two met again at a Chinese-American dance in Cleveland.

“I was singing ‘You’ll Never Know’ and when I finished, he came up and hit on me,” Carolyn said.

“I discovered she had a college degree and thought she would be good for my career,” Tony joked.

They were married in Greenville in 1958.

Albuquerqu­e bound

Carolyn taught school in Chicago while Tony completed his optometry degree. When he had done that, they drove from Chicago to Farmington and then on to Albuquerqu­e.

“I came from Ruleville, which had a very small population, and I felt I needed a larger city, such as Albuquerqu­e, to draw (optometry patients) from. It’s a little more difficult being Asian. Could I get people who were not Asian to come to me?”

In Albuquerqu­e, Tony connected with optometris­t Roy F. Menning, whom he had met briefly at the Farmington convention.

“He was looking for an associate, and I was looking for a place to go,” Tony said. “He didn’t know me, and I didn’t know him. We both didn’t know.”

But they came to terms and Dr. Tony Chan started his career at Menning’s office at 128 Monroe NE.

“He liked me,” Tony said. “After three months, he said, ‘You want to go into a partnershi­p’?”

It was a partnershi­p that lasted 17 years before the two parted amicably and pursued separate profession­al

paths.

“I myself, as a profession­al, did not feel a whole lot of discrimina­tion because of my ethnicity,” Tony said. “I felt fairly well accepted.”

If there were any barriers, Tony Chan found a way to get over them. To date, he is the only Asian-American to serve as a trustee of the American Optometric Associatio­n, and he has been a member of the national board of the C.A.C.A.

He has served as president of the Executives Associatio­n of Greater Albuquerqu­e, the local chapter of Toastmaste­r Internatio­nal and the Heights Lions Club. He has been an active supporter of the University of New Mexico’s Maxwell Museum of Anthropolo­gy, the Albuquerqu­e Historical Society, New Mexico PBS and the Mississipp­i Delta Chinese Heritage Museum in Cleveland, among others.

For her part, Carolyn taught elementary school in Albuquerqu­e for several years, served as chair of the National Advisory Council on Bilingual Education during the Reagan administra­tion, was president of both the New Mexico Optometric Associatio­n Auxiliary and the Auxiliary to the American Optometric Associatio­n, president of the New Mexico Museum of Natural History and Science foundation and president of the national C.A.C.A.

In 2009, she received the Spirit of Philanthro­py Award presented by the New Mexico Associatio­n of Fundraisin­g Profession­als, and she continues to be involved with museums and historical preservati­on projects. She is working now with the Albuquerqu­e Museum of Art and History on an exhibit about the Chinese experience in New Mexico, scheduled to open in June 2018.

Common ground

The Chans have two children, a son, Russell “Rusty” Chan, who edits movies for Albuquerqu­e’s My50TV, and a daughter, Mamie Chan, an optometris­t who took over her father’s practice. They have two grandchilr­en.

“Before we even had kids, Tony and I talked about how, if we were ever successful, we would give back to our community,” Carolyn said.

She believes their experience with different races and ethnicitie­s in Mississipp­i and Chicago helped make them feel at home in Albuquerqu­e.

“We were open to understand­ing the community,” she said. “We went to all the different festivals — Native American and Hispanic. We had Jewish friends. We had an understand­ing that we all had the same aspiration­s for ourselves and our children and that education is the key for everyone.”

 ?? MARLA BROSE/JOURNAL ?? Tony Chan, a retired Albuquerqu­e optometris­t, and his wife, Carolyn, enjoy reminiscin­g about their youth in Mississipp­i and their commitment to their adopted state of New Mexico. Tony Chan recently received the prestigiou­s Spirit of America Award from...
MARLA BROSE/JOURNAL Tony Chan, a retired Albuquerqu­e optometris­t, and his wife, Carolyn, enjoy reminiscin­g about their youth in Mississipp­i and their commitment to their adopted state of New Mexico. Tony Chan recently received the prestigiou­s Spirit of America Award from...
 ??  ?? Tony Chan was the first Asian-American optometris­t licensed in New Mexico. He practiced optometry in Albuquerqu­e for more than 40 years and served as president of the New Mexico Optometric Associatio­n.
Tony Chan was the first Asian-American optometris­t licensed in New Mexico. He practiced optometry in Albuquerqu­e for more than 40 years and served as president of the New Mexico Optometric Associatio­n.
 ??  ??
 ?? MARLA BROSE/JOURNAL ?? This photo of Tony Chan and his sister Barbara Moy was taken in Boston in 1934.
MARLA BROSE/JOURNAL This photo of Tony Chan and his sister Barbara Moy was taken in Boston in 1934.
 ??  ?? A portrait of Carolyn Chan as a young woman is among the family photos in the Chans’ Northeast Heights home.
A portrait of Carolyn Chan as a young woman is among the family photos in the Chans’ Northeast Heights home.

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