Founder of Hyundai - Chung Ju-Yung

1915-2001
     = my addtions.

  Born the son of oppressed peasants, industrialist Chung Ju-Yung, founder of the Hyundai industrial empire, pulled post-war Korea out of poverty and ruin while building his own fortune. A man who employed more than 170,000 of his fellow Koreans and attained folk-hero status for his philanthropy and efforts to reunite his nation, Chung Ju-Yung died in Seoul, South Korea on March 21st, 2001 from complications of pneumonia.
   
  Undoubtedly the wealthiest man in Korea by the 1990s, Chung Ju-Yung was born on November 25th, 1915, the eldest of the eight children of poor tenant farmers in Asan, Tongchon, in what later became North Korea. Chung's formal education ended in elementary school, when his father withdrew him and set him to the task of helping to provide for his seven younger siblings. Initially a laborer on the family farm, Chung was later sent to work as a railway construction laborer and then as a dock hand for a barge owner by the time most modern youth would be entering junior high school, his wages taken by his parents to feed the family. Chung made several attempts to run away from his Tongchon home, and was twice brought back and disciplined before a third attempt, around 1932 was successful. Chung financed his 120 mile trek to Seoul by selling one of his father's cows, arriving in the city around the age of 16. (That life long guilt later prompted him to send 1.500 heads of cattle to the North as a humanitarian gesture in 1998.)
   
  Chung supported himself by peddling rice for a Seoul vendor in 1934, learning the edicts of Confucius and hoarding his wages until he purchased the rice shop he had worked for in 1937. When the Japanese (who occupied Korea until 1945) made it illegal for Koreans to own such critical food trades as rice shops because of the implementation of a rice rationing system under the military-control order of Japanese forces, his firm was forced to be shutdown. Chung became a truck driver, then owner of his own delivery service. That led Chung to operate an automobile repair shop. He then opened a garage and repair firm, the "Ah-do Service" auto repair shop in Seoul in March, 1940, establishing the rigid work ethic and demand for quality upon which he built a multinational empire. In 1946 Chung, then 31 years old, launched the Hyundai Auto Service in Seoul, his first company financing Hyundai Togun (later renamed Engineering and Construction) as well as Hyundai Motors in 1967. With the help of his younger brother Chung In-yung, who worked as an interpreter for a U.S. engineering battalion, Chung Ju-yung secured several construction projects for U.S. troops stationed here. By 1960, Hyundai had emerged as Korea's No. 1 construction company.
   
Chung's business ventures flourished in part because he found favor with South Korean leader Park Ching Hee. Park granted Chung and Hyundai many government building and military contracts after becoming impressed with the Chung work ethic. Park discovered, during a surprise plant inspection, that it was Chung's custom to begin work before dawn after walking 3 miles to his office from a modest seven room home he had built with surplus construction materials, and that the shirtsleeves corporate head often put in 16 hour days. Chung regularly used the profits from his existing businesses to build his new ventures, as well as his almost relentless "can do" attitude, exemplified by a 1972 business milestone. Chung took the first order for his shipbuilding business, Hyundai Heavy Industries, a super tanker for the Hong Kong trade giant CT Tung, before he had even built his own ship yard. CT Tung received their tanker on time.
   
  Chung, who with his wife Byun Jung-Suk had eight sons and a daughter, brought his boys into the conglomerate, which, in the 1980s lived up to its name (Hyundai being the Korean equivalent of "Modern") by entering electronics manufacturing. By then the largest family-owned business empire (Chaebol) in Korea, Hyundai had literally as well as figuratively rebuilt a nation which, a generation earlier, had been devastated by war. In addition to Hyundai Engineering (construction), Hyundai Motors (Korea's largest auto manufacturer after absorbing Kia), Hyundai Merchant Marine (shipping) and oil interests, Chung developed Hyundai Electronics into the world's second largest manufacture of computer chips in less than 10 years. Chung parlayed much of Hyundai's profits into philanthropic or civic benefit ventures throughout Korea, building hospitals, schools, and apartment complexes for Hyundai workers.
   
  In 1977 Chung was one of the civilian forces at the head of the effort to rebuild the war torn cities of Vietnam, and was made an honorary Commander of the British Empire by England's Queen Elizabeth II. Chung also received the Order of Merit from the governments of China and the nation of Zaire, and in 1982 stood as the first non-American entrepreneur and philanthropist to receive an honorary degree in business from George Washington University. In his homeland, Chung spent more than ten years leading the Federation of Korean Industries. Chung was also credited with the successful negotiations to hold the 1988 Olympic games in Seoul.
   
  Chung's life and career were not without trials- in at least one instance, literally. In 1982, Chung's first born son and the traditional heir to the leadership position of his business empire, Chung Mong Pi, was killed in an automobile accident, a tragedy worsened by a first bout of squabbling among Chung's sons over the future of the family fortune. In 1990 Chung's fourth son, Chung Mong Woo committed suicide. When the long reigning head of the Hyundai empire chose to retire as the conglomerate's chairman (he remained a highly influential Honorary Chairman and controlling share holder in the public company) Chung endured an embarrassing publicly played out power struggle between his eldest surviving sons, who he had appointed joint chairmen.
   
  Chung finally intervened when the squabble began to affect the company's finances: Elder son Mong Koo was made chair of the Hyundai Motor Group, his next son Mong Jun was appointed head of the Hyundai Heavy Industries Corporation, and Chung brought in his son Mong Hun to oversee the electrical division. One of Chung's younger brothers took the reigns of Hyundai's automotive interests in the United States, which he had chartered in the 1980s. In all Hyundai held some 50 subsidiaries and industrial divisions as of 2000.
   
  Chung suffered a political disappointment in 1992 when his bid to revitalize Korea's economy by becoming President failed at the polls. Chung's campaign loss had deeper effect than a disappointing show of voter support: Chung was subject of an investigation by the new government, which placed an ongoing tax audit on his companies and found him guilty of charges of campaign impropriety, using some $81 million of Hyundai funds to finance his presidential campaign. Blasted in the media, Chung was sentenced to a prison term of three years, which was suspended in light of his advanced age at sentencing (around 80) and his frail health. Chung, who espoused the Confucian maxim "there are no failures, only setbacks" moved forward to promote the reunification of North and South Korea, working with leaders of both nations to promote joint industry and tourism projects that would benefit both countries, particularly destitute North Korea.
   
  In 1998, Chung became the first civilian South Korean to enter North Korea without a military escort. At that historic juncture, which garnered international media coverage, Chung, 83 years old, led a cow across the border at Panmunjam, site of the war end truce, while his sons followed with another 500 head of cattle that were donated to feed Chung's old village of Asan. Chung declared that the gift to the impoverished township was his repayment for the theft of his father's cow more than 60 years earlier. Chung additionally received permission to establish businesses and a hospital in the district for the care of its people.
   
  In the year that followed his retirement from Hyundai, the conglomerate was fractionalized in compliance with Korean government policies put in place in the face of a national financial crisis. The 85 year old Chung Ju-Yung, who had been in deteriorating health, was admitted to Seoul's Asan Medical Center, one he himself had built, during the first week of March 2001. Admitted with a critical case of pneumonia, Chung Ju-Yung's condition worsened. He died in his sleep at hospital, in the company of his family, on March 21st, 2001.
   
  Scheduled for interment on March 25th, 2001 after a traditional period of mourning, Chung Ju-Yung was mourned as a national hero in Korea as the man credited with rebuilding a war torn and impoverished nation split by ideologies. Hyundai officials revealed that in keeping with his observance that "he had come empty handed and he would leave empty handed", Chung Ju-Yung had bequeathed more than $57 million to the business he had founded in 1946. Chung Ju-Yung was survived at his death by his wife Byun Joong-Suk, sons Mong Joon, Mong Koo, Mong Kun, Mong Yun, Mong Hun, and Mong Il, his daughter Kyung Hee, four brothers, a sister, and a number of grandchildren.
   

Timeline

Year Month/Date Notes
1915 November 25 Born as the eldest son of two girls and six boys in Tongchon,Kangwon-do, now North Korea.
1930 March Graduates from Songjon Primary School.
1939 December Marries 16-year-old Byeon Jung-seok.
1940 March Sets up car maintenance shop Ado Service in Seoul.
1946 April Establishes Hyundai Auto Service.
1947 May Founds Hyundai Civil Works Co.
1950 January Sets up Hyundai Construction and Engineering Co. after merging Hyundai Auto Service and Hyundai Civil Works Co.
1950 July Establishes Hyundai Commercial Transportation Co.
1960   Hyundai Construction ranks first in the construction industry in terms of orders received.
1961 January Hyundai Construction's headquarters is built in Mukyo-dong, Seoul
1964 June Completes building of Hyundai Construction's cement factory in Tanyang, Chungchong-pukto.
1965 September Receives order to build Thailand's expressway, the nation's first order from abroad.
1967 April Starts building multipurpose dam on the Soyang River, finishes the project in Dec. 1973.
1967 December Founds Hyundai Motor Co.
1968 February Begins construction of the Kyungbu Expressway connecting Pusan and Seoul, finishes in June. 1970.
1969 January Inaugurated as Hyundai Construction chairman.
1969 December Establishes Hyundai Cement Co.
1971 February Becomes Hyundai Group chairman.
1973 April Founds Hyundai Heavy Industries Ltd.
1974 February Sets up Hyundai Engineering Co. and Hyundai Motor Services Co.
1975 April Founds Hyundai Mipo Dockyard Co.
1976 January Pony-model cars, the nation's first vehicle model, are released.
1976 March Establishes Korea Industrial Development Co. and Hyundai Merchant Marine Co.
1976 December Sets up Hyundai Corp.
1977 February Appointed chairman of the Federation of Korean Industries and leads the organization until 1987.
1977 July Establishes Asan Foundation and Hyundai Oil Refinery.
1978 August Starts working on the Sosan reclamation project, Chungchong- namdo, finishes it in August 1995.
1981 May Becomes chairman of the Seoul Olympic Bidding Committee.
1982 July Appointed president of the Korea Sports Council.
1983 February Sets up Hyundai Electronics Industries.
1986 November Establishes Hyundai Development Co.
1987 January Becomes honorary chairman of the Hyundai Group.
1989 January Visits North Korea and proposes joint development of Mt.Kumgang as a tourist attraction.
1991 October Founds Hyundai Petrochemical of Korea.
1992 March Elected as a lawmaker in the 14th parliamentary elections.
1992 December Runs for the presidency.
1993 February Retires as a politician.
1996 January Chung Mong-koo, Chung Ju-yung's eldest son, becomes chairman of Hyundai Group.
1998 March Co-chairmanship of Chung Mong-koo and Chung Mong-hun, Chung Ju-yung's fifth son, starts.
1998 June Visits North Korea with 500 head of cattle as a present.
1998 October Goes to the North with 501 head of cattle and meets with North Korean leader Kim Jong-il.
1998 March Founds Hyundai Asan.
2000 May Resigns as honorary chairman of Hyundai Group and announces that Hyundai Group chairman Chung Mong-hun and Hyundai Motor chairman Chung Mong-koo will leave their positions.
2000 June Meets with Kim Jong-il in the North.
2001 March 21 Dies at 86.

Sources:

    The Korea Times
    Orbits.Com

 

 

 

 

This site was last updated 08/15/05