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Ellen Li

Ellen Li Shu-pui
CBE, LLD, JP
李樹培夫人
Ellen Li Shu-pui.jpeg
Unofficial Member of the Legislative Council of Hong Kong
In office
1 July 1966 – 20 June 1973
Appointed by Sir David Trench
Preceded by Sir Kwan Cho-yiu
Personal details
Born Ts'o Sau-kuan
(1908-07-22)22 July 1908
Saigon, French Indochina
Died 2 June 2005(2005-06-02) (aged 96)
Hong Kong
Spouse(s) Li Shu-pui
Alma mater St. Stephen's Girls' College
University of Shanghai

Ellen Li Shu-pui, CBE, LLD, JP (Chinese: 李樹培夫人; 22 July 1908 – 2 June 2005) was the first woman to be appointed to the Legislative Council of Hong Kong.

Li was born Ts'o Sau-kuan in 1908 in Saigon, Vietnam. She was educated at the St. Stephen's Girls' College and was among the first women to study business administration at the University of Shanghai. After her education, she worked at the Chinese Maritime Customs before she moved to Hong Kong in 1934. She married Dr. Li Shu-pui, younger brother of Dr. Li Shu-fan, in 1936.

During the depression years of the 1930s Hong Kong, she worked in the social services and founded the Hong Kong Chinese Women's Club and the Hong Kong Council of Women. She also encouraged and extended the activities of the Young Women's Christian Association, repeatedly serving as president. She also worked in the Family Planning Association and many government committees. She was made member of the Court of the University of Hong Kong in 1948. She was diagnosed of breast cancer in 1962 and was cured after receiving a series of operations.

She was made Justice of the Peace in 1948. In 1964, he was appointed member of the Urban Council of Hong Kong, the first woman to be appointed to the Council. She became the first woman to be appointed to the Legislative Council of Hong Kong in 1965 as a provisional member during the absence of Dhun Jehangir Ruttonjee, and was appointed in July 1966 in place of Kwan Cho-yiu in which she held the position until 1973. She was instrumental in passing the 1971 Marriage (Amendment) Bill, which abolished the polygamy by virtue of the Great Qing Legal Code.


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