In the years leading up to the revolution in 1911, Charlie Soong started a family in Shanghai with his wife from there
Ni Kwei-tseng. The couple had their first child in 1888—a girl whom they named
Soong Ai-ling. Their next daughter,
Soong Ching-ling was born in 1893, followed by their first son,
T. V. Soong (Soong Tse Ven), a year later. Their last daughter,
Soong Mei-ling came in 1898 and was followed by the brothers T. L. Soong (Soong Tse Liang, 宋子良
Sòng Zǐliáng) and T. A. Soong (Soong Tse An, 宋子安 ''Sòng Zǐ'ān''). Charlie intended to send all of his children to be educated in the United States. Ai-ling, at the early age of thirteen, was the first to go, becoming a special student at
Wesleyan College in
Georgia. All three sisters attended Wesleyan, with Ching-ling and Mei-ling moving to Georgia in 1907. (Mei-ling left Wesleyan, however, and graduated from
Wellesley College in Massachusetts.) Ai-Ling graduated in 1909, and moved back to China. Charlie installed her as Sun Yat-sen's secretary, in charge of handling his correspondence and of
decoding messages to him from the republicans. A few years later in 1911, Sun Yat-sen was successful in bringing about the
Xinhai Revolution, and the Qing State fell to be replaced by the short-lived
presidency of Sun Yat-sen. In 1912, Ching-ling returned to China, just in time to see the republic collapse under the leadership of
Yuan Shikai. The connection between Charlie Soong and Sun Yat-sen was now widely known, and Charlie felt that his family would not be safe in China. In 1913, they fled with Sun to
Tokyo. They remained there until 1916, when Charlie deemed the situation in Shanghai to be safe enough to return. File:Soong sisters with their mother.jpg|Soong sisters with their mother. Image:Soong sisters in their youth.jpg|The three Soong sisters in their youth, with Soong Ching-ling in the middle, and Soong Ai-ling and Soong Mei-ling on her left and right. File:Sun-Soong wedding photo 2.jpg|Soong Ching-ling and Sun Yat-sen wedding photo (1915). File:1927 Chiang Soong wedding photo1.jpg|Soong Mei-ling and General
Chiang Kai-shek wedding photo (1927); he was a successor to Sun Yat-sen as President of the Republic of China and a descendant of the third son of the 12th century BC
Duke of Zhou's (Duke of Chou). She was known as "Madame Chiang Kai-shek" and lived from 1898 to 2003. ==Dispute with Sun Yat-sen==