Choy was born in
Honolulu in 1892 and studied at
McKinley High School from 1908 to 1911. As a young man, he met
Sun Yat-sen and was resolved to return to China. In 1911, he returned to
Guangdong, his native province and was elected a member of the Provincial Assembly. However, finding politics uninteresting, Choy returned to the United States and enrolled in
Columbia University as a Chinese government student. He graduated from
Columbia College in 1915. During his time at Columbia, he was the president of the Chinese Students Club and was critical of Japanese interference in Chinese politics. In 1915, Choy again returned to China. He was made a member of the
Liangkwang Military Headquarters. The following year he was given the appointment of Director of Foreign Affairs of the
Nationalist Government in Guangdong. Shortly afterwards, he resigned to enter the business world. In 1918, Choy raised money for the establishment of branch offices of the Bank at
Hankou and
Tianjin. He secured over fifty thousand dollars' worth of subscriptions to the total capitalization of the branch banks. He then served as director of the administrative department of
Ministry of Railways of the Nationalist Government in 1926. In 1927 he was made director-General of Railways of the
Ministry of Communications. He was made currency controller of the
Ministry of Finance on November 1, 1927. In 1936, he was named Chairman of the
China Merchants Steamship Company Group and headed its operations during
World War II, when he relocated to Hong Kong after the
Japanese invasion of Shanghai. He resigned on March 1, 1943. Choy organized the first San Francisco Federal Savings & Loan Association branch in
Chinatown. Choy died in San Francisco on July 9, 1981. == References ==