Chew was born in the
Toisan district of
Guangdong province in Southern China in 1866. He lived with his grandmother and assisted a
Taoist priest. When he was thirteen, Chew journeyed to the United States, along with his cousin. He moved to
California in 1881, where he first worked as a domestic servant (a
houseboy) on a ranch in
San Jose. While working on the ranch in San Jose, he learned English and
Christian teachings. Growing up, he often encountered harassment,
anti-Chinese violence, arson, and murders as white workers reacted brutally to the Chinese living in the West Coast. In the face of this prejudice, Chew adopted Western-style clothing and cut off his
long braid. He also converted to Christianity.
Mary S. Carey, a recent widow, was his first teacher at a mission school in San Jose. Carey, along with other teachers, also faced harassment for providing education to Chinese immigrants. The mission school, along with most of the Chinese quarter in San Jose, was burnt in 1887 by white
arsonists. In the face of mounting anti-Chinese racism, Chew succeeded in his studies and became the first Chinese graduate from the seminary in 1892. He was later ordained in
Chinatown to a crowd of three hundred attendees, Chew was fluent in
Cantonese and English, and he married Chun Fah, a woman from the
Occidental Board Presbyterian Mission House. Fah served as an interpreter for the Mission and her writing was published annually in the Occidental Board’s monthly reports. Chew was assigned to a ministry in
Los Angeles, and he and other missionaries preached in Chinese to Southern Californians during Sundays. == Publishing career ==