Chew, Susan
Susan Chew was born in 1927 in Victoria, British Columbia. Growing up on a farm just outside the city, she and her ten siblings helped their parents, Chew Dang and Yee C. Loo Chew, with the family’s vegetable garden business. She later moved to New Westminster, British Columbia, where she was a successful business owner. In 1956, Susan made headlines in New Westminster, British Columbia, and across the country when she was denied tenancy in an apartment when American buyers of the building found out that she was Chinese. The community rallied around Susan, so the original owners cancelled the sale of the building. Susan was able to move in without further incident. Over the years, Susan has taken on a number of work, community and entrepreneurial roles: as a Cub Scout leader, journalist, hula dance performer, travel agent and tour guide, model, designer, actress, radio host, boutique owner, public speaker and real estate agent. After spending many years in Toronto, Ontario, she now resides in Vancouver, British Columbia.
This note from Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau expresses gratitude for a birthday bouquet of twelve paper flowers representing each of the Canadian provinces and territories. Susan’s co-worker taught her how to make paper flowers on their lunch break, and the hobby quickly became a business. Her flowers were on display at many locations – the Royal Ontario Museum and at the Canadian Pavilion in Osaka, Japan, to name a few.