Quicknews
Jan 15, 2026

A heartbreaking story ...

In November 1916, twelve-year-old Lily Chen was married to thirty-four-year-old Robert Harrison in San Francisco’s Chinatown. Lily’s family were Chinese immigrants who owed Harrison over $800 for passage to America and other loans. Facing debt they could never repay, Lily’s parents were forced to agree to the marriage to save their family. Lily, only a child, understood that she was being treated as property, not a person. She was being sold to pay a debt. Because California banned marriages between Chinese and white people, Lily and Harrison traveled to Nevada, where the law allowed it. The ceremony was quick and cold. Lily, barely able to speak English, was now legally a wife to a man she did not choose. That night, Harrison abused her. For twenty-five years, she endured abuse, forced pregnancies, and the control of a man who treated her as property, all while living in isolation and fear. By age twenty-seven, Lily had gone through eleven pregnancies. Five of her children survived, while four died. Her body was broken, and her spirit was crushed. When Harrison died in 1941, he left everything to his children and nothing to Lily. She was evicted from her home, alone, with no money, no support, and no way to rebuild her life. For the next forty years, she lived in poverty, surviving but never finding peace or recognition. In 1976, Lily spoke about her life for the first time. She told a researcher the truth she had carried for sixty years: she was sold at twelve, abused for twenty-five years, and abandoned with nothing. Her story was later shared in a documentary, and her great-great-granddaughter spoke for her: “Great-Great-Grandma Lily survived horror so we could tell her story. Her suffering was not meaningless. We hear her now, and we will fight child marriage in her memory.” Lily’s life was filled with pain, but her truth finally lives on.

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