Tran Dinh Truong
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Tran Dinh Truong (born 1932) a Vietnamese-American was born in South Vietnam.
[edit] Biography
A devout Anti-Communist during the Fall of Saigon, as the Principal owner of the Vishipco Line, the largest shipping company in South Vietnam he used his company’s resources, of 24 commercial ships and hundreds of trucks, to aid in the evacuation of thousands of American civilians and military personnel while the Army of the Republic of Vietnam (ARVN), defended South Vietnam against the invading Communist North Vietnamese Army and their Viet Cong Agents.
In May 1975, he immigrated to the United States and in retaliation for leaving his occupied homeland of South Vietnam, his parents and siblings were tortured and imprisoned by the Communist government of Hanoi.
He began his hotel business in New York City, first with the Hotel Opera on the Upper West Side in Manhattan, and then his current Hotel Carter in Midtown Manhattan and Hotel Lafayette in Buffalo, New York. The Hotel Lafayette has been allowed to delapalate into a transient residential hotel in spite of local efforts of renewal. If the current situation continues the buiding will soon be condemned and lost to history. Along the way Mr Troung owned and operated other NYC hotels as well, including the infamous Hotel Kenmore Hall on 23rd Street which was seized from Mr Troung by the US Marshal Service in 1994 because of deplorable conditions and rampent crime within the building.
When he heard of the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks on the United States he immediately, as a New Yorker, and former CEO of the Vishipco Line, contributed $2 million of his personal funds to the American Red Cross Disaster Relief Fund.
In May 2004, Tran Dinh Truong was awarded a Golden Torch Award, by the Vietnamese American National Gala in Washington D.C. Mr. Tran is also on the Board of Directors of The United Way of New York City.
He currently resides in New York City. In his spare time, he likes to write, swim, and cook.