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Farewell, Tess

Tess Johnston, September 17, 1931 – September 14, 2025

It is with profound sadness that we announce the death of Tess Johnston, our beloved friend, mentor, and co-founder. Tess pioneered the study of pre-1949 Shanghai, beginning at a time when the city’s historic buildings and their stories were ignored, and continuing for over 35 years. Her books and talks preserved the historic city before it changed beyond recognition and captured its stories, and she generously shared her knowledge with a generation of writers, scholars, and Shanghailanders. Her groundbreaking work was a labor of deep love for the city, and continues to resonate for of all of us who love and explore Old Shanghai.

“I had never seen anything like Shanghai in 1981,” said Tess Johnston, describing her impression of the city when she first arrived. “I had never been to a foreign country that looked so utterly and completely Western. It was perfectly preserved, a cross between Warsaw in 1938 and Calcutta, a totally Western city with an Asian population. It was a scruffy showcase of Western architecture–and it was absolutely wonderful.”

Tess, who died yesterday at 93, had arrived in September 1981 with the U.S. Foreign Service to work at the U.S. Consulate. That wonderful Western architecture would captivate her for the rest of her long life and keep her in Shanghai for 35 years, pioneering the study of Old Shanghai and becoming the expert on the pre-1949 Western presence.

A native of Charlottesville, Virginia—who, despite living all over the world for half a century, never lost her charming Southern drawl, in English and Chinese—Tess joined the Foreign Service in 1953. She spent 33 years with the Foreign Service, in postings as diverse as East Berlin, New Delhi, Tehran, Paris, and Shanghai, but it would be Shanghai that captured her curious mind and her heart.

Tess wanted to know all about the marvelous buildings all around her, but in 1981 Shanghai, pre-1949 Western architecture was little more than an embarrassing reminder of the ‘Century of Shame’, a physical reminder of a hundred years of forced foreign domination. No one wanted to talk about the history of these buildings, owned by imperialists and blacklisted capitalists, let alone research and write about . them. She quickly realized that her curiosity about this “Western city improbably perched on the shores of China,” was not going to be easily satisfied, and she was going to have to be the one to do it. “I was in the right place at the right time, so why not?”

Shanghai was ‘perfectly preserved’ when Tess arrived in 1981.

So Tess got down to the business of getting to know the city, photographing, documenting, and discovering in every minute of her spare time. She unearthed invaluable research aids: a treasure trove of Old Shanghai books and maps in the street markets, and another sort of treasure trove in the people who had grown up here in the years before 1949, both Shanghainese and foreign, who shared with her the tales of their past lives. It was Tess who encouraged them to write their memoirs, share their photographs, and tell their stories, stories that have helped countless writers and researchers piece together the story of Old Shanghai.

The wheels of change had begun, slowly, and Tess was all too aware that this museum of pre-1949 architecture could not last. There was a book in this once-great city, but superb photographs were essential. It would her take her several more years—with a posting in Paris in between–before she found that photographer, Deke Erh (Erh Dongqiang).

Left: Tess and Deke, infiltrating the former Continental Bank vault. Right, Tess and Deke on the rooftop of the Continental Bank.

Deke, who is Shanghainese, had first picked up a camera as a teenager during the Cultural Revolution (1966-76), and travelled the countryside. Saddled with a “bad family background”, he just wanted to get away from Shanghai, where all his associations were negative. When he returned in the 1980s, he looked at the city with new eyes, and saw a wealth of historic architecture. “Nobody was interested back then,” he says, “not even the professors at Tongji University (now noted for its preservationist architectural faculty).”

Tess and Deke’s first book together, A Last Look: Western Architecture in Old Shanghai, published in 1993, was the first to highlight the city’s built heritage, the first visual record of its incredible architecture legacy. Back then, there were no historic plaques on the buildings, no hint of what they had been. In some ways, she gave Shanghai back its history.

The pair would go on to collaborate on 25 books, including a glorious tome on Shanghai Art Deco, 15 volumes on Western architecture and the Western presence in treaty ports throughout China, as well as a series of walking guides through the history of different Shanghai neighborhoods—a priceless contribution to the story of Shanghai.

Tess retired from the Foreign Service in October 1996, but “I could not see myself leaving China, especially with so many books incubating, such a rich field to explore, and most of all, my abiding love for the country and its people,” she says in her memoir, Permanently Temporary. By November of that year she was back as a private citizen and finally able to focus full-time on her grand passion, the architecture and history of Old Shanghai.

In those years, writers, researchers, and the simply Shanghai history-curious always found their way to Tess (if you share her passion for Old Shanghai, she always has time for you), and so did we. In 1998, Patrick and I first met Tess, in her apartment lined with Old Shanghai books, maps, and wonderful Old Shanghai ephemera. We had sought Tess out because we were curious about Shanghai’s old buildings, and we all agreed that maybe there were others like us, who wanted to know more: and thus, Historic Shanghai was born.

Historic Shanghai founders ~ Tess, Patrick and Tina

Tess remained in Shanghai for the next 20 years, giving lively walking tours, delivering talks (her classic: “A Hundred Years of Shanghai’s Expat History in 50 Minutes”), and never tiring of exploring old buildings and researching and writing books. She and Deke pioneered research into Shanghai Art Deco, culminating in the beautiful, richly illustrated book Shanghai Art Deco. Her last Shanghai walking guide was published in 2016, the year she repatriated: Final Five Shanghai Walks: The Where’s Where of the Who’s Who of Old Shanghai. Since then, she published a memoir about her time in Vietnam, A War Away: An American Woman in Vietnam, 1967-1974 , and edited her dear friend Daisy Kwok’s memoir, Shanghai Daisy.

Tess in Action: On a walk, infiltrating (the Shanghai Municipal Council), speaking, snapping an architectural detail in Xiamen, rain be damned…

Until COVID scuttled her travel plans, Tess returned to Shanghai each spring—twice with new books to promote—eager to see her friends, her buildings, and to continue to explore.

In the introduction to A Last Look, Tess and Deke say that their goal is“to preserve these Western monuments for future generations through our photographs, our research, and the collective memories of the buildings’ former architects, builders and tenants. Tess often said that she was grateful that she was here to do just that, arriving “at the right time and in the right place” to document Shanghai as it was. So are we, Tess, so are we.

Tess was never sure, she told me, if there was an afterlife. If there is one, Tess, we hope it’s packed with historic Shanghai buildings—Lord knows, enough have been demolished to recreate 1980s Shanghai–and your beloved dachsunds.  Bon voyage, Tess, and thank you with all our hearts.

In Permanently Temporary, Tess wrote that she’d like this on her epitaph:

She never read all the books she wanted to read

Nor owned all the dogs she wanted to own

Nor lived in all the houses she wanted to live in.

Tess and Deke’s books, published by Old China Hand Press, are all out of print, but it’s worth seeking them out from second-hand sources.

Sources

Langfitt, Frank. After Decades, A Shanghai Preservationist Heads Home to America. NPR, April 7 2016

Johnston, Tess. Permanently Temporary: From Berlin to Shanghai in Half a Century. Shanghai, Old China Hand Press, 2010.

More Info:

Inventory of the Tess Johnston Papers. Online Archive of California.



11 responses to “Farewell, Tess”

  1. Paul Rosdy says:

    I visited Tess Johnston in 1994 or 5 when Joan Grossman and I visited Shanghai for our film The Port of Last Resort. I still have the emigrant address book that she published in a reprint. Thank you for all.

    • Robert DeWitt says:

      Paul, I had the chance to meet Joan in Washington, DC at a showing of your film. At the time, I was preparing for an assignment at the US Consulate General in Shanghai. After Joan’s lecture about the film, I approached her about the possibility of showing the film at the Consulate after my arrival. Ultimately, that showing happened, and it was hosted by the Consul General Henry (Hank) Levine at the Consulate. And of course, Tess Johnston was in the audience that evening.

  2. Robert DeWitt says:

    I had the privilege to work with Tess at the U.S. Consulate General in Shanghai after she retired and to become her friend. She came to work at the Consulate, again, to help us, on a part-time basis, with correspondence regarding non-immigrant (visitor) visas. At the time, I was the Consulate’s chief of the visa section. I attended many of her talks, some of which were given at the Consulate to various “official” audiences. Tess was always generous with her time and willing to speak to our many VIP visitors from Washington. I, as an amateur collector of Chinese antiques, often had the opportunity to scour Shanghai’s curio markets with Tess on weekend mornings. While I looked at the porcelain, Tess looked for Shanghai ephemera. This was during the 2001-2005 time period. After I left Shanghai in late 2005, I kept in touch with Tess, once visiting her in her apartment on Connecticut Avenue in Washington DC. Of course, it was crammed with her treasures — she, too collected Chinese antiques. I have most of her books, and she autographed every one for me. I treasure them, and I treasure my friendship with this amazing lady. She was smart, witty, generous, and kind. We spoke several times about what we believed regarding the afterlife. She wasn’t sure there was one; I was (and still am) absolutely sure there is, and this led to lively and interesting discussions. So, although I mourn Tess’ passing, I am certain that I will see her again one day. It will be fun to reminisce with her about our time together in Shanghai. I shall miss her. Tess leaves behind an incredible legacy of scholarship, connoisseurship, and friendship. May she rest in peace. Robert (Bob) DeWitt, retired Foreign Service Consular Officer

  3. Robert DeWitt says:

    Tina and Patrick, What a lovely tribute to Tess that you have written. I don’t know if you remember me, but I certainly remember both of you. Tess introduced us, of course, and during my tenure at the Consulate General in Shanghai,2001-2005, I had the chance to see you at many receptions and gatherings. I hope all is well with you and yours. Sincerely, Bob DeWitt

    • Tina Kanagaratnam says:

      Thank you, Bob, and sorry for the late reply! We do indeed remember you well, and hope all is well. Thank you for your lovely remembrance of Tess. If you’re in the area, there will be a memorial service for Tess in D.C. on December 9. Let me know if you need more info – you can email us at info@historic-shanghai.com / Tina

  4. Brodie Paul says:

    Vale Tess.
    I caught her passion for old Shanghai helping her move from her rooms at Gascoingne apartments on Huai Hai lu in 1992. I still have one of the doors we salvaged from Snake Eyes’ Du mistress’s home chapel. Tess was Jealous of her treasures.

    • Tina Kanagaratnam says:

      Would love to see a photo of those chapel doors! Tess left us with a glorious Gothic door from a Veysseyre house that was being demolished … it’s now at the U.S. Consulate.

  5. Roni Kalyk says:

    When Tess arrived in Shanghai in 1989 I was already living there. Mutual friends suggested that Tess and I would be compatible companions, and that is exactly what developed. We spent happy hours perusing the antique markets, attending performances at the music conservatory, exploring the newly evolved restaurants and wandering the beautiful streets of Shanghai. When my husband, Michael, and I returned to Hong Kong in 1990 our flat became Tess’s home in Hong Kong. I became in her words her “underpaid literary agent,” arranging lectures and book sales over many visits. Under beds, hiding in armoires and stashed in closets, boxes of her books were available for all arranged events. Tess was one of the
    most treasured of my friends, and I am so grateful for
    every minute I spent in her lively company.

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