Lin's pioneering work
Donated 1.2 million yuan to help the anti-Japanese soldiers and civilians, and then returned to Xiamen to live with Chun. In the thirty-first year of Guangxu (1905), he was buried in Pushanshe. Lin Erjia, son of Lin Weiyuan, is also known as Zang Shu. 1895, because he was not a Japanese docile subject, he returned to Xiamen with his father and sister-in-law, and soon moved to Beijing in the name of a Taoist. In the 31st year of Guangxu (1905), he was the general manager of Xiamen Insurance Bureau and the prime minister of Xiamen Chamber of Commerce. At the end of the Qing Dynasty, the Qing government planned to rebuild the navy, and Lin Erjia donated huge sums of money and was promoted to assistant minister. But the money was diverted by Cixi to repair the Summer Palace, and Erh Lin's family resigned in a rage and returned to their hometown. In the thirty-fourth year of Guangxu (1908), Shuijia and Erh Lin in Nanjing County raised 32,000 yuan from overseas to build a dam. In the second year of the Republic of China (19 13), a new manor was built in Gulangyu, and Xinzhuang Printing Society was established. After the recovery of Taiwan, Lin Erjia returned to Taiwan Province and Banqiao to revive his family business, and died in 195 1.