WILLIAM BIGGERSTAFF OBITUARY
William Edward ("Bill") Biggerstaff
Resident of Portola Valley
William E. ("Bill") Biggerstaff, whose career included senior positions with Ford and Wells Fargo Bank, culminating in 1983 as a co-founder of Silicon Valley Bank,passed away Nov. 15 in Portola Valley, Calif. He was 91 years old.
Mr. Biggerstaff is survived by his wife of 59 years, Shirley Gibson Biggerstaff, along with four children and seven grandchildren.
He was born in Berkeley, California on March 17, 1919, the youngest of four children of Eugene and Elizabeth Biggerstaff.An avid sportsman both as a player and fan Mr. Biggerstaff lettered in basketball three years while studying at the University of California, Berkeley. Among those he played against was UCLA's Jackie Robinson. Upon graduating from Cal Berkeley in 1940, Mr. Biggerstaff entered the U.S. Navy and later commanded a destroyer escort in the South Pacific during World War II.
Knight Biggerstaff, Cornell Sinologist who worked alongside Marshall trying to avert Chinese civil war and fended off McCarthyism, dies at 95
By Blaine Friedlander May 18, 2001
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Biggerstaff
Knight Biggerstaff, a Cornell University professor emeritus of history who assisted U.S. Gen. George C. Marshall's effort in 1946 to construct a peace plan to avert a Chinese civil war, died of bronchial pneumonia May 13 in Ithaca. He was 95.
Because he was a China expert at the height of the Cold War, an acquaintance of Sinologist Owen Lattimore and because of his affiliation with the Institute of Pacific Relations, Biggerstaff was falsely branded as a Communist sympathizer in the 1950s. For about two years, Biggerstaff waged a battle – ultimately successful – against the federal government to preserve his reputation.
As a noted scholar of contemporary China,he served as a China specialist in the U.S. Department of Stateduring World War II. In 1945, Biggerstaff became the Chinese language secretary at the American Embassy in Chongqing, working under United States envoy Gen. Patrick Hurley. Because of Biggerstaff's ßuency in Mandarin Chinese, he became an interpreter during peace negotiations.
In the hot Chongqing summer of 1945, as the Allies sat on the verge of victory over Japan, a truce between Chiang Kai-shek's Nationalist Kuomintang government and Mao Tse-tung's Communists began to unravel. Ambassador Hurley invited Mao and communist leader Chou En-lai, Chiang, Biggerstaff and four others to the ambassador's residence for lunch to resume negotiations, according to Biggerstaff's unpublished memoir.