This person’s name is Wen Yingxing. He was born in an official family in Luodong Township, Taishan County, Guangdong in 1887. His father was a Jinshi of the Qing Dynasty and served as the seventh-rank governor. In 1901, Wen Yingxing entered Nanyang Public School (the predecessor of Shanghai Jiao Tong University) to study. Later, he was admitted to Tangshan Beiyang Institute of Technology and served as a student intern engineer on the Guangdong-Hankou Railway. One day, he and his classmates went to Beijing and happened to see a notice on the wall posted on the wall for the Qing government's public-funded recruitment to study in the United States. The notice promised that those who returned from studying abroad would be given priority for the examination. Wen Yingxing couldn't help but his eyes lit up, so he happily signed up to take the exam. He didn't want to be lucky enough to pass the exam and become one of Tsinghua's international students in the United States. In the autumn of 1904, Wen Yingxing came to the unfamiliar United States of America by boat and became a Chinese student at the Virginia Military Institute. Seven months later, Wen Yingxing received an order from the Qing court to transfer to West Point Military Academy immediately. This turning point made him fortunate to become a classmate with Mr. Patton, who had repeated a grade and later became a famous general. On May 28, 1968, Wen Yingxing also passed away on the ninth day after his wife's death. Because he was China's first graduate of the West Point Military Academy and was in the same class with many American generals, the principal of West Point Military Academy, Major General Coster, Special Brigadier General Lieutenant General Wen Yingxing, and his wife were buried in the West Point Military Academy Military Cemetery.