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==Early and personal life==
==Early and personal life==
John Tran was born in [[Saigon]], [[South Vietnam]] on November 20, 1975, <ref>''Who's Who in Young Asian Americans''[http://www.asianamerican.net/bios/Tran-John.html]</ref> the fourth child in a family of six children. Sponsored by an American family,<ref>asianweek.com - ''Tran Becomes Rosemead's First Vietnamese Mayor''; April 4, 2007[http://www.asianweek.com/2007/04/04/tran-becomes-rosemeads-first-vietnamese-mayor/]</ref> the Tran's left [[Communist]]-controlled Vietnam in 1979 in order to [[Immigration|immigrate]] to the [[United States]]; they originally settled in the state of [[Oklahoma]]. After several moves, the Tran's settled in [[Rosemead, California]]. <ref>asianweek.com - ''Tran Becomes Rosemead's First Vietnamese Mayor''; April 4, 2007[http://www.asianweek.com/2007/04/04/tran-becomes-rosemeads-first-vietnamese-mayor/]</ref> Tran graduated from [[Mark Keppel High School]] in 1993.<ref>LA Times - May 24, 2009 [http://articles.latimes.com/2009/may/24/local/me-tran24]</ref>
John Tran was born in [[Saigon]], [[South Vietnam]] on November 20, 1975, <ref>''Who's Who in Young Asian Americans''[http://www.asianamerican.net/bios/Tran-John.html]</ref> the fourth child in a family of six children. Sponsored by an American family,<ref>asianweek.com - ''Tran Becomes Rosemead's First Vietnamese Mayor''; April 4, 2007[http://www.asianweek.com/2007/04/04/tran-becomes-rosemeads-first-vietnamese-mayor/]</ref> the Tran's left [[Communist]]-controlled Vietnam in 1979 in order to [[Immigration|immigrate]] to the [[United States]]; they originally settled in the state of [[Oklahoma]]. After several moves, the Tran's settled in [[Monterey Park, California]]. <ref>-
Upon graduation from high school, Tran married his first wife.</ref> Tran graduated from [[Mark Keppel High School]] in 1993.<ref>LA Times - May 24, 2009 [http://articles.latimes.com/2009/may/24/local/me-tran24]</ref>

When Tran turned 18 years old, he became a [[Naturalization|naturalized]] United States citizen.<ref>Man of the Town[http://news.newamericamedia.org/news/view_article.html?article_id=aedb64f152de229de9994167278d0dcf]</ref> Tran is the father of three sons, two from his first marriage and one from his relationship with his current fiancee. He has lived in Rosemead for over 18 years.
Upon graduation from high school, Tran married his first wife, an American citizen. When Tran turned 18 years old, he became a [[Naturalization|naturalized]] United States citizen.<ref>Man of the Town[http://news.newamericamedia.org/news/view_article.html?article_id=aedb64f152de229de9994167278d0dcf]</ref> Tran is the father of three sons, two from his first marriage and one from his relationship with his current wife. He has lived in Rosemead for over 18 years.
<ref>Who's Who in Young Asian Americans [http://www.asianamerican.net/bios/Tran-John.html]</ref>
<ref>Who's Who in Young Asian Americans [http://www.asianamerican.net/bios/Tran-John.html]</ref>



Revision as of 04:45, 20 March 2010

John Tran
Preceded byJohn Nunez
Succeeded byMargaret Clark
Personal details
Born (1975-11-20) November 20, 1975 (age 48)
Saigon, South Vietnam
ChildrenJoshua, Andre and Jack Dylan
ProfessionReal estate agent and consultant[1]

John Tran is an American politician who served on the Rosemead, California city council as that city's first Asian-American mayor.

Early and personal life

John Tran was born in Saigon, South Vietnam on November 20, 1975, [2] the fourth child in a family of six children. Sponsored by an American family,[3] the Tran's left Communist-controlled Vietnam in 1979 in order to immigrate to the United States; they originally settled in the state of Oklahoma. After several moves, the Tran's settled in Monterey Park, California. [4] Tran graduated from Mark Keppel High School in 1993.[5]

Upon graduation from high school, Tran married his first wife, an American citizen. When Tran turned 18 years old, he became a naturalized United States citizen.[6] Tran is the father of three sons, two from his first marriage and one from his relationship with his current wife. He has lived in Rosemead for over 18 years. [7]

Career and public service

Tran started his public service career as a member of the Garvey School District Board of Education in 1999. At age 23, Tran was the youngest member to be elected to the board; he later served as Garvey's school board president in 2002.[8] While serving on the Garvey School Board, Tran also served on the board of directors of the California Latino School Board Members Association and was a member of the California School Board Association.[9]

Following his school board service, Tran was elected to the Rosemead city council in March, 2005 - serving only one term. Tran is the first Asian-American elected to the council.[10] As with many cities in the state of California,[11] the Rosemead city council rotates its members into the mayor’s position; Tran was appointed mayor of Rosemead in March, 2007. Running for re-election to the city council in March 2009, Tran lost the bid by only one vote.[12]

On November 3, 2009, Tran contested and won the seat of a two-term incumbent on The El Monte Union High School District School Board.[13]

External links

References

  1. ^ Who's Who in Young Asian Americans [1]
  2. ^ Who's Who in Young Asian Americans[2]
  3. ^ asianweek.com - Tran Becomes Rosemead's First Vietnamese Mayor; April 4, 2007[3]
  4. ^ - Upon graduation from high school, Tran married his first wife.
  5. ^ LA Times - May 24, 2009 [4]
  6. ^ Man of the Town[5]
  7. ^ Who's Who in Young Asian Americans [6]
  8. ^ Who's Who in Young Asian Americans [7]
  9. ^ Who's Who in Young Asian Americans [8]
  10. ^ Who's Who in Young Asian Americans [9]
  11. ^ asianweek.com - Tran Becomes Rosemead's First Vietnamese Mayor; April 4, 2007[10]
  12. ^ The LA Times; By one vote, an election in lost in Rosemead, May 24, 2009 - Carla Hall [11]
  13. ^ svgtribune.com; New faces on San Gabriel Valley school boards - Amanda Baumfeld and Maritza Velazquez, Staff Writers, 11/04/2009 [12]