While studying at the University of California, she met a girl from China, who was the niece of Guangdong warlord Chen. However, when they met at that time, neither of them knew each other's life story. It was not until they got engaged that Chen Shuzhen knew that her husband was the son of the famous general Zhang Xueliang. In fact, after they are both stars, they are really suitable.
Zhang Lvlin and his wife Chen Shuzhen have two sons. The eldest son Zhang Juxin, the eldest grandson of General Zhang Xueliang, was born in 1962. He graduated from Stanford University with a doctorate in electrical engineering. He has made outstanding contributions in the field of scientific research and won the American National Science Award. The second son, Zhang, the second grandson of General Zhang Xueliang, was born in 1967 and is said to be the elite of the Zhang family.
After moving to the United States, Zhang Xueliang told his son many times that his greatest wish in his later years was to visit relatives in the northeast, but he could not make it because of health reasons. In order to fulfill his father's last wish, Zhang Lvlin, his son, was entrusted by his father to return to the mainland many times to visit relatives in his hometown in Northeast China.
1in may, 994, Zhang Lvlin and his wife Chen Shuzhen returned to Shenyang to visit relatives and friends for the first time via hongkong and Peking. When the couple came to Beijing, they insisted on visiting relatives in an unofficial capacity, that is, as China space experts studying in the United States. After learning that Mr. Zhang Lvlin had arrived in Beijing, relevant parties invited him to visit the physical objects and models of satellites and rockets launched by China. After the visit, Zhang Lvlin was particularly pleased with the rapid development of China's space industry.
Later, he returned to Liaoning and paid tribute to his grandfather Zhang's Marshal Mausoleum on behalf of his father. The Grand Marshal's Mausoleum is located on the Gao Liying plate, 60km northeast of Fushun City. It was built by his father, Zhang Xueliang, and his grandfather, Zhang, who died in the Huanggutun incident in 1929. 193 1 year, when Zhang Xueliang was preparing to move Zhang's coffin temporarily parked in Shenyang into this antique tomb, the "September 18th Incident" happened. Since then, Zhang Xueliang has left the Northeast and never returned to his hometown of Shenyang. Zhang Qianling has never been realized, resulting in Fushun's "Marshal Mausoleum" being empty. Until 1990, when Zhang Lvlin's father, Zhang Xueliang, really regained his freedom, he repeatedly told his son that the first important thing when he returned to his hometown in Northeast China was to move his grandfather's coffin to the Grand Marshal's Mausoleum. But it was not completed until the death of Zhang Xueliang in 200 1 year.
Zhang Lvlin was filled with gratitude when he saw the125,000 square meter "Grand Marshal's Mausoleum", which was well preserved after more than half a century of ups and downs. In order to reassure his father on the other side of the ocean, Zhang Lvlin also photographed all the scenery in the mausoleum area with his camera and brought it back to the United States.
Dr. Zhang Xueliang has been married three times. Among them, he has three sons and one daughter with his ex-wife, the eldest daughter Zhang, born in 19 16. Now, her husband Tao Pengfei, the former president of the China-US Friendship Association, has passed away. The eldest son, Zhang Xun, was born in 19 17, then went to the United States and died in a car accident in the late 1950s. The second son, Zhang Yu, was born in 19 18. When he was in England, he was frightened by the German bombing of London. He went to Taiwan Province Province to reunite with his father in the 1960s and died soon after. Zhang Xueliang's third son Chang was born in 19 19 and died in 10. Zhang Xueliang's fourth son, Zhang Yunlin, was born in Zhao Yidi on 1930. He went back to the mainland to work in the United States three times in 1994, 1995 and 2005. He is a famous American aviation expert.