Guómíndǎng shíqī, tā bǎ zhèxiē yǒu “tōnggòng” xiányí de cángpǐn cáng zài wūdǐng wǎpiàn xià. Dào le Wéngé, tā jiāzhōng cáiwù bèi chāo, dàn tā de cángpǐn yīn zǎo jǐtiān jiāo bówùguǎn bǎocún, cáng zài shāndòng lǐ cái miǎn zāo jiénàn. 1979 nián “wánbìguīzhào” hòu, wú lǎoxiānshēng gǎn shànghǎi bówùguǎn tuǒshàn bǎoguǎn zhī ēn, jiāng 5000 duō zhāng jīngpǐn xiàn gěi le gāi guǎn.[Pinyin]
During the Kuomintang era, he hid his collection suspected of being "pro-Communist" under the roof tiles. During the Cultural Revolution, his home was ransacked, but since he had handed over his collection to the museum for safekeeping a few days earlier in a mountain cave repository, the collection was spared. In 1979 Shanghai Museumreturned it intact to Mr. Wu. Appreciating their careful preservation, the old gentleman donated over 5,000 valuable pieces to the museum.