The Zheng clan moved from Guang-Dong Province of China to Taiwan at Ciian-Long, Ziia-Ciing times of Ciing Dynasty. After several generations’ industrious management, they finally got rich. To honor their ancestors and show off the success, their off-springs built the Zhong-Sheng-Gong Memorial in 1929. Here they worship an ancestor known for his fidelity, Seng Zheng, who was a disciple of Confucius and had been entitled as Zhong-Sheng-Gong by emperors since then. Zhong-Sheng-Gong Memorial combines traditional Hakka courtyard house and gorgeous Baroque style. It is one of the biggest and best decorated clan memorials in Taiwan. Actually, it is claimed, with Tian-Shei-Hall in Bei-Pu, as the two most important clan memorials, each in the south and the north. It has an area of about 3600 square yards. The layout is two blocks with double bays. The walls have stucco washing finish. Clay moldings, wood carvings, color paintings, calligraphies, 3-D mosaics, and Koji Potteries are used for decorations in the entrance hall, on the roofs, the beams and the side walls. The gateway at the square in front of the house looks grand with the decoration of sculptures of animals; the swallowtail roof, the horseback roof with element of water, and the horseback roof with element of fire are all very interesting designs. What’s the most special is the rare calligraphy on the surface of the pillars in the main hall because every stroke of the words looks like a bamboo leaf. In the main hall, a shrine for their ancestors’ tablets is put at the center and the altar is designed in the traditional way. A plaque with “Be Righteous As Gods Allow” is hung above to make clear Seng Zheng’s discipline.