70 years ago: Hong Kong's wartime diaries | Gwulo: Old Hong Kong

70 years ago: Hong Kong's wartime diaries

Shows diary entries from seventy-one years ago, using today's date in Hong Kong as the starting point. To see pages from earlier dates (they go back to 1 Dec 1941), choose the date below and click the 'Apply' button.
  • 12 Sep 1942, Barbara Anslow's diary

    Book / Document: 
    Date(s) of events described: 
    Sat, 12 Sep 1942

    So worried about Mabel. Dr Yaroogsky-Erooga says Mabel will probably be in hospital for about a month; he will try to get extra food for her, but if she doesn't yield to treatment, they may have to operate.  So terrible that we haven't anything extra or tempting to give her.   Mum is looking so skinny and drawn too.

    Fr Moore etc. left today, only Father Meyer and Father Hessler (Maryknollers) remain, plus Canadian Father Murphy and the Sisters of the Immaculate Conception.  To Confession.

    Tony came in evening.  We all went to concert, not bad but I had a heavy heart throughout  because of Mabel.  'Pinafore' number arranged by Cheape was good. ((Probably George Cheape.))

  • 12 Sep 1942, R. E. Jones Wartime diary

    Book / Document: 
    Date(s) of events described: 
    Sat, 12 Sep 1942

    Zingall, of I.R.C. ((Zindel from the International Red Cross)) had nothing of importance to impart.

    News nil.

    Concert P.M.

  • 12 Sep 1942, Chronology of Events Related to Stanley Civilian Internment Camp

    Date(s) of events described: 
    Sat, 12 Sep 1942

    Those members of the Maryknoll Order who had turned down the American repatriation in the hope of eventually being allowed to go to their mission stations in China are allowed out of Stanley:

    What a day! We are to be released from our confinement and go back to civilized life! We toted our baggage in the morning down to the American Club Block A-4, and there at 10:00 a.m. it was examined, not too minutely, by the gendarmes. Nothing was confiscated, however. At about eleven o'clock the truck which brings the food out to the Camp backed up and the first group, consisting of Fathers Toomey, Troesch, Downs, Keelan, Siebert, Walter and Knotek, Brother Thaddeus and Sisters ((Mary)) Dorothy ((Walsh)) and Henrietta Marie ((Cunningham)), got in. At the Depot were many of our friends to see us off and to wish us well. At 2:30 in the afternoon the second group, consisting of Fathers Tackney, Madison, Moore, McKeirnan, Gaiero and O'Connell, and most of our baggage, left.

     

    Father Donald Hessler and Father Bernard Meyer stay behind. With the help of the Canadian Father Murphy and two Maryknoll Sisters, Mary Christella and Mary Eucharista, they will minister to the Catholics left in Stanley. The Sisters, who also run the library, will leave sometime before January 1943.

     

    Also leaving today is Australian Doris Cuthberston, private secretary to Jardine Mattheson managing director J. J. Paterson. She's been 'guaranteed out' by Raoul de Sercey, a friend of Mr. Paterson's.

    This is the last time anyone will be allowed to leave camp on the 'guaranteeing out' system whereby people could return to Hong Kong if they had a neutral sponsor who would promise they'd be supported there.

    Usually a promise has also to be made not to work against Japanese interests but in this case it's not exacted. It wouldn't have mattered: Miss Cuthbertson is coming out for a reason, and she immediately throws herself into a courageous programme of relief for Jardine Mattheson employees in Stanley and the POW camps. Mr. de Sercey escapes from Hong Kong in April 1944, but she seems to have managed to carry on her humanitarian work until the end of the war, surviving at least three waves of Kempeitai terror.

    Sources:

    Maryknoll Diary, September 12, 1942

    Hessler etc.: Cindy Yik-yi Chu, The Maryknoll Sisters in Hong Kong, 2004, 58

    Ride Papers, Statement of Raoul de Sercey, June 2, 1944 (kindly supplied by Elizabeth Ride)

  • 12 Sep 1942, John Charter's wartime diary

    Date(s) of events described: 
    Sat, 12 Sep 1942

    ((Documents are issued to act as replacements for the passports that John and Yvonne had lost during the upheaval of the fighting and later move to Stanley:))

    John Charter's Stanley Camp passport

    Yvonne Charter's Stanley Camp passport

  • 12 Sep 1942, Eric MacNider's wartime diary

    Date(s) of events described: 
    Sat, 12 Sep 1942

    20 people (14 Fathers) left the camp

    Request programme concert (M.C. Brown). ((I'm not sure which Brown this was))

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