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.
  • 30 Aug 1943, R. E. Jones Wartime diary

    Book / Document: 
    Date(s) of events described: 
    Mon, 30 Aug 1943

    Hot, fine. Wind E with cloud.

    Voting for Council.

    ((G)).

    Lots of aerial activity but we cannot tell who they were.

    Convoy had to return?

    Talk with Steve pm. ((G)).

  • 30 Aug 1943, WW2 Air Raids over Hong Kong & South China

    Date(s) of events described: 
    Mon, 30 Aug 1943

    OBJECTIVE: Skip-bomb ships in convoy near Hong Kong.  This is the first time that American fighter pilots in the China theatre attempt skip-bombing, which will become a widespread tactic used by 14th Air Force pilots to attack Japanese ships. 

    TIME OVER TARGET: ~1:15 p.m.

    AMERICAN UNITS AND AIRCRAFT: Four P-40s from the 74th Fighter Squadron (23rd Fighter Group, 14th Air Force)

    AMERICAN PILOTS AND AIRCREW: 1st Lt. Davis G. Anderson; 1st Lt. Paul Bell; Lt. Thomas P. Bennett; 1st Lt. William B. Hawkins

    ORDNANCE EXPENDED: Two 500-pound bombs and 2,000 rounds of .50-caliber heavy machine gun ammunition

    RESULTS: A small naval escort vessel and three small merchant ships are bombed and strafed as they leave Hong Kong.  Pilots report that the escort and freighter are set afire and another freighter is left burning and listing.

    JAPANESE UNITS, AIRCRAFT, AND PILOTS: None

    AIRCRAFT LOSSES: None

    SOURCES: Original mission reports and other documents in the Air Force Historical Research Agency archives at Maxwell Air Force Base in Montgomery, Alabama.

    Information compiled by Steven K. Bailey, author of Bold Venture: The American Bombing of Japanese-Occupied Hong Kong, 1942-1945 (Potomac Books/University of Nebraska Press, 2019).

  • 30 Aug 1943, Diary of George Gerrard in Stanley Internment Camp Hong Kong

    Date(s) of events described: 
    Mon, 30 Aug 1943

    My birthday and I received your lovely loving letter of 1st November '42 and jolly nice it was too. I was grateful for your news and pleased to know that you were keeping well and fit. The letters arrive just any old how but nevertheless a letter is a letter and much appreciated. We are to be allowed to send a postcard this week.

    The Amoy people who are now in Shanghai transferred end of May were lucky in being able to get a group photograph taken in the grounds of the Hope Hospital, photographs here are absolutely taboo, the only people to have cameras are the Jap. Superintendents. However events are moving quickly and our incarceration may not be so long now.

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