1957-8: Andrew Suddaby's photos
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Thanks to Andrew Suddaby for uploading over 200 of his photos showing Hong Kong in 1957-8:
Over to Andrew ...
An amazing year in Hong Kong
In 1957 I was half way through my National Service in the Royal Air Force. I’d spent the first year living in bleak wooden huts on various camps in England, but now I was bound for Hong Kong. It’s strange to recall but I even had to look up ‘Hong Kong’ in an atlas to find out where I would be spending the last year of my National Service. It wouldn’t be on yet another wooden-hutted camp in some remote and boring area of Britain; it would be to the exotic and mysterious Far East. Yes, in the 1950s Hong Kong was still both.
The end of October 1957 saw me going abroad for the first time and flying for the first time in a wonderful if somewhat noisy B.O.A.C. Argonaut. Three and a half days later it landed on the old runway at Kai Tak - the one that preceded the one jutting out into the harbour. My first, rather worrying, sight of Hong Kong was of people waving at us from their flats level with the plane as it dropped down literally between some buildings in Kowloon.
The day I arrived it was a glorious, sunny morning and, having been taken across the harbour to North Point by R.A.F. launch, a Chinese funeral procession passed by. So this is what the exotic East is like! And the R.A.F. camp at Little Sai Wan (Siu Sai Wan) was modern and so different to anything that I had previously experienced, with great swimming just round the Point. Yes, that spot is still there and nostalgia drew me back to it whenever I re-visited Hong Kong.
For the next year I marvelled at what seemed a different world. The sights, the smells, the unfamiliar sounds, the rat-a-tat of mah-jong tiles, the clanking of the trams, the exotic fruits in the street markets but, I’m afraid to tell, so little of the wonderfully different food. In Britain a purchase tax of 45% was still levied on most things but in Hong Kong, everything was a bargain. On the other hand, one couldn’t help but feel sorry for all those people doing their best to scratch a living in such a crowded place. I spent as much of my very limited pay as I could afford on rather expensive Kodachrome film and I have often wished that I’d had more to record Hong Kong before it changed for ever. I hope that you enjoy seeing my photographs, taken nearly sixty years ago. If you are old enough, they might even bring back some memories for you. Sometime soon, I hope to add more colour photographs that I took in 1981 and 1987.
Andrew Suddaby
(You can click any of the photos below to see other readers' comments, and / or leave your own.)
Thanks again to Andrew for showing us his photos. If you have any photos of old Hong Kong you'd like to share on Gwulo.com, please click here for details of how to upload them: http://gwulo.com/node/2076
Also on Gwulo.com this week:
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Comments
1957-8: Andrew Suddaby's photos
Many thanks for Andrew's photos. They bring back many fond memories of HK. And of course a big thank-you to David, too.
RAF Hong Kong 1950's
Did Andrew Suddaby know Neil Collins at this time. I was aged 10 in 1954 and 'Uncle Neil' was befriended by my parents around this time.
Hello, 1954 was a bit before
Hello, 1954 was a bit before my time. I was only at R.A.F. Little Sai Wan between October 1957 and September 1958. The camp's population would have been about 500 young men but it was constantly changing as we arrived from and returned to the U.K. However, there was a lad called 'Tex' Collins (I never knew his first name) who was billeted in a room a few doors from mine on the top floor of Gibson Wing. I do not have any photographs of him but I recall that he was much smaller than me and had straight dark hair. Hope that helps. Andrew
The colour is amazing
Thanks so much for sharing these.
Thanks to Andrew for those
Thanks to Andrew for those wonderful photos! I have had a great time looking at them as they are of the Hong Kong I knew... We retired to UK in 1959, so it was like looking into my past. How uncluttered HK was then, all levels of the Peak were not covered with high rise flats; Chung Chau Island was a quiet beach; rickshaws were still available. The coloured photos of the Tiger Balm place are beautiful.
Barbara
Thank you Barbara. I was
Thank you Barbara. I was never sure whether my old photographs were worth uploading onto David's website, so it's good to hear that they are giving pleasure to some people. I am currently working my way through those that I took in 1981 went I took my wife to show her how exotic Hong Kong was - and I think that we arrived just in time before it all changed for ever. Andrew
Hello Barbara, I've just
Hello Barbara, I've just realised that you're the lady who features every now and again on Tony Banham's website and that you were interned at Stanley. Ron Murray, an ex colleague of mine in Carlisle, was interned there with his father and two (?) brothers. In 1941 he would have been seven or eight ears old.. They lived in a garage of, I believe, Bungalow C - the one next to the one that was bombed later in the war. When I took my wife in 1981 we managed to find it and I took photographs for him. He said it hadn't changed a bit! Ron died a few years ago, following several years of illness, that was probably due to the poor diet you all had to endure. However, I saw on Tony's website (February, 2015) that Ron had made a return trip in 1995, and, if I'm not mistaken, you're standing next to him in a photograph. It's a small world! Each year between 2000 and 2007 I went back for a week in November or December to explore the battlefields using Tony's and Tim Ko's books as my guides - as well as to indulge in my own bit of nostalgia around Litle Sai Wan (Sui Sai Wan) and other once familiar places. In 2007, I took a group of about 30 people and guided them around the places that we had known in the 1950s,as well as giving them a potted history and 'tour' of some of the battlesites. One of the babies born at Stanley was another colleague in Carlise - Alan Weir. My very best wishes, Andrew
Barbara
Hi Andrew,
Barbara is a regular contributor here too - you can read her latest article from last month at http://gwulo.com/node/28070, and at the bottom of that page there are links to her other articles.
I've made a page for Ron (http://gwulo.com/node/28877) to add him to the list of Stanley internees. We already have a page for Alan (http://gwulo.com/node/11336), and to round things off nicely he is mentioned in Barbara's diary: http://gwulo.com/node/11336/backlinks
Regards, David
Many Thanks
Received by email:
Many Thanks for posting Andrew Suddabys pictures. I lived in the New Territories aged 7, 1959 and they brought back a lot of Memories. I still have my Shek Kong School badge from the time. I enjoy all the newsletters.
Tricia Davies Nee Fryer
Great Picture for Making Now And Then Comparison
Hello Andrew,
The colour picture of Queen Vitoria Street showing the Central Market on the left is a perfect tool for creating a "Now and Then" shot of the same street. The facade of the Central Market Building has not changed a bit over 60 years which is really rare in the ever changing Hong Kong.
Tai Wong , Mississauga,Canada
Battys Belfry as we called it!
I worked at Battys Belfry (Belvedere) from April to December 1958, so presumably came
across Andrew, although in a different intake. we were Linguists and were stationed at
Little Sai Wan1 Many thanks for the memories Andrew.
Alistair Miller
Hi Alistair,
Hi Alistair,
I was at Little Sai Wan between October 1957 and September 1958 but didn't work at Battys. However, our memories of those days must be broadly the same, so I'm pleased that you have enjoyed seeing my photographs from 1958. Even some of the 1981 and 1987 photographs might rekindle memories. I shall soon be uploading some that I took in November 1987 when I made a special trip out to Hong Kong especially to have a look round the old camp before it was demolished, so keep looking!
Best wishes. Andrew
Batty's Belfry
Hi Alistair,
We've also got a page for Batty's Belvedere at:
http://gwulo.com/RAF-Battys-Belvedere-Hong-Kong
Any photos or memories you can add to that page will be very welcome.
Regards, David