I would like to have more information about the son of F.C. Clemo, with the purpose of connecting with him if he is available.
I had met him when he was working in CL & Power PLant, I presume when his father was the Plant Suerintendent, and I was an appentice at the Hongkong & Whampoa Dockyard, next door to the :Power PLant.
I would be most grateful to rceive any available information.
I remember reading the article about young Clemo's return to Hong Kong in January 1940.
Hong Kong Telegraph 9 January 1940 refers
There was a joyful reunion between Mr. and Mrs. F. C. Clemo and their 18 year old son Fred who flew in from Southampton on the Imperial Airways flight on 8 January. He had been attending Bedford College and had left Hong Kong five years ago. Young Clemo has the distinction of being the first schoolboy to make the air trip from England to Hong Kong.
(Not sure if Fred was his nickname or short for Frederick like his father. That said, simiilar to the Sunday Herald article, the Hong Kong Daily Press also gives his name as R. Clemo about his return to Hong Kong. I think R. Clemo may well be Frederick James Duncan Clemo as mentioned here The year of birth of the latter seems to match.)
Permalink Submitted by IDJ on Mon, 2022-01-03 19:18.
Bedford College in the 1960s when I visited there, was an engineering-based college if I remember correctly. The teaching Labs./Workshops were full of engineering items related to the world-renowned engineering companies in the town such as W.H. Allen etc.
Young Clemo would have been well-educated in engineering terms to follow in his father’s profession with China Light & Power.
His flight with Imperial Airways would have cost in the order of 167 GB Pounds at the time. (I’m not sure what that would equate to these days?)
His flight from Southampton would have been by flying boat with multiple stops to Bangkok, then a change of aircraft to the branch-line De Havilland DH 86 to Hong Kong.
While often inferred in its newsprint advertising and colourful posters no Imperial Airways flying boats ever reached Hong Kong. Flying Boat services only commenced post-war in1946 by BOAC which in 1939 as a newly created state run airline had absorbed Imperial Airways.
I do not remember the first name of the Clemo who I met during my apprenticeship at the Hongkong & Whampoa Docks in Hung Hum, but it dosn't quite match any of the information available. The period in question is between Feb.1948 to Feb. 1952.
During this period he used to visit the shipyard to meet with their apprentices like me. I was 16 years old at the time. He appeared to be a teenager and looked very much like the photograph here. I don' think my contact was old enough to be in the HKVDF and imprisoned by the Japanese during the war years. He was very likeable and friendly and his surname is all that I remember well.
Comments
R. Clemo
I would like to have more information about the son of F.C. Clemo, with the purpose of connecting with him if he is available.
I had met him when he was working in CL & Power PLant, I presume when his father was the Plant Suerintendent, and I was an appentice at the Hongkong & Whampoa Dockyard, next door to the :Power PLant.
I would be most grateful to rceive any available information.
Re: R. Clemo
I remember reading the article about young Clemo's return to Hong Kong in January 1940.
Hong Kong Telegraph 9 January 1940 refers
There was a joyful reunion between Mr. and Mrs. F. C. Clemo and their 18 year old son Fred who flew in from Southampton on the Imperial Airways flight on 8 January. He had been attending Bedford College and had left Hong Kong five years ago. Young Clemo has the distinction of being the first schoolboy to make the air trip from England to Hong Kong.
(Not sure if Fred was his nickname or short for Frederick like his father. That said, simiilar to the Sunday Herald article, the Hong Kong Daily Press also gives his name as R. Clemo about his return to Hong Kong. I think R. Clemo may well be Frederick James Duncan Clemo as mentioned here The year of birth of the latter seems to match.)
Clemo Junior
Bedford College in the 1960s when I visited there, was an engineering-based college if I remember correctly. The teaching Labs./Workshops were full of engineering items related to the world-renowned engineering companies in the town such as W.H. Allen etc.
Young Clemo would have been well-educated in engineering terms to follow in his father’s profession with China Light & Power.
His flight with Imperial Airways would have cost in the order of 167 GB Pounds at the time. (I’m not sure what that would equate to these days?)
His flight from Southampton would have been by flying boat with multiple stops to Bangkok, then a change of aircraft to the branch-line De Havilland DH 86 to Hong Kong.
While often inferred in its newsprint advertising and colourful posters no Imperial Airways flying boats ever reached Hong Kong. Flying Boat services only commenced post-war in1946 by BOAC which in 1939 as a newly created state run airline had absorbed Imperial Airways.
R. Clemo
I do not remember the first name of the Clemo who I met during my apprenticeship at the Hongkong & Whampoa Docks in Hung Hum, but it dosn't quite match any of the information available. The period in question is between Feb.1948 to Feb. 1952.
During this period he used to visit the shipyard to meet with their apprentices like me. I was 16 years old at the time. He appeared to be a teenager and looked very much like the photograph here. I don' think my contact was old enough to be in the HKVDF and imprisoned by the Japanese during the war years. He was very likeable and friendly and his surname is all that I remember well.
Thanks Moddsey for the information.
R. Clemo
I listened to the interview with his parents, and they only mentioned one son, so it seems very likely that this is the same person as Frederick James Duncan CLEMO (aka Freddie) [1922-1999]. I'll leave them separate for now, and hopefully someone who knew the family can put us straight.