Amaro John REED [1865-1936]
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Submitted by David on Fri, 2021-08-27 22:50
Sex:
Male
Status:
Deceased
Connections:
- Amaro John REED [1865-1936] child of Robert REED [1834-1873]
- Amaro John REED [1865-1936] parent of Robert Cyril REED [1903-1969]
- Amaro John REED [1865-1936] parent of Wilfred Alexander REED (aka Willie) [1906-1971]
- Amaro John REED [1865-1936] spouse of Maria Rita REED (née DA SILVA, aka Rita) [1871-1948]
- Amaro John REED [1865-1936] parent of Francis Oswald REED [1913-1941]
- Amaro John REED [1865-1936] parent of Arthur Augustus REED [1908-1941]
- Amaro John REED [1865-1936] parent of Reginald John REED (aka Reggie) [1914-1980]
- Amaro John REED [1865-1936] parent of Stephen Arnold REED [1910-1942]
- Amaro John REED [1865-1936] parent of Edgar Vincent REED [1905-1941]
Comments
Macanese Tree Ancestry
Macanese Tree Ancestry
Amaro John Reed born 15 January 1865 Hong Kong
Married 22 May 1902 St Joseph's Church Hong Kong
Died 31 January 1936 Hong Kong
Commonwealth War Graves Commission
Private 3856 HKVDC Stephen Arnold Reed died 14 January 1942 son of Amaro John Reed and Maria Rita Reed of Kowloon
Amaro John Reed, aka John
Amaro John Reed was born on January 15, 1865. He was the son of Robert Reed and Anna Maria Dias who wed on May 2, 1861. Anna Maria's parents were Rodrigues and Faustina Rosario. Amaro had a younger sister, Lucretia Mary, who was born in 1867. Amaro married Maria Rita da Silva on May 22, 1902 at St. Joseph's Church in Hong Kong. They had seven sons, Robert, Edgar, Wilfred, Arthur, Stephen, Francis and Reginald. In the early years, the Reed family resided at 167 Wanchai Road before moving to the house at 8 Broadwood Road.
Amaro (he went by John) worked at the clerical branch of the Hong Kong Civil Service for over forty years. He first joined the Government service in 1888 and attained Class 1 in the Senior Clerical and Accounting staff. He eventually became Chief Accountant at the Hong Kong Post Office and headed its issuing and philatelic stamp division. Amaro reputedly held the finest collection of Hong Kong postage and Chinese Customs revenue stamps in Hong Kong. Sadly, his collection of stamps was lost during the war, even though the stamps were kept under lock in his study.
Amaro retired in 1927, and was awarded the I.S.O. medal for his long service, as shown in the photo below.
Amaro was ill for some time and passed away at his Broadwood Road residence on the morning of January 31, 1936 at 71 years of age. His widow, Maria Rita, having lost four sons in the war, died on June 6, 1948 at age 77.