Articles tagged "All" | Gwulo: Old Hong Kong

Articles tagged "All"

HK Electric Tramways

A rare ticket dating back 1902, the establishment of Hongkong Tramway Electric Company Limited. An interesting point is the corresponding Chinese name indicated "香港電線車公司", differed from that we knew for long time (香港電車電力有限公司, probably a translated name).

Keong Wai

Can anyone translate "Keong Wai" for me please? It was the name of a ship that Richard Unsworth commanded  in the late 1890s.

Ownership of uploaded photos

After reading the "... server has been hacked" post, Dave W writes:

Where do we stand?

A lot of people upload photographs to this website.

Does this mean you then claim copyright ownership of them and sell them with the proceeds going into your pocket via PayPal?

Interested and confused.

The Gwulo website & server has been hacked

A couple of days ago I discovered that hackers had gained access to the Gwulo server and website. Since then I've been checking through the site and this is what I've found:

MTR planning study 1967

Interesting excerpts from the 60s study here: http://www.hkitalk.net/HKiTalk2/thread-885346-1-1.html

c.1901 - "The Naval Department Buildings, Queen's Road"

c.1901 - "The Naval Department Buildings, Queen's Road"

When: This photo is one of set taken by R C Hurley [1] around 1901-1902, and published as a collection titled "Views of Hong Kong".

Where: The photo shows the

1927 - "Coolies wearing Chinese raincoats"

1927 - "Coolies wearing Chinese raincoats"

Who: "Coolies wearing Chinese raincoats" is written in pencil on the back of the photo.

Men on wharf

They're loading the boat / barge on the left of the photo. We can just make out another man working down in the hold:

73 years ago: Hong Kong's wartime diaries

December, 1941.

73 years ago tensions were high as war with Japan seemed inevitable. On December 8th, those fears were confirmed when Japanese planes attacked Kai Tak, and Japanese soldiers crossed the border into the New Territories. The fighting continued until the British surrendered on Christmas Day.

The end of the fighting marked the beginning of the Japanese occupation, a time of great hardship for Hong Kong's residents. They would have to endure for three years and eight months, until the Japanese surrendered in August 1945, and Hong Kong was liberated shortly afterwards.

What was it like?

Let the people who lived through these times tell you themselves.

We've collected several wartime diaries, and split them into their day-by-day accounts. Each day we send out an email message containing all the diary entries written on that day, 73 years ago.

How to sign up to receive the daily messages?

Please click here to subscribe.

You'll be taken to another screen marked Feedburner (they're the company we use to send out the daily email messages) and asked to enter your email address. Once you've completed that screen, you'll be sent an email message, asking you to confirm your subscription. Click the link in that message and your subscription is activated. Then each day you'll receive an email message with today's diary entries.

It's free of charge, your details stay private, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

What do the daily messages look like?

Here are sample extracts from the messages you'll receive:

  • 30 Nov 1941: "Topper says we are as near war now as we have ever been, that Japan with her militarist Govt. can't very well back down now."
     
  • 1 Dec 1941: "Government advising further evacuation.  Only hope seems to be that Japs now say they will keep on talks with USA in hope that USA will change viewpoint - that isn't thought likely."
     
  • 7 Dec 1941: "There must be something in the wind, G.H.Q. staff are preparing to move into Battle HQ, a huge underground structure just behind the Garrison Sgts. Mess."
Extract from Barbara Anslow's Diary
Extract from Barbara Anslow's Diary: "war had been declared"
  • 8 Dec 1941: "I started my birthday with a war. Kowloon bombed about 8AM."
     
  • 10 Dec 1941: "Sid has been wounded.  Bullet through shoulder.  He told Hospital to phone Mum at the Jockey Club and she went to see him."
     
  • 13 Dec 1941: "We hear rumours that the Mainland is being evacuated and that the

An Incident in Hong Kong Baking in 1948 or How Things Happen

Earlier this year I came to Hong Kong on a research visit. My main interest was in the tumultuous events of the Second World War, but one of the first files I inspected in the Public Records Office was a set of documents related to the more mundane matter of an application to the Hong Kong Government from one of the Colony's leading companies, Lane Crawford, who wanted special treatment in the matter of some land they hoped to acquire for the erection of a new bakery.

"Riding to hounds at Fanling"

Could anyone point me towards accounts of hunting in Hong Kong? I noticed in Peter Hall's book "In the Web" that one of his relatives "rode to hounds at Fanling". I'd be interested to find out if many women hunted. My aunt, Evelyn Warren, was a keen horsewoman and persuaded her father, Charles Warren, to go in for buying race horses when she returned to Hong Kong from her English boarding school in 1919 .

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