Wed, Feb 6 2013
Alongside the four tours led by Hong Kong artists Nadim Abbas, Yuk King Tan, Ho Sin Tung, and Samson Young, Latitudes is also venturing into the city, researching around local forms of vernacular collection display and eccentric attractions. This encompasses museum-like retail spaces, or ‘marginal’ sculptural displays, as well as joining pre-existing tours.
On 30th January, Latitudes joined the "Devils's Peak and Museum of Coastal Defence" tour organised by Walk Hong Kong and led by former British Army officer and War World II specialist Martin Heyes, who has lived in Hong Kong for nearly 40 years. Heyes is a passionate and insightful guide for anyone interested in the context and details of the 1941 Japanese invasion of Hong Kong.
Following are excerpts of text from Walk Hong Kong website and images of our route.
"At the end of the 19th
century, and early into the 20th, the British authorities were very
concerned about perceived threats to the safety of their colonial
possessions in the Far East from other European powers. Hong Kong fell
into this category. Accordingly, the British Government constructed
impressive military fortifications to protect their imperial
possessions and one of these was at Devil's Peak at the eastern
extremity of the Kowloon peninsula."
Kowloon and Victoria Harbour.
"The large
fortification constructed to defend the eastern approaches to Hong Kong
harbour consisted of 2 fixed gun battery positions, together with a
Redoubt at the summit of Devil's Peak which later became the Fire
Command Headquarters for the eastern part of Hong Kong."
Overgrown trench.
View from Devil's Peak
Redoubt.
"Although the
position was eventually considered redundant and was in fact
decommissioned before the outbreak of the Pacific War, the location was
the scene of bitter fighting between the courageous Indian soldiers of
the Rajput Battalion and the attacking Japanese army during the battle
for Hong Kong in December 1941, immediately prior to the British
evacuation of the mainland to Hong Kong island."
Gough battery.
"Following our visit to the gun battery position on
Devil's Peak, we walk down through the seafood restaurant area of Lei
Yue Mun to catch the ferry to Sai Wan Ho on Hong Kong island. A short
taxi ride then brings us to the Museum of Coastal Defence, housed inside
the late Victorian-era Lei Yue Mun Fort."
"The fort occupied a
strategic position guarding the eastern approaches to Victoria Harbour.
The British military built barracks here as early as 1844, but these
were abandoned shortly afterwards. In 1885, in the face of perceived
aggrandizement from other European powers, artillery barracks were
constructed with a redoubt at the core of the fortifications."
Devil's Peak (right) seen from the Museum of Coastal Defence.
Display in the Museum of Coastal Defence showing the life of a British soldier in the 19th Century.
The Hong Kong Telegraph from January 1902 – including a prominent ad for beloved Brit product Bovril.
Japanese naval flag & pistols from the December 1941 invasion of Hong Kong.
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To complement the tour, please check the Social media archive with tweets, sound recordings and photo-documentation.
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All photos: Latitudes | www.lttds.org
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported License.
2013, Heman Chong, history, Hong Kong, Incidents of Travel, itineraries, Moderations, residency, Spring Workshop, tour