Rasmussen, Mrs. Remedios, Mrs. C. C. Remedios, Mrs. E. G. Ross, Mrs. R. M. Sadler, Miss E. Sandeman, Mrs. T. E. Saunders, Mrs. Saunders, Miss K.
AMOY-SWATOW
Saunders, Miss M. Simões, Mrs. Stepanov, Mrs. Sullivan, Mrs. Talmage, Mrs. J, V. N. Talmage, Miss K. M. Talmage, Miss M. E. Thompson, Mrs. H.
Thomsen, Mrs. Tribe, Miss E. N., M.D. Turnbull, Miss Van Dyck, Mrs. A. S. Wilson, Mrs. Woodley, Miss Zwemer, Miss N.
223
SWATOW
Swatow, which was first thrown open to foreigners by the Treaty of Tientsin, is situated at the mouth of the river Hau, near the eastern border of the Kwangtung province, in lat. 23 deg. 20 min. 43 sec. N., and long. 116 deg, 39 min. 3 sec. E. It is the shipping port for the city of Cha’o-chow-fu, the seat of the local, wernment, 35 miles inland, and San-Ho-Pa, forty miles farther up the river.
Swatow is built on the northern bank of the Han, which forms part of an alluvial plain through which the branches of the river flow. The shore on the opposite side is bold and striking, the hills stretching away to the coast and forming what is known to sea-going people as the "Cup of food Hope;" Pagoda Hill rises at the opposite side; and in a direct line from this lies the large island of Namoa.
The first foreign trading depôt in this locality was inaugurated at Namoa, where the opium vessels used to anchor, but it was subsequently removed to Double Island, which is situated just inside the river and is four miles from Swatow. Foreigners here made themselves notorious in the early years of the settlement by the kidnapping of coolies, and so strong was the feeling shown against them by the natives that no foreigners were safe far from Double Island, while they were strictly forbidden to enter Swatow, and it was not until 1861 that they could do so. In the country round Swatow the antipathy to foreigners was of much longer duration. The British Consul was held technically to reside at Cha'o-chow-fu, and subsequent to 1861 several ineffectual attempts were made to pass through its gates. In 1866 a visit was made under more favourable circumstances, but it is only within the last few years that the population has refrained from annoyance and insult to foreigners within its walls. In 1862 the lease of a piece of land was applied for and granted to the British Government on the north bank of the river about a mile from Swatow, but so strong were the demonstra- tiens of the populace against it that the matter fell through. Foreign residences, however, commenced to spring up here and there, and many of them are consequently somewhat scattered, though the majority are in or near the town of Swatow. The yearly increasing trathe of the port has led to much over-crowding on the narrow strip of land on which it is built, and since February, 1877, no less than 214 acres have been reclaimed from the sea, the greater part of which is now covered with shops and houses.
The climate of Swatow is reputed to be very salubrious. The town occupies, however, an unenviable position as regards typhoons, on account of being opposite the lower mouth of the Formosa Channel, and it has on many occasions been subjected to all the violence of these terrible storms, which almost every year sweep across the lower coast of China. The population of Swatow is estimated at 30,000.
The foreign trade of Swatow has never been large, but of late years it has shown a slight increase. The quantity of Opium imported in 1896 was 3,742 piculs as compared with 4,112 piculs in 1895. The quantity of Tea exported reached only 6,301 piculs in 1896. A considerable trale is done in Sugar, there having been 701,231 piculs brown and 625,854 pieuls white exported in 1896. The China Sugar Refining Co. of Hongkong have a large Sugar Refinery here, but work has for some time been suspended. A large beancake factory was also started in 1882. The net value of the trade of the port for 1896 was Tls. 27,276,480, for 1895 Tls. 26,984,558, and for 1894 Tls. 25,908,508,
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