880

LAPPA--KONGMOON

the course of trade to and from the Luichow Prefecture operates against Lappa. Much of the cargo which formerly came thence in junks to Macao and reported at Malowchow now avails itself of the more convenient and doubtless safer direct steamer carriage between the French port of Kwangchowwan and Macao. There is also a tendency for a portion of the west coast produce to go via Kongmoon, whether destined for Hongkong or Canton, and the old junk trade of this region with the foreign colonies is gradually disappearing.

DIRECTORY

Kung-pak-sun-kwan

CHINESE MARITIME CUSTOMS (Lappa District)-2, Rua dos Prazeres, Macao

Commissioner-F. W. Carey Foreign Assistants-C. A. R. Cabral

and B. K. Wallace

Chinese Assistant-Leung Cum Chiu Tidesurveyor-H. M. Andersson Examiners-W. M. Komaroff and E. A.

C. Friedrichsen

Tidewaiters-G. J. Walters, G. Flynn, J. J. Lovelock, S. F. Z. Siegfrids, L. A. Hurlow, O. E. Segerholm, M. B. Hoffman, W. H. P. Weston, A. Luiz Cruising Launches

"Paktou"

Officer-in-charge-G. J. Walters Launch Officer-M. B. Hoffman "Lungtsing"

Officer-in-charge-G. Flynn

Launch Officer-W. H. P. Weston

KONGMOON

Kong-moon

Kongmoon was added to the list of treaty ports on 7th March, 1904, in accordance with the stipulations of Article X. of the Mackay Treaty. A British Consulate was established, but withdrawn in 1905. Kongmoon is located some three miles

up a creek on the West River, in the Kwangchow Prefecture of the Kwangtung Province in Lat. 22° 34′ 49′′ N, and Long. 113° 8′ 53′′ E., and is about 45 miles distant from Macao, 70 from Canton and 87 from Hongkong. The creek on which it is built connects the West River with the sea at Gaemoon, and is a narrow and tortuous stream, the lower reaches of which, near the main river, are lined with rafts, while further up in the vicinity of the town it is crowded with native craft of every description, thus rendering navigation for steamers difficult at all times, but especially so when the current runs fast during the summer months. The steamer anchorage is in the West River at the mouth of the Creek, opposite the Chinese Maritime Customs, but the town is included in the port limits. The population of Kongmoon is about 55,000, and it has the appearance of being a more populous centre, as it extends for a considerable distance on both banks of the stream. Formerly it was a business centre of considerable importance, but various causes have arisen which appear to have lessened its commercial standing and interfered adversely with the general prosperity of the port.

It was generally considered that the proximity of Kongmoon to Hongkong and Macao and its favourable situation as an outlet and distributing centre for the southern prefectures of the province augured well for its future prosperity and development. This was, to some extent, true, but it should be remembered that facts have arisen which have tended to diminish rather than increase its commercial

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