CO129-323 - Acting Governor May Governor Nathan - 1904 [6-7] — Page 71

CO129 Colonial Office Hong Kong Records 理藩院香港檔案 All AI Reviewed

C O P Y.

To

N.2. B:

C. O.

24851

RECO

REG 14 JUL 04

18, Bank Buildings,

Hongkong, 23rd December, 1908.

The Honourable

The Acting Colonial Secretary.

«sic,

70

In reply to your Memorandum of the 16th instant, I have had a conference with the Members of the Committee of the Chamber of Commerce upon the subject of The Undesirable Persons Introduction Bill, and they are unanimously of the opinion, an opinion which I fully share with them, that there is no necessity for the proposed legislation, inasmuch as every responsible Government assumes the care and charge of lunatics and pays for the same out of the public revenue.

As regards lepers, it is practically impossible, except at prohibitive expense (as pointed out by me in my letter to the Hon. Attorney-General of the 16th October, of which I enclose a copy) to exercise medical supervision over Chinese passengers embarking at Canton for Hongkong, and the Government was unwilling to undertake such medical supervision even in connection with so important a matter as attempting to keep plague out of this Colony. I would also point out that, if lepers are prevented from coming into Hongkong direct by steamer, they will come down from Canton to Hongkong by junk, landing either at Lai Chi Kok or on the South or West of the Island of Hongkong.

For the above reasons, I shall feel bound to oppose the Bill in toto.

Moreover, in its details, it is very objectionable

Edit History

2026-06-01 18:09:04 · NVIDIA / meta/llama-4-maverick-17b-128e-instruct
Live
View comparison
AI Proofread
C O P Y. To N.2. B: C. O. 24851 RECO REG 14 JUL 04 18, Bank Buildings, Hongkong, 23rd December, 1908. The Honourable The Acting Colonial Secretary. «sic, 70 In reply to your Memorandum of the 16th instant, I have had a conference with the Members of the Committee of the Chamber of Commerce upon the subject of The Undesirable Persons Introduction Bill, and they are unanimously of the opinion, an opinion which I fully share with them, that there is no necessity for the proposed legislation, inasmuch as every responsible Government assumes the care and charge of lunatics and pays for the same out of the public revenue. As regards lepers, it is practically impossible, except at prohibitive expense (as pointed out by me in my letter to the Hon. Attorney-General of the 16th October, of which I enclose a copy) to exercise medical supervision over Chinese passengers embarking at Canton for Hongkong, and the Government was unwilling to undertake such medical supervision even in connection with so important a matter as attempting to keep plague out of this Colony. I would also point out that, if lepers are prevented from coming into Hongkong direct by steamer, they will come down from Canton to Hongkong by junk, landing either at Lai Chi Kok or on the South or West of the Island of Hongkong. For the above reasons, I shall feel bound to oppose the Bill in toto. Moreover, in its details, it is very objectionable
Baseline (Original)
See No. 2. A. O O P Y. To N.2. B: C. O. 24851 RECO REG 14 JUL 04 18, Bank Buildings, Hongkong, 23rd. December, 1908. The Honourable The Acting Colonial Secretary. «sic, 70 In reply to your Memorandum of the 16th. instant, I have had a conference with the Members of the Commit- tee of the Chamber of Commerce upon the subject of The Undesir- able Persons Introduction Bill, and they are unanimously of the opinion, an opinion which I fully share with them, that there is no necessity for the proposed legislation, inasmuch as every responsible Government assumes the care and charge of lunatics and pays for the same out of the public revenue. As regards lepers, it is practically impos- sible, except at prohibitive expense (as pointed out by me in my letter to the Hon. Attorney-General of the 16th. October of which I enclose a copy) to exercise medical supervision over Chinese passengers embarking at Canton for Hongkong, and the Government was unwilling to undertake such medical supervision even in connection with so important a matter as attempting to keep plague out of this Colony. I would also point out that, if lepers are prevented from coming into Hongkong direct by steamer they will come down from Canton to Hongkong by junk, landing either at Lai Chi Kok or on the South or West of the Island of Bong kong. For the above reasons I shall feel bound to oppose the Bill in toto. Moreover in its details it is very objection- -able
2026-06-01 18:09:04 · Baseline
View content

See No. 2. A.

O O P Y.

To

N.2. B:

C. O.

24851

RECO

REG 14 JUL 04

18, Bank Buildings,

Hongkong, 23rd. December, 1908.

The Honourable

The Acting Colonial Secretary.

«sic,

70

In reply to your Memorandum of the 16th.

instant, I have had a conference with the Members of the Commit-

tee of the Chamber of Commerce upon the subject of The Undesir-

able Persons Introduction Bill, and they are unanimously of the

opinion, an opinion which I fully share with them, that there is

no necessity for the proposed legislation, inasmuch as every

responsible Government assumes the care and charge of lunatics

and pays for the same out of the public revenue.

As regards lepers, it is practically impos-

sible, except at prohibitive expense (as pointed out by me in my

letter to the Hon. Attorney-General of the 16th. October of

which I enclose a copy) to exercise medical supervision over

Chinese passengers embarking at Canton for Hongkong, and the

Government was unwilling to undertake such medical supervision

even in connection with so important a matter as attempting to

keep plague out of this Colony. I would also point out that, if lepers are prevented from coming into Hongkong direct by steamer they will come down from Canton to Hongkong by junk, landing

either at Lai Chi Kok or on the South or West of the Island of

Bong kong.

For the above reasons I shall feel bound to

oppose the Bill in toto.

Moreover in its details it is very objection-

-able

Comments

Approved members can add comments, bookmarks, and private notes.

No comments yet.

Private Research Note

Private notes are available after approval.