Directory_and_Chronicle_1905 — Page 737

Directories & Chronicles 香港指南 All

TIENTSIN-TAKU

175

INSURANCE OFFICES—Continued

OFFICES

Schweiz Allgem Vers. Act. Ges. Zurich. Scottish Imperial Life Insurance Company South British Fire and Marine Insurance Co. (Marine) South British Fire and Marine Insurance Company. South British Fire and Marine Insurance Company. Standard Life Assurance Company

Sun Fire Office

Sun Life Assurance Company

AGENTS

H. M. Schultz & Co. H. M. Schultz & Co. Arnhold, Karberg & Co. Wilson & Co. Lees & Co. Wilson & Co. Wilson & Co. E. Bavier & Co.

Thames and Mersey Marine Insurance Company, Ld. Wilson & Co.

Tokio Marine Insurance Co.

Transatlantic Fire Insurance Company

Ld........

Transatlantic Marine Insurance Company, Ld..

Union Assurance Society

Union Insurance Society of Canton, Ld.. United Dutch Marine Insurance Company

Upper Rhine Insurance Company, Mannheim Western Assurance Co.....

Western Assurance Company, Toronto

World Marine Insurance Company

Yangtsze Insurance Association

Yangtsze Insurance Association, Limited

Yen Chai Ho Insurance Co.......

Mitsui Bussan Kaisha E. Meyer & Co.

Collins & Co.

Lees & Co. Siemssen & Co.

Wm. Forbes & Company William Forbes & Co. Wm. Meyerink & Co. Faust & Co.

Mackenzie & Co.

American Trading Co. Liddell Bros. & Co.

China Merchants' Steam Nav. Co.

TAKU

沽大 Ta-ku

This village is situated at the mouth of the Pei-ho, on the southern side of the river, about sixty-seven miles from Tientsin. The land is so flat at Taku that it is difficult for a stranger to detect the entrance to the river. There are two anchorages, an outer and inner. The former extends from the Customs Junks to three miles outside the Bar, seaward; the latter from Liang-kia-yuan on the south to the Customs Jetty, Tz'chu-lin, on the north. The village is a poor one, and possesses few shops and no buildings of interest except the forts, now demolished. The only foreign residents are the employées of the Lighter Company, the Customs and the Pilot Corporation. A railway from the adjoining town of Tungku (two miles up the river) to Tientsin was completed in 1888.

Taku is memorable on account of the engagements that have taken place between its forts and the British and French naval forces. The first attack was made on the 20th May, 1858, by the British squadron under Sir Michael Seymour, when the forts were passed and Lord Elgin proceeded to Tientsin, where on the 26th June he signed the famous Treaty of Tientsin. The second attack, which was fatally unsuccessful, was made by the British forces in June, 1859. The third took place on the 21st August, 1860, when the forts were attacked from the land side and captured, the booms placed across the river destroyed, and the British ships sailed triumphantly up to Tientsin. The water on the bar ranges from about two to fourteen feet at the Spring tides. At certain states of the tide, steamers are obliged to anchor outside until there is sufficient water to cross.

Taku and Tongku as naval bases have been very prominent in the history of China. In May, 1900, as the Boxer sedition came to a head, the European Powers assembled the greatest naval armament ever seen in the Eastern hemisphere, and one might almost add in the history of the World, at Taku Bar. Sir Edward Seymour, K.C.B., as Senior Naval Officer, was in command. The Admirals were called upon to protect the Legations in Peking and the foreign settlements of Tientsin, and in the second week of June, naval landing parties were sent ashore by the six European Powers, the United States and Japan. Russia, however, sent

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