Directory_and_Chronicle_1937 — Page 466

Directories & Chronicles 香港指南 All

PEI-TAI-HO AND CHINWANGTAO

Peitaiho continues to expand. There are now five associations, namely, Rocky Point Association, East Cliff Association, Temple Bay Association, Lighthouse Point Assocaintion, and the Kung I Hui. An endeavour is being made to arrive at some kind of co-operation between these various sections, whose interests are common, The first desideratum is a Sanitary Department serving the whole district comprised in the term "Peitaiho Beach." The next necessity is to form some general advisory committee, obviating the necessity of so many diverse forms of control. Voluntary service will have to be replaced by expert advisers, and how to meet this expenditure is a matter for consultation between the four associations and the Kung I Hui. The Kung I Hui is a body of Chinese gentlemen mostly with large local interests: it is registered in the Ministry of Communications as a definite working organisation and has a legal and, to a certain extent, judicial status. It has expended large sums of money in making excellent roads, lined with trees, and intends to throw the whole of the Lotus Hills open as a public park.

Chinwangtao owes its existence as a seaport to the Chinese Engineeering and Mining Company, Ltd. (now amalagamated with the Lanchow Mining Company under the little of The Kailan Mining Administration). It serves primarily as a port of ship- ment for Kaiping coal.

Chinwangtao is situated on the western coast of the Gulf of Liao and is distant about 10 miles W.S.W. of Shanhaikwan. The breakwater and pier forming the harbour are so constructed that vessels may lie alongside at any state of the tide and in all weathers, discharging from or loading directly into railway cars, so that there is the minimum of handling and loss by breakage. The Administration owns large areas of land in the vicinity of the port. A good harbour, good water, electric light, and cheap coal offer exceptional inducements for industrial enterprises, and it is expected that there will be a great development in this direction.

The Port of Chinwangtao is accessible throughout the year, and as a seaside healthi resort Chinwangtao is almost without rival in China. It is easily accessible, has a dry and bracing climate, offers safe bathing from a sandy beach, has good golf links, and is situated amidst magnificent mountain scenery, while a Rest House and numerous summer bungalows afford the visitor every comfort. Extensive improvements in the port were made during 1929. A portion of the lagoon has been reclaimed for the extension of the coal-yard. A school for the benefit of the children of the Kailan Mining Administration's employees has been built, as well as additional quarters for the staff and a new power house to meet the requirements of the Yao Hua Glassworks, as well as those of the Administration, was completed towards the end of the year.

The Yao Hua Mechanical Glass Company have a glass factory at Chinwangtao. The establishment, which covers about 110 mou of land, is one of the largest of its kind in existence. The capital of the Company is $2,500,000.

TRADE IN 1935.

The return in the closing months of 1934 of peaceful conditions to the Luanyu area, from which the port of Chinwangtao derives its trade, together with the great improvement in Sino-Japanese relations which the conclusion of the agreements on certain previously vexed questions had made possible, seemed to presage a period of much-needed peace in Eastern Hopeh. These hopes, however, were unfortunately only too quickly falsified, as, while normal conditions continued during the opening months of 1935, the political tension which prevailed from June onwards shook the foundations of public confidence and exercised a most adverse influence upon trade in general. In June and November the political tension was especially acute, and large numbers of Japanese troops, with full air and artillery equipment, were concentrated at Shanhaikwan for use in case of crisis developed-an eventuality which happily in neither case came to pass. The period was one of unrestrained lawlessness, organised

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