Old Hong Kong Photos ... Volume 4 : Errors & corrections

Submitted by David on

Spotted a mistake? Please let us know in the comments below, so it can be corrected in future editions.

Comments

At the bottom of page 33 I wrote that I'd never seen any women working on the seafront, using shoulder poles to unload junks. Then recently I bought this photo, and proved myself wrong!

Woman carrying large baskets of clay pots from junk, by Admin



So I'll change the bottom two paragraphs on that page from:

Back to shoulder poles – as the photo shows, in 1896 Des Voeux

Road was the centre of the shoulder pole world. Each of those masts

belonged to a junk that needed loading or unloading by men like

these. They’d pad up and down planks that ran from the harbour

wall down into the junk. There are lots of photos like this, taken

along the seafront and showing men carrying heavy loads on shoulder

poles. But only men – I haven’t seen any women among them.

We know women did exactly this kind of work, and were arguably

even stronger as they had to climb the Peak’s slopes. But as far as I

can tell the men and women kept to their own districts: women on

the hills, men on the flat land near to the seafront.

to:

Back to shoulder poles – as the photo shows, in 1896 Des Voeux

Road was the centre of the shoulder pole world. Each of those masts

belonged to a junk that needed loading or unloading by men like

these. Carrying their loaded shoulder poles, the men would pad along 

the narrow planks that ran from the harbour wall down into the junk. 

This seafront scene is repeated in many photos (see Volume 3, p.45 

for several more examples), but looking through them I note it 

is very rare to see any women. If women could haul coal up the 

Peak’s slopes, they were surely strong enough to handle this kind of 

work. But the photos suggest that men took most of the seafront 

trade, while the carrier women worked inland and on the hillsides.

Back to shoulder poles – as the photo shows, in 1896 Des Voeux

Road was the centre of the shoulder pole world. Each of those masts

belonged to a junk that needed loading or unloading by men like

these. Carrying their loaded shoulder poles, the men would pad along 

the narrow planks that were laid between the junk and the harbour wall. 

In earlier copies of this book, I wrote that I hadn’t seen any carrier 

women working along the seafront, suggesting that the men 

monopolised this work, while the women worked inland and on the 

hillsides. In fact there wasn’t such a neat division of labour, as I’ve 

since seen photos of women using shoulder poles to unload junks, 

and read of men carrying loads up to the Peak. 

The panorama photo across facing pages 90 & 91 of the printed book is produced with good clarity.

The crop at the bottom of page 94 allows us to be more focused on buildings at 301-309 Nathan Road.

Your production lead or designer may be able to read out some of the these ten characters at once :

   泰林無線

   淘化大同公司

Meanwhile, the same photo posted in gwulo (~2014) is less clear even with the enlarge function. Some seasoned readers were quick enough to talk about “Tai Lam” early in 2013. Besides, the words 淘化大同 at the lower left corner of the ‘U’ (as of the watermark Gwulo.com) are also partly covered.

David, it is pleased to read you have received many thank-you / well-done’s in recent weeks. I try to express so in a slightly different way in this note.

Keep up the good quality in your printed photos for future books and reprints !  🙏

Cheers

 

Tai Lin Radio Service Co., first shop on Nathan Road (1950s), by hkspace_wl