Sex
Male
Status
Deceased
Michael Yatskin
Born in Siberia Russia around 1910 . Escaped due to revolution via Harbin Shanghai then Hong Kong. Prisoner of war at Sham Shui PO prison camp for over 3 years? I have a book of sketches by Lieut A.V. Skvorzov of life in the prison camp . I believe there is one in the museum in Hong Kong.
He was an engineer in the PWD in Hong Kong when he was head of works at Sham Shui Po in 1955 when the Li Cheng Uk tomb was discovered. His subsequent actions saved the tomb.
We emigrated to Western Australia in1965. He was killed in a terrible car accident in 1965.
Comments
Fortunately, your father's
Fortunately, your father's Naturalisation Certificate was in one of the sets I copied at the UK National Archive earlier this year. The certificate is held under their reference HO 334/252/1766.
It is dated 19th October, 1936, and made out to "MIHAIL KONSTANTINOVITCH YATSKIN commonly known as MICHAEL CONSTANTIN YATSKIN".
It adds some other useful information:
HKU and Milenko
Hello,
I think your father is the same person identified on a HKU record of my father, Boris George Milenko, which shows Parent or Guardian as M. C. Yatskin at the address Albert-Villa, Kowloon. My father was born in Russia (Votkinski Zavod), and came to Harbin with his parents in 1920. His father and my grandfather was Yuri Milenko, a lawyer from St Petersburg who continued to practice law in Harbin - Yuri migrated to Australia in about 1952 and lived in Wollongong, NSW. It seems very likely M. C. Yatskin is in fact Michael Constantin Yatskin.
I requested HKU records from their archives section a number of years ago, and in addition to his graduation in 1939 with a B. Sc. (Eng) in 1939, they included a copy of a form he must have completed on enrolling at the university in September 1935, which includes M. C. Yatskin.
On the Gwulo website I've added some old photos from the late 1930's and likely also 1940 - if you recognise any of the people could you let me know who they are?
Also, recently I've liaised with David about the location of Albert-Villa in Kowloon - if you have any details could you share these?
My father was also in the HKVDC, but was not interned. He escaped in 1942 to mainland China, then made a very difficult journey to Chungking, then Iraq during the war, then to Australia in 1944. He continued working as an electrical engineer in NSW up to the early 1980's.
M C Yatskin
He's mentioned in the 1940 Jurors List:
And in "02. Prisoners Of War - Hong Kong Volunteer Defence Forces":
Michael Constantin Yatskin
I think you are referring to my father. However i was unaware he was guardian to your relatve