Charles Toms BAILEY [1893-1956]
Barbara Anslow: "[In 1941] Mr C.T. Bailey was a father figure in ARP Dept."
Barbara Anslow: "[In 1941] Mr C.T. Bailey was a father figure in ARP Dept."
Read more about Gertrude Tamara Jex in this thread on the Stanley Camp discussion list.
Notes from Barbara Anslow:
She was ARP personnel with us in Dina House during the battle, then in Tai Koon Hotel (where she and I shared a bed), and ultimately in Stanley.
Notes from Jill Fell:
Barbara Anslow mentions my father’s cousin, Marjorie Cook née Warnes in her Stanley diary. She brought her to life with some wonderful anecdotes told to me this summer. However, when she and Marjorie moved to Stanley, they were in different sections of the camp and lost track of each other. I wonder if anyone else remembers Marjorie.
I have only just got information about my great uncle Jack Mcgowan and his wife (I have no information on her, she may have been Chinese or a prior English wife) were in the siege of the Repulse Bay hotel and after lived in the sewer drain for the duration of the Japanese occupation. I was about 8 or 9 when he returned to the UK and I can only remember meeting this living skeleton off the train in London, but no wife.
A Mr Mcpherson who was the superintendant of the then new Auckland harbour bridge knew him and survived with him in the drain.
Notes from the Chardhaven Hotel thread:
Annelise:
Advert in The Straits Times, 24 October 1939, Page 2
For Sale:
Residental Hotel 44 rooms, beautifully funrished, 20 bath rooms, etc., licensed to sell intoxicating liquors, situated in the best part of Kowloon, showing handsome profits, price £3,000 selling on account of ill health. Apply to Mrs. Greenburg, proprietress, Chardhaven Hotel, Kowloon, Hong Kong.
80skid:
Husband: Thomas Herbert EDGAR
Further information: http://brianedgar.wordpress.com/2011/10/18/in-memoriam-eveline-marques-doliveiralena-edgar/
Family lore tells us that Edward and two younger brothers were put into Dr. Bernardo’s Home* in London after the death of his mother in 1918.
Family lore also tells us that Edward joined the Hong Kong Police Force.
Although passenger records are incomplete, evidence has been found that Edward sailed back from Hong Kong to London in 1938 aboard the RMS Corfu, and he was already on the police force, so apparently there had been earlier voyages.
Edward returned to Hong Kong prior to the war.