The Sunday Rest Issue in 19th
Century Hong Kong
Louis Ha
[in Lee Pui-tak (ed) Colonial
Hong Kong and Modern China – Interaction and Reintegration (Hong Kong:
Hong Kong University Press: 2005) pp. 57-68.]
Holidays,
although they provide pleasure to be free from work, often touch on religious,
cultural, economic and political sensitive issues when they become a matter of
allowing or disallowing labour on those days. It needs even more skill and political wisdom to launch a
new holiday that will be well accepted by inhabitants. According to a recent government
decision, the Birthday of Buddha was added as a holiday in Hong Kong starting
from 1999. The decision was a well
considered one and welcomed by inhabitants for several reasons. Firstly, Buddhism has been integrated
into the culture of Hong Kong and it is natural to have some kind of
celebration on that day; secondly, there is the political wish of China to make
Hong Kong more ÒChineseÓ and to balance the many existing holidays connected
with Christianity which is regarded as ÒWesternÓ; thirdly, the new holiday is
within the usual quota of annual holidays enjoyed by Hong Kong people which
means no extra financial burden is to be borne by anyone.[1]
Finally, the friendly relationship between different religious communities in
Hong Kong makes the addition of this new holiday not a cause of contention.
In
other places and other times, however, matters concerning holiday legislation have
often been controversial. For example, in European countries and Canada, Sunday
legislation has been debated for a long time concerning matters such as
allowing Sunday shopping or not.[2]
In Hong Kong, although Sunday rest
is commonly accepted and expected by most people, there is no general
prohibition on Sunday labour. In
fact, starting from as early as 1875 all Sundays were prescribed by law as
holidays and regarded as dies non
in Hong Kong.[3] Government departments, educational institutions, banking,
building and trading companies are closed on those days, while shopping malls,
markets, restaurants, hotels, transportation and entertainment industry are
wide open. It is a kind of hybrid
of Sunday rest and Sunday labour, the origin of which can be traced back to the
early years of the British Colony.
The early
years
In
order to build houses and roads as quickly as possible in the early years of
the Colony, Sunday labour was a common practice. Only the few privileged Westerners enjoyed their real Sunday
rest. The first argument
concerning Sunday rest began with a letter to the editor of the Friend of
China published on April
24, 1844. The writer cynically argued
that Hong Kong were not a British Colony because the government had not enforced
the British law of Sabbath.[4]
One month later, another letter
pointed out that 200 workers were employed by the government to dig on Sundays,
probably levelling sites for building, causing great nuisance to the nearby
chapel where the Colonial Chaplain preached. The argument was that the government was inconsistent in
allowing Sunday labour while paying a chaplain to preach the Bible that forbids
such practice.[5] The Colonial Chaplain was therefore
blamed for neglecting his duty to promote the observance of the Sabbath in Hong
Kong.[6]
The wish of the letter-writers was
to transplant the British system of Sunday observance to Hong Kong. The government certainly did not find
it convenient to do so. Its
position regarding labour was that of an employer among so many others.
However, it agreed to give orders to government departments to observe Sunday
rest leaving the rest of the society to the conscience of individual
employers. In order to wash its
hands on this matter, the government published for general information an order
to the Survey General dated June 28, 1844:
"with
a view to a better observance of Sunday throughout the Colony, that all
Europeans in the service É be thereby afforded an opportunity of attending
Divine Service. In all contracts
made in future É Sunday is omitted in calculating the time necessary for the
completion of the work contracted for."[7]
In
addition to the Sunday holiday, the government later extended its generosity to
cover another half day of rest and declared all public offices closed on
Saturday afternoons starting from April 29, 1866, except the General Post
Office.[8]
The government, however, did not
care too much about whether the people or its employees really take the Sunday rest. On October 16, 1856, a government
notification shows that despite clear instruction, the Sunday rest was not
observed completely in the Government Departments.
"Whereas
it has been represented to His Excellency the Governor that certain Government
works are conducted on Sundays, His Excellency has instructed the responsible
authorities to take such measures as shall prevent the desecration of that day
in such respect ; and as regards works carried on by private persons, His
Excellency recommends to all Christian inhabitants, that the contracts with the
natives shall be such as may prevent the employment of workmen or labourers on
the Sabbath day."[9]
The
defenders of Sunday labour argued among others that keeping restaurants open on
Sundays was necessary for seamen to prevent scenes of drunkenness on the street
for a better general observance of Sabbath. And since the Chinese were no
Christians, to enforce Sunday observance on them and to suspend their work,
which was usually paid by day, would be unjust, unwise and would practically
encourage them to quit Hong Kong by compelling them to observe rules not of
their religion. As for defenders
of Sunday rest, their intention was to leave people, especially Christian
Westerners, free for religious observance in a worthy environment. Therefore, Sunday should be kept from
the "noisy and disagreeable bawling of Chinese hawkers on Sunday
mornings," at least during the hours of religious service.[10]
The
Sunday question came up again in October 1867, when John Charles Whyte,[11]
a police magistrate, contended in a case of gambling at the Police Court that
an arrest on Sunday was illegal.[12]
It seems odd that the Sunday rest would have gone so far as to merit such
interpretation. In fact, the
Sunday observance was not on the books of Hong Kong law, but many believed that
the law of England on Sunday observance should be respected in British
colonies.[13] Once again people pointed out the
inconsistency of Government policy. They argued that on the one hand the
government built Churches with public money for the spread of the gospel
exhorting people to keep holy the Sunday, on the other hand it licensed
drinking and gambling houses which were open on Sundays.[14]
Accordingly, European business people also adopted contradictory practices regarding
the Sunday observance. They paid
workmen to go on with building operations and stone chipping, while they only
kept Sunday rest themselves when there was no mail departing the habour.[15]
Despite individual effort to persuade
the government to enforce Sunday rest, pragmatism was the rule of day. In the
1870s, the loading and unloading of ships in the harbour and the building
operations on shore increased drastically in pace with the prosperity of Hong
Kong while taverns for the sale of alcoholics were open during all the hours of
Sunday.[16]
Organised
pressure
At
the end of 1870s, a united force led by Christian leaders was organized for obtaining
legislation prohibiting Sunday labour. On May 1, 1879, a deputation consisting
of the Anglican Bishop Burdon, the Catholic Bishop Raimondi, and the Rev. J.C.
Edge of the London Mission Society presented to the Governor a memorial signed
by 110 companies, firms, merchants and residents, requesting the governor to
enforce the existing English law on Sunday observance, the Act of Charles II
Chap. 7, in Hong Kong.[17]
The effort, however, was in vain. It is true that the Ordinance No. 6 of
1845 in establishing the Supreme Court provided that British law should be in
force in Hong Kong. This ordinance was amended by the Ordinance No. 2 of 1846
which limited the English law to "such of the laws of England only as
existed" when the Hong Kong legislature was set up in 1843. Both were repealed by Ordinance No. 12
of 1873.[18]
The Government easily ignored the
request even though it was made by such eminent persons of the society, because
by then Hong Kong had become a busy port where steamers hurriedly came and
departed, with mail arriving almost every day. In these prosperous times the
government judged it not suitable to enforce the law of a general Sunday rest.[19]
Not even the devout Catholic governor, John Pope Hennessy, could afford to let
Hong Kong workers free from Sunday labour. To the deputation he could only confirm that Sunday labour was
absolutely necessary in all government departments except that of the Survey
General.[20]
In
the 1880s, the number of ships entering and clearing in Hong Kong ranged from
5,700 to 8,500 with a total tonnage of 5 to 9 million - a volume that doubled
that of the 1870s.[21]
By this time, Sundays were already
prescribed as public holidays.
However, the competition with Shanghai in shipping business was so
strong and the workload in harbour so heavy that Sunday labour became
indispensable for the shipping companies. Seamen and clerks employed by shipping
companies worked all the year round without a single day of break.[22]
The situation became unbearable for the workers.
In
this continuous tension of work, the nature of the Sunday rest gradually
switched from a religious need to a physical one involving conflicting
interests between workers and owners of the shipping trade. On March 24, 1888, A.G. Goldsmith,
Chaplain of St. Peter's (Seamen's) Church, started a signature campaign among
masters and officers of ships visiting Hong Kong. The object was to petition the governor on obtaining a
system of Sunday observance that would remedy the evil of having employees
working without any day of rest. The campaign collected 600 signatures.[23]
The effort was made on the part of
workers. The Hong Kong General Chamber of Commerce, which represented the part
of business owners, however, diplomatically commented that the object was
"worthy of every encouragement, but in review of the many conflicting
interests involved," it could not support the legislation of total
cessation of Sunday work in the harbour, "unless an unyielding law
applicable to all classes and nationalities or vessels be passed. "
Again,
the petition did not bear any fruit. But the opposing positions of workers and
employers were clear. On April 18,
1889, Governor G.W. Des Voeux (governor from October 1887 to May 1891) explained
in the Legislative Council that since Hong Kong was a free port without a
custom house, the government could not stop the work on Sunday in the harbour
by simply closing the custom house. He pointed out that the only means to
legislate the cessation of labour on Sunday was either by fine or imprisonment.
And then, the law should be general enough to cover all vessels without
exception and forbidding Sunday labour on shore too, otherwise it would be
unfair. He was convinced that Sunday rest would diminish the wealth and
competitive power of Hong Kong, which would cause a violent change in the
social condition.[24]
Change
of mind
Two
years after this firm statement against Sunday legislation, however, the same
governor hurried to pass a law prohibiting Sunday work in the harbour.[25]
The change of mind was a result of several factors. In England, the Duke of Edinburgh, speaking to the Missions
to Seamen Society in April 1890, defended the right of British subjects to one
dayÕs rest in the week. He trusted
that in colonies where the people had no votes, the duty of Her MajestyÕs
government was to see that no injustice was done to the working classes.[26]
That might have changed the
attitude of the governor toward Sunday rest but that was not enough to move him
to act. One month later in Hong
Kong, the British Mercantile Marine Officers' Association was formed with an
initial membership of ten, which increased to over a hundred in less than six
months. Later, by alliance with
the Liverpool Association the number stood at over 3,000 and it rose to 15,000
when the Association joined the Federation of Shipmasters and Officers in
London.[27]
The Association then made some
clever moves. It started with
accepting only British as members, making the association a body representing
the interest of British marine officers.
It also made use of two very powerful instruments: its network in
England and the pressure of the local press, which was invited to cover all its
ordinary meetings. The Association
was not a trade union, yet it had acquired certain support and therefore
bargaining power on the question of Sunday labour.
A
series of actions to obtain Sunday rest was taken under the leadership of the
charismatic Captain Samuel Ashton. A meeting was arranged with the General
Chamber of Commerce to discuss publicly the question of Sunday labour in the
harbour on October 17, 1890;[28]
later a meeting with the Acting Governor, Francis Fleming, on November 18.[29]
The arguments raised during the
meetings by both sides were later published on newspapers. On the one side, it was argued that
seamen were not really free to refuse work on Sundays because their jobs would
be at stake. Thus, the Sunday work
was forced labour and should be regarded as moral slavery, discrediting the
British flag and the government of a crown colony.[30]
On the other side, it was argued
that the problem of Sunday labour in Hong Kong was not acute, because it did
not affect the same group of British marine officers every Sunday in the year.[31]
Also, European supervision for the loading and discharging of cargo during
Sundays could be dispensed with.[32]
Besides, it would be difficult to apply a law of Sunday rest to every vessel of
whatever nationality and whatever design including Chinese junks which sailed
on the coast. The Chinese, having no reason to regard Sunday a day of rest, would
oppose the stoppage of work on Sundays.[33]
The meetings did not obtain any substantial result for the legislation of
Sunday rest, but they caused exciting debates in the newspaper for several
weeks, creating certain a pressure both in Hong Kong and overseas.[34]
Eventually,
the question of Sunday rest in Hong Kong was mentioned in the Parliament of
London. But it was not discussed seriously enough to deserve any practical
action. Difficulties in prohibiting Sunday labour by law were raised there, and
merchants and shipping agents were advised to reduce unnecessary Sunday labour
on a voluntary basis.[35]
The real question was not tackled.
It
was an article published in the October issue of the London Telegraph that first suggested the Queen could
make a gift to Hong Kong on the occasion of the fiftieth anniversary of the Colony
(1841-1891).[36] And the
gift could be the Sunday legislation. The idea seemed to catch the fancy of British
officers and things started to move in favour of a Sunday legislation. In Hong
Kong, Bishop Burdon gave his own push in his sermon for the celebration of the
Colony's jubilee on January 21, 1891. He concentrated mainly on the issue of Sunday
rest, advocating it as part of British civilization and exhorting that Sunday
rest would show the spiritual side of the British who could care "for
something else beside buying and selling." The sermon received echoes of appreciation in the press.[37]
Another trivial, yet perhaps
decisive, factor that hastened the legislation was that Des Voeux was to finish
his term of governorship in May 1891.
He might want to leave his signature on the gift of the Queen to Hong
Kong.
Sunday
legislation
On
May 6, 1891, the Sunday Cargo-working Ordinance was passed in the Legislative
Council after it was first read one week earlier.[38]
The ordinance stipulated that
Òno
cargo shall be received on board, loaded, worked or discharged from any vessel,
within the waters of this Colony on Sunday, unless a 'permit' from the Harbour
Master has been first obtained.
"ÉThe penalty will be a fine of "not over $1,000 or in default
of payment to imprisonment for any period not exceeding one month. "
One week
before the ordinance was to be in force on August 1, 1891, final efforts from
Hong Kong were made to London by people against as well as for Sunday rest. The Chamber of Commerce
representing the interests of employers presented a petition with 247
signatures against the ordinance requesting that the ordinance be disallowed or
repealed. Another petition carrying 743 signatures was in favour of Sunday
rest; among the signatories, 579 claimed to have been deprived of the
"birthright of an Englishman to Sunday rest.Ó [39]
The
ordinance was not repealed. And ten months later, 20 permits for ships to
discharge cargo on Sunday were issued. The permits were obtained by paying a
charge ranging from $75 for ships under registered tonnage of 200 and $200 for
the tonnage of 2,000 and over.[40]
The permit soon became a loophole for working on Sundays as the rapid increase
of fee collected for permits showed.
For 1891, the fee collected was $5,000. In the years 1892 and 1893, it became $7,900 and $13,000,
almost ten percent of the Government revenue under the item of various fees.[41] Shipping companies were quick to
propose a loose definition of the term "Sunday" to include only from
5 a.m. to 10 p.m. and some others proposed the exemption of mail steamers and
vessels discharging coal for the ship's own consumption from the fee or a
reduction of it. To make the
situation more acceptable, the Sunday Cargo Working Ordinance was amended in
1893 to allow all transit mail steamers to discharge and take in cargo without
incurring the fees imposed under the Ordinance.[42]
From
the fact that work continued incessantly in the harbour on Sundays despite the
fee for the permits, it shows that the effect of the Ordinance to disallow
Sunday work was minimal.
Apparently, the only winner of the issue on Sunday rest was the
Government who appeared to be civilized enough to promulgate an ordinance on
Sunday rest as well as get the extra income from issuing permits.
Conclusion
The
Sunday labour or the prohibition of it was like a chronic illness that demanded
attention from time to time in the nineteenth century Hong Kong. It became the topic of prolonged discussion
for editorials and letters to the editor at least once every decade.[43]
The Sunday rest, a practice with
Western religious connotation, has been closely linked with social structure,
economic interest and traditional custom.
In
the nineteenth century Hong Kong, however, Sunday was like any other weekday
for the majority of the inhabitants who were Chinese. They used lunar calendars
and celebrated the new moon and full moon with big meals saving a long holiday
of about fifteen days in the beginning of the Lunar New Year. These traditional
monthly and annual feast-days did not fit well with the Sunday rest
system. The long holidays during the Lunar New Year specially
annoyed Westerners who needed the services of Chinese. Their tumultuous public
manifestations during these feast days were merely tolerated so far as they were
kept within their own residential areas.
But
for the small group of Europeans, Sunday was a day of rest and worship by
tradition, and this tradition was meant to be kept to make Hong Kong a European
city for their convenience. They
were entitled to do so because according to the mentality of those times, Hong
Kong was after all a British Colony.
Western missionaries and devout Christians were specially interested in
promoting Sunday rest and in lobbying the government to pass laws forbidding
Sunday labour. What they desired was a favourable environment for Christian
Westerners to keep their religious observance as well as to share the Christian faith with the Chinese in
observing the Sunday as a holy day.
Yet
initially the social structure was not ready for a Sunday rest by legislation. To
compete with other Chinese coastal ports, the mail arriving at Hong Kong on
Saturday or Sunday required immediate attention and goods on ships needed quick
unloading and loading. So, at
first the discussion on Sunday rest was focused on Sunday observance for
Christians and on asking the "Christian government" to provide
necessary arrangement for the compliance of such duty.[44]
Finally, in 1891, the government responded
positively to the demand of the British mercantile marine officers who formed a
strong moral pressure in realizing their right of a Sunday rest. An ordinance
was passed, but the Sunday rest was not guaranteed or observed.
In
the process of debating the issue, Chinese inhabitants were often
mentioned. They were presented
either as low-pay labourers who could not afford to rest on Sundays,[45]
or regarded as unable to work diligently if they were not forced to work every
day.[46]
This kind of argument must have been intended to ridicule the over-zealous
Christians campaigning for Sunday rest rather than to insult the intelligence
of the Chinese. The Chinese then were not in the position to speak for
themselves, because all the while during the discussion on Sunday rest, the
Chinese were de facto discriminated against by regulation which required them
to carry a pass when they stayed out-doors in the city from 9 p.m. to 5 a.m.[47]
This night pass regulation which was in force from 1843 was cancelled only in
1897,[48]
six years after the passing of the Sunday Cargo-working Ordinance.
APPENDICES
– Newspaper clippings
Appendix
I: Letter to the editor,
Friend of China, 4
May, 1844.
Dear Sir,
You are aware that the Government employ a Chaplain, for the purpose of
enforcing commands of the Bible, and for this purpose two services are held by
him at Hongkong every Sabbath.
This is well; but, as if to counteract the too zealous teaching of the
said Chaplain, the same Government have had employed, for the last few
Sabbaths, in digging on Lord Saltoun's hill, about two hundred China Coolies,
in full view of the place where the Chaplain preaches, and so near, that their
noise and bustle can be distinctly heard by the audience in attendance upon the
said religious services. Would it
not be well for the Chaplain, some of these days, to explain, from his pulpit,
that part of the good book which says, that people must not only not work
themselves on the Sabbath, but positively forbids them also from employing ANY
OTHER persons to carry on their work on that day? A long time ago I recollect reading something on this subject
in the 20th Chap. of Exodus, and 10th verse. But, perhaps, the doctrine is in some other verse and
chapter. Likely, however, you may
have in your possession some good reasons for the above Government plan, or
know better than I do how to reconcile the inconsistency.
Yours,
&c. ,
EXODUS.
Appendix
II: Letter to the
editor, China Mail,
25 Oct, 1856.
Sir, it is
to be hoped that your correspondent "An Englishman" has not the ear
of Sir John Bowring, for it would be very much to be regretted should the
spirit of the Sabbatarianism, which is so mischievous at home, be introduced
here. To compel the Chinese, who
recognise no Divine command for the observance of that day, to suspend their
usual avocations, would be not only impolitic, but unjust, and would add
another to the already sufficient causes of complaint which they have against
the government of this Colony, and tend to promote emigration from rather than
towards this island. Government
and private works are all carried on by Chinamen, under Chinese
superintendence, and the contracts are always taken by Chinese; and I am of
opinion that we should make Christians of them before we enforce on them the
observance of Christian holydays.
With
considerable inconsistency, your correspondent suggests that Englishmen and
Christians should do business on Sunday in order that sailors may get good
tipple instead of bad. Whilst he
would make the pagan peripatetic vendor from whom a good many of the Chinese
obtain their food, observe the Sabbath strictly.
Hoping,
Sir, that you will oppose in your columns and tendency to such tyrannical and
uncalled for legislation as that your correspondent proposes, I remain, yours
obediently,
JUSTITIA.
P. S. - Of course I am as much opposed as
"An Englishman" to the convicts being made to work on Sunday, for I
think it as wrong for a Christian to compel needless labour on the Sunday as to
force pagans to cease their labours on that day.
(Notes by
the editor) Justitia, we think, has misunderstood "An EnglishmanÓÕs
object-which was, he says, merely to prevent the noisy and disagreeable bawling
of their wares by hawkers on Sunday mornings in the European part of the town -
if any part may be called so; - he did not advocate the stoppage of building
work, - that had already been done by the Governor; and as for the "inconsistency"
of which he is accused - eating and drinking are, he adds, "works of
necessity" and the opening, during certain hours of the day, of
respectable and well-conducted refreshment-houses for seamen, would on the part
of Government be a "work of mercy" calculated to prevent scenes of
drunkenness in the public thoroughfares, and indeed to lead to a better general
observance of Sabbath.
Appendix
III: Editorial, Daily
Press, 14 October 1867.
The great
Sunday question, cropped up recently at the Police Court, when Mr Whyte
contended that no arrest can legally be made on Sunday in Hongkong.
On this
point it may be best to say nothing, while the fate of the prisoners in the case
we refer to, which is remanded, is still pending. The Attorney-General is to be consulted about the meaning of
the ordinance under which they are charged, and if they are convicted after
all, they will have the consolation of knowing that their punishment is
strictly en regle. Meanwhile, they may hope, amongst other
aspirations, that the reverence of old English lawgivers for Sunday, may do
them good service, even out here, in this un-Sabbatarian colony, and that they
may thus escape from custody before it becomes the duty of the magistrate to
decided what retribution is deserved by people guilty of the frightful sin in
which it is alleged that they had been detected - gambling in an unlicensed
house. In reference, however, to
the characteristics of the Hongkong Sunday, to which attention is thus called,
most English people here must have been conscious of conflicting emotions. There are Sundays of many different
kinds in different parts of the world.
The English Sunday, which has been at one period of our history a day of
the most unrestrained and joyous merrymaking, with a "Book of Sports"
under Royal patronage to suggest amusements to the country people and laughing
crowds on a thousand village greens; which at another time has been a gloomy
interval of rampant fanaticism between the recurring weeks, has become a
compromise to a great extent, but is still a battle-ground between
Sabbatarianism, and the irrepressible desire of hard-worked men and women for
the excitement of pleasure, on the one day of rest from labour. The predominant religious impulses of
the English people give the day a holy colouring, and there need be no fear
that in our country, at any time, the Sunday pleasure seekers, however, completely
emancipated from existing restrictions they may be, will ever swamp the
worshippers and dethrone the church from its preeminence on Sunday. One by one those restrictions will be
broken down, and religion will perhaps be the chief gainer, when Sabbatarianism
is altogether beaten out of the field.
On the continent of Europe there are many varieties of Sunday, and the
orthodox British tourist sees much to horrify him, though it is often so
difficult to distinguish his horror of the way in which "foreigners" desecrate
the Sabbath" by their amusements, from his still greater horror of the
"Popery" which is infused into their proceedings when they keep it
holy. The Scotch Sunday, perhaps
one of the most unmitigated evils at present remaining in this world, is quite sui
generis meanwhile, but
the Hongkong Sunday is after all the oddest thing in Sunday's we have ever metÉ
.
[1] It was calculated in November 1997 that the total
salary of Hong Kong employees for one day amounts to 700 million dollars. See Ming Pao Daily,Hong Kong. (November 19, 1997).
[2] See Montreal Gazette (November 19, 1994); Winnipeg Free Press (April 3, 1993; August 5, 1993); Financial Post
Daily (July 22, 1993). See also A. H. Lewis, Critical
History Of Sunday Legislation From 321 To 1888 A. D. (New York: D. Appleton and Co., 1888; Reprint, William
S. Hein & Co., Inc., 1997).
[3] In 1875, all Sundays with five more days were
prescribed as public holidays. In
1912, the law was amended to include all Sundays and 12 other days as
holidays. The number of days
further increased to 16 days apart from Sundays. At present, the public holidays include all Sundays and 17
other days. See Hong Kong
Ordinance, No. 6 of 1875, No. 5 of 1912, No. 1 of 1947 and No. 9 of 1950.
[4] Friend of China (April 24, 1844).
[5] Friend of China (May 4, 1844). Please
also refer to Appendix I.
[6] Friend of China (June 15, 1844).
[7] Norton-Kyshe, The History of the Laws and Courts
of Hong Kong, reissued in 1971, (Hong
Kong Vetch and Lee, 1898), Vol. 1, p. 53.
[8] Norton-Kyshe, op. cit. , Vol. 11, p. 105.
[9] Norton-Kyshe, op. cit. , Vol. 1, p. 407.
[10] China Mail
(October 25, 1856).
[11] J. C. Whyte, graduated from Trinity College, Dublin,
was called to the Bar of Ireland in 1847, appointed second police magistrate in
1862, acting judge of the court of summary jurisdiction in 1863, 1866, 1869,
and a provisional member of the legislative council in 1866, died in 1871. See Norton-Kyshe, op. cit. , Vol. 11, p. 39, 51, 81, 172, 174, 177.
[12] Daily Press
(October 14, 1867). Please also
refer to Appendix III.
[13] China Mail
(January 23, 1867).
[14] Hong Kong Mercury (June 14, 1866).
[15] Daily Press
(October 14, 1867).
[16] China Mail
(May 1, 1879). See also
Norton-Kyshe, op. cit. , Vol. 11,
p. 284.
[17] Ibid.
[18] Norton-Kyshe, op. cit. , Vol. 11, pp. 511-512.
[19] China Mail
(May 2, 1879).
[20] China Mail
(May 1, 1879).
[21] Historical and statistical abstract of the Colony
of Hong Kong, 1841-1930 (Hong Kong:
Noronha & Co., 1932).
[22] China Mail
(June 18, 1888).
[23] The petition to the governor (November 9, 1888). Great Britain, Colonial Office,
Original Correspondence: Hong Kong, 1841-1951, Series 129 (hereafter CO
129) /250 p. 149.
[24] China Mail
(April 18, 1889).
[25] According to the 1964 edition of the Hong Kong Law
Book, the Sunday Cargo Working
Ordinance was still valid, although
with some amendments made in 1829, 1934 and 1939.
[26] Times
(London) (July 25, 1890).
[27] Annual Report of the British Mercantile Marine
Officers' Association, 1890. CO
129/250 p. 169.
[28] Daily Press
(October 18, 1890). Also see Norton-Kyshe,
op. cit. , Vol 11, p. 423.
[29] China Mail
(November 19, 1890).
[30] Dawson (secretary of the Missions to Seamen) to Lord
Knutsford (Secretary of State for the Colonies) (September 8, 1890). CO 129/1248, p. 785.
[31] F. Henderson (General Chamber of Commerce, Hong Kong)
to W.M. Deane (acting Colonial Secretary) (December 15, 1890). CO 129/250, pp. 176-178.
[32] Machintosh (Chairman of the Chamber of Commerce) to
S. Ashton (President of the British Mercantile Marine Officers' Association) (October
31, 1890). CO 129/250 p. 156.
[33] Memorandum by J.J. Keswick (April 1, 1891). CO 129/250 pp. 180-182. Also see Daily Press (October 18, 1890).
[34] See Daily Press (October 21, 22, 23, 28,
1890). China Mail (October 18; November
18, 20, 1890). Hong Kong Telegraph (November 18, 21, 1890).
[35] Norton-Kyshe, op. cit. , Vol 11, p. 420.
[36] Telegraph
(London) (October 1890).
[37] Daily Press
(January 29, 1891).
[38] Norton-Kyshe, op. cit. , Vol 11, p. 433.
[39] Daily Press
(August 1, 1891).
[40] See Hong Kong Blue Book, 1892.
[41] See Hong Kong Blue Book, 1892, 1893, 1894, 1895.
[42] Norton-Kyshe, op. cit. , Vol 11, p. 455.
[43] The newspapers are the Friend of China (1842-1859), the China Mail (from 1845), the Daily Press (from 1857), the Hong Kong Mercury (1866) and the Hong Kong Times (1873, 1876).
[44] China Mail
(May 1, 1879).
[45] Friend of China (May 1 and 2, 1844).
[46] Daily Press
(October 14, 1867).
[47] Norton-Kyshe, op. cit. Vol. 2, p. 474.
[48] An Ordinance to amend the Regulation of Chinese
Ordinance was passed in 1897. See
the Hong Kong Government Gazette
(May 8, 1897).