About Us Terms of use Sitemap Contact Us
關於香港記憶 使用說明 網站地圖 聯絡我們
Search
搜尋
Collection All Items All-round Support
  • Medical team formed by Hong Kong Chinese Medical Association
    Group photograph of the medical team sent by the Hong Kong Chinese Medical Association (now the Hong Kong Medical Association) to Shanghai before they set off to help rescue injured soldiers following the Incident of 28 January in 1932.
  • Newspaper report of One Yuan Repayment Movement in Hong Kong
    When the 'One Yuan Repayment (or Donation) Movement' was launched in Chongqing, Shanghai and other mainland cities in 1938, the Chinese General Chamber of Commerce in Hong Kong responded to the call, raising funds to support the victims of the war. Published on 1 January 1939, this newspaper article reports on the chamber's efforts.
  • Stars Shine for a Good Cause
    Article entitled 'Stars Shine for a Good Cause', supplemented with photographs of celebrities participating in the national salvation movement in Hong Kong, featured in the issue of January 1939 in the Tati pictorial.
  • Liao Chengzhi
    Liao Chengzhi was the son of Liao Zhongkai, elder statesman of the Nationalist Party, and He Xiangning. He founded the Eighth Route Army Hong Kong Office under the name of 'Yuet Hwa Company' on Queen's Road Central, Central, which was responsible for receiving anti-Japanese overseas Chinese and mainlanders seeking exile to Hong Kong.
  • Photos of Ho Kom Tong from fundraising performance (1)
    Before the fall of Hong Kong, a number of Hong Kong groups, including various youth, women and clansmen associations and the China Chamber of Commerce, supported the anti-Japanese campaign through financial contributions, charity sales, charity performances, appeals for the donation of supplies and purchases of the Liberty Bond. Ho Kom Tong, the younger brother of Hong Kong tycoon Sir Robert Hotung, donated to the cause and also performed in a charity show.
    Ho Kom Tong plays a female role in the Cantonese opera Joint Investiture of a Prime Minister by Six Warlords for a fundraising performance held at Tai Ping Theatre on 29 January 1940.
  • Photos of Ho Kom Tong from fundraising performance (2)
    Before the fall of Hong Kong, a number of Hong Kong groups, including various youth, women and clansmen associations and the China Chamber of Commerce, supported the anti-Japanese campaign through financial contributions, charity sales, charity performances, appeals for the donation of supplies and purchases of the Liberty Bond. Ho Kom Tong, the younger brother of Hong Kong tycoon Sir Robert Hotung, donated to the cause and also performed in a charity show.
    Ho Kom Tong performs at a Hong Kong St. John Ambulance charity show of Drunk Overlord in the Pavilion of a Hundred Flowers on 18 January 1941.