Charles Halcombe served for much of the 1880s and 1890s with China’s Imperial Maritime Customs Service. His career included sojourns in both Canton and Hong Kong. Halcombe long harboured dreams of becoming a journalist. Unusually he married a Chinese woman, Liang Ah Ghan, the daughter of a Chefoo merchant during his stay. His seven-year career in China, his writing ambitions and his marriage all strongly inform his impressions and the retelling of his experiences. In these excerpts from The Mystic Flowery Land we join Halcombe arriving by sampan at Hong Kong’s old Pedder’s Wharf before accompanying him on an extended literary stroll along Queen’s Road. With him we enter the rum-mills and Chinese theatres, meet the Sing-Song girls, indigent Europeans, and inveterate gamblers of the colony. On Hollywood Road Halcombe explores the fascinating Man-Mo Temple. In Canton Halcombe investigates the riverine life of the city - the infamous flower boats, the working river and coastal steamers, the numerous temples to the sea gods. But it is perhaps Halcombe’s description of the terrible bubonic plague that hit Hong Kong in 1894 that stands out to the reader today as both shocking in its tragedy and pertinent to our own times.
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The Mystic Flowery Land: A Curious Imperial Maritime Customs Officer's Roamings in Hong Kong and Canton in Southern China's Plague Year
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The Mystic Flowery Land: A Curious Imperial Maritime Customs Officer's Roamings in Hong Kong and Canton in Southern China's Plague Year
Charles J H Halcombe was born in 1865. He left England for Australia at 15 and spent some time as a merchant sailor. He was shipwrecked twice and lived through a mutiny on one of his ships. He spent time in South Africa from where he departed for Shanghai in 1887, arriving at just 22 years of age. He was to spend the next seven years in China. He appears to have worked for the major British-owned Shanghai English-language newspaper, the North-China Daily News, before joining the Imperial Maritime Customs Service as a Watcher. Halcombe remained with the Customs Service for some years. He resigned in 1893 when stationed at Kiungchow, on the then-remote Hainan Island. Unusually, though not uniquely, Halcombe married a Chinese woman, Liang Ah Ghan, the daughter of a Chefoo merchant.
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