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British Forces Overseas Hong Kong

British Forces Overseas Hong Kong comprised the elements of the British Army, Royal Navy (including Royal Marines) and Royal Air Force stationed in British Hong Kong. The Governor of Hong Kong also assumed the position of the commander-in-chief of the forces and the Commander British Forces in Hong Kong took charge of the daily deployment of the troops. Much of the British military left prior to the handover of Hong Kong to China in 1997. The present article focuses mainly on the British garrison in Hong Kong in the post Second World War era. For more information concerning the British garrison during the Second World War and earlier, see the Battle of Hong Kong.

British Forces Overseas Hong Kong
Active26 January 1841; 183 years ago (1841-01-26)–30 June 1997; 26 years ago (1997-06-30)
Country British Hong Kong
Allegiance Monarch
Branch
Type
RoleTerritorial Defence
Size
Garrison/HQGarrison – All installments
HQ – Flagstaff House (Residence of the CBF)
AnniversariesLiberation Day
Equipment
Engagements
Commanders
Commander-in-chiefGovernor of Hong Kong
Commanding OfficerCommander British Forces in Hong Kong (CBF)
Inaugural holder of CBFMajor General George D'Aguilar
Final holder of CBFMajor General Bryan Dutton
Notable
commanders
British Forces Overseas Hong Kong
Traditional Chinese駐港英軍
Simplified Chinese驻港英军
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinZhùgǎng Yīngjūn
Yue: Cantonese
Jyutpingzyu3 gong2 jing1 gwan1

Overview edit

Prior to and during the Second World War, the garrison was composed of British Army battalions and locally enlisted personnel (LEPs) who served as regular members in the Hong Kong Squadron of the Royal Navy or the Hong Kong Military Service Corps and their associate land units. The Hong Kong Infantry Brigade served as the main garrison formation. After the outbreak of the Second World War, the garrison was reinforced with British Indian Army and Canadian Army units. A second brigade, the Kowloon Infantry Brigade, was formed to assist in commanding the expanded force. The garrison was defeated during the Battle of Hong Kong, by the Empire of Japan.

After the Second World War and the end of the Japanese occupation of Hong Kong, the British military reestablished a presence. As a result of the Chinese Civil War, the British Army raised the 40th Infantry Division and dispatched it to garrison Hong Kong. It later left for combat in the Korean War, and the defense of the territory was taken up by additional British forces who were rotated from Europe. The garrison was further supplemented by LEPs, and Gurkhas. The latter came from Nepal, but formed part of the British Army. The size of the garrison during the Cold War fluctuated and ended up being based around one brigade.

The Royal Hong Kong Regiment, a military unit which was part of the Hong Kong Government, was trained and organised along the lines of a British Territorial Army unit. As such, it was supported by British Army regular personnel holding key positions. These British Army personnel, for their duration of service to the Royal Hong Kong Regiment, were seconded to the Hong Kong Government. In the post-WWII era, the majority of the regiment's members were local citizens of Chinese descent.

Responsibilities edit

Before 1 July 1997, the British government had the political commitment to safeguard the territory against external and internal threats. Commonwealth forces were also deployed to station in the territory shortly before the Second World War. The greatest test was in 1941, when Japanese forces invaded Hong Kong, leading to the 44-month-long Japanese occupation of Hong Kong.

Internal Security was the responsibility of the Hong Kong Government, in particular the Royal Hong Kong Police. It was supported by British Forces in Hong Kong should it be called upon to do so. During the Hong Kong 1967 riots, in which 51 people were killed, the British garrison supported the Royal Hong Kong Police in quelling the disturbance. Until 1995, the safety of much of the Sino-Hong Kong border was the responsibility of the British forces and as such contributed greatly to the interdiction of illegal immigrants (II). As the preparation of the handover of Hong Kong to China in 1997, that responsibility was passed on to the Hong Kong Police.

The Royal Navy played a significant role in the support of the Royal Hong Kong Police in anti smuggling operation in Hong Kong waters, especially in the heyday of seaborne smuggling during the mid-1980s to mid-1990s.

Search and Rescue (SAR) was provided by all branches of the British Forces in Hong Kong may be called upon for aid to civil defence as well as search and rescue operations in times of emergency.

Prior to 1990–1991, British Forces (British Army) was responsible for patrolling and enforcing border control between Hong Kong and China. This role was passed on the Hong Kong Police Force years before the handover in 1997. Some HK nationals who served in the British military were deployed overseas, including Operation Granby.[1]

The territory has nevertheless maintained a Government Flying Service, formerly the Royal Hong Kong Auxiliary Air Force, that is responsible for search and rescue operations, air ambulance services, and other air services for the Hong Kong Government. The GFS also took over some responsibilities from the Royal Air Force and the Army Air Corps.[2] The Hong Kong Police Force also has a highly trained and equipped counter terrorism unit, the Special Duties Unit, trained by United Kingdom's SAS and SBS, and a Marine Police force. These forces have been heavily armed since before the handover in 1997, and are within the portfolio of the Secretary for Security (which, before 1973, was named Secretary for Defence).

The Fire Service Department also took over some diving rescue responsibilities from the British Forces Overseas.[3]

The Royal Hong Kong Regiment (The Volunteers) was disbanded in 1995 prior to the handover in 1997. It was funded by and was a branch of the Hong Kong Government, yet under command of the Commander British Forces.

Structure in 1989 edit

Command structure edit

The Governor of Hong Kong, being a representative of the British sovereign, was the Commander-in-Chief of the British Forces in the colony. The Governor was advised by the Commander British Forces in Hong Kong (CBF) on all military actions. During the 1980s and 1990s, the CBF was normally a career Major General or Lieutenant General from the British Army. Until 1966, the CBF was an ex-officio member of the Legislative Council.[4]

Throughout the years of British rule in Hong Kong, a variety of British Army units spent various periods of time in the colony as resident units. In latter stages of the post-war period, British army units were sent to Hong Kong on a rotational basis for a period of three years. The following list contains resident units only and those which stayed in Hong Kong for short durations for re-supply or acclimatisation during the Korean War, Opium War, Boxer Rebellion and the Malayan Emergency are not included in the list. The majority of infantry battalions were Ghurkas who were permanently based in Hong Kong after Indian partition.

British Army formations edit

Major formations of the British Army in Hong Kong included:

Second World War edit

  • Headquarters, China Command (1939) - covered British military interests in: Hong Kong, Shanghai, and Tientsin.
    • Hong Kong Infantry Brigade (This was the primary British garrison in Hong Kong prior to and during the Second World War)
    • Kowloon Infantry Brigade (This brigade was formed in 1941 after the garrison was reinforced)
    • C Force - Canadian Army's reinforcement under British Command during the Battle of Hong Kong in 1941.

Cold War edit

British Army units edit

Royal Armoured Corps edit

Infantry edit

Gurkhas edit

  • 1st Battalion, 2nd King Edward VII's Own Gurkha Rifles (1971–75; 77–79; 81–85; 87–89; 91–92)
  • 2nd Battalion, 2nd King Edward VII's Own Gurkha Rifles (1953–57; 57–62; 66–68; 72–75; 77–81; 83–85; 87–91)
  • 1st Battalion, 6th Queen Elizabeth's Own Gurkha Rifles (1956–57; 65–73; 75–77; 79–83; 85–87; 89–93)
  • 2nd Battalion, 6th Queen Elizabeth's Own Gurkha Rifles (1948–50; 62–63; 1969 amalgamated with the 1st Bn.)
  • 1st Battalion, 7th Duke of Edinburgh's Own Gurkha Rifles (1959–62; 73–77; 83–87; 89–91; 93–94)
  • 2nd Battalion, 7th Duke of Edinburgh's Own Gurkha Rifles (1954–57; 62–63; 62–70; disbanded in Hong Kong in 1987)
  • 1st Battalion, 10th Princess Mary's Own Gurkha Rifles (1957–60; 69–73; 75–79; 81–83; 85–89; 91–93)
  • 2nd Battalion, 10th Princess Mary's Own Gurkha Rifles (1948–50; 1962; amalgamated with 1st Bn. in 1968)
  • 1st Battalion, The Royal Gurkha Rifles (1994–96)

British Indian Army edit

Artillery edit

  • Hong Kong and Singapore Royal Artillery (1847 to 1940s)
  • 3rd Regiment Royal Horse Artillery (1973–1975; Borneo Lines, Sek Kong)
  • 4th Field Regiment, RA (1961-1964; HQ & 29 Bty at Fan Ling Camp, 88 Bty & 97 Bty at Dodwells Ridge Camp)
  • 8th Coast Regiment, Royal Artillery, Kowloon (1939 until captured by the Japanese in 1941)
  • 5th Heavy Anti-Aircraft Regiment, RA, RAF Kai Tak (circa 1939)
  • 5th Field Regiment, RA (1958–1961; at Fanling Camp & Dodwells Ridge Camp)
  • 14th Field Regiment, RA (1949–1951 at Gun Club Hill Barracks & Sek Kong; 1953–1955 at Quarry Bay Camp; 1960–1962 at Sek Kong)
  • 15th Observation Battery and 173rd Locating Battery 1950 at Lo Wu Camp
  • 15th Medium Regiment, RA (1955–1957; 7 and 38 Med Btys at Gun Club Hill Barracks)
  • 18th Medium Regiment, RA (1966-1969; 40 and 52 Lt Btys at Borneo Lines, Sek Kong. RHQ disbanded in Hong Kong and Regiment placed into Suspended Animation.)
  • 19th Field Regiment, RA (1956–1958; 25, 28 and 67 Fd Btys at Quarry Bay Camp and Sek Kong Camps)
  • 20th Anti-Tank Regiment, RA (1952; 1953–1955, with 12, 45 and 107 Fd Btys at Sek Kong Camp, 1975–1976; disbanded in HK in 1976)
  • 23rd Field Regiment, RA (1949–1952; 49, 50 and 69 Fld Btys at Quarry Bay Camp)
  • 25th Field Regiment, RA (1947–1955; 35, 54 and 93 Fld Btys at Gun Hill Club Barracks; 1969–1971 at Borneo Lines, Sek Kong)
  • 27th Heavy Regiment, RA (1949-1957; Redesignated 27th HAA Regt RA in 1950; 119 Bty to 34th LAA Regt RA in 1952; at Clear Water Bay and Stonecutters Island.)
  • 32nd Medium Regiment, RA (1952-1954,74 and 98 Med Btys at Gun Club Hill Barracks; 1959–1961, 46, 50 and 74 Med Btys at Whitfield Barracks & Gun Club Hill Barracks)
  • 34th Light Anti-Aircraft Regiment, RA (1949-1952; 1961–1963, 11 and 58 LAA Btys at Gun Club Hill Barracks)
  • 42nd Field Regiment, RA (1955–1956, with 68, 87 and 179 Fld Btys at Sek Kong Camp)
  • 45th Field Regiment, RA (1951–1953 with 70, 116 and 176 Fld Btys; 1959–1961)
  • 47th Coast Regiment, RA (1971-1973 with 3, 4 Lt and 31 Med Btys at Borneo Lines, Sek Kong)
  • 49th Anti-Tank Regiment, RA (1957-1961, with 55, 127 and 143 Fld Btys at Borneo Lines, Sek Kong; 1964–1966, with 143 Bty at Dodwells Ridge Camp)
  • 58th Medium Regiment, RA (1949–1951; with 118 and 175 Med Btys at Gun Club Hill Barracks)
  • 72nd Light Anti-Air Regiment, RA (1952–1955, with 31, 206 and 216 LAA Btys at Gun Club Hill Barracks)
  • 74th Light Anti-Air Regiment, RA (1955–1958, with 158 and 161 LAA Btys at Whitfield Camp)

Engineers edit

Royal Engineers and Queen's Gurkha Engineers

  • 1 Field Squadron,
  • 22nd Fortress Company, Royal Engineers (circa 1939)
  • 40th Fortress Company, Royal Engineers (circa 1939)
  • 24 Field Engineer Regiment, Royal Engineers
    • 11 Field Squadron, RE (1950-1951, Sek Kong, formed by renumbering 50 Fd Sqn 24 Field Engineer Regiment)
    • 15 Field Park Squadron, RE (1950-1958, formed by renumbering 46 Fd Park Sqn)
    • 50 Field Squadron, RE (1949-1950, for by renumbering 11 Field Squadron)
    • 54 Independent Field Squadron, RE (1950-circa 1958, formed by renumbering 25 Fd Sqn)
    • 54 (Hong Kong) Support Squadron, RE (1971 until disbandment in 1975)
    • 56 Field Squadron, RE (1950-1958,formed by numbering 37 Field Squadron)
  • Royal Engineers Postal and Courier Service (British Forces Post Box 1)
  • Queen's Gurkha Engineers (formed in HK in 1952 as 50th Regiment RE, renamed QGE in 1977)
    • 67 Squadron, QGE(disbanded in 1996)
    • 68 Squadron, QGE (disbanded in 1993)
    • 69 Squadron, QGE (disbanded in HK in 1968 and reformed as 69 Gurkha Independent Field Squadron in Chatham)
    • 70 Squadron, QGE (disbanded in 1993)
    • Gurkha Training Squadron (disbanded in 1971)

Signals edit

Royal Signals and Queen's Gurkha Signals

  • 27th Signal Regiment, Royal Signals (embarked for Hong Kong in 1949 as the 40th Divisional Signal Regiment)
    • Amalgamated with Hong Kong Signal Squadron to form Hong Kong Signal Regiment (1950)
    • Redesignated 27th Signal Regiment (1959)
    • Renamed HQ Royal Signals, Hong Kong (1960)
    • Renamed 27th Signal Regiment (1971, disbanded in 1976))
  • Hong Kong Independent Lines Squadron, Royal Signals (circa 1958)
  • Independent Gurkha Brigade Squadron (circa 1958)
  • Gurkha Infantry Brigade Signal Squadron (circa 1959)
  • Detachments, 19th Air Formation Signal Troop, Royal Signals (circa 1959)
  • Detachments, 232 Squadron, Royal Signals (circa 1959)
  • HQ Royal Signals, Hong Kong (1960-1967)
    • 252 Signal Squadron on the Hong Kong Island
    • 253 Signal Squadron in Kowloon, repurposed as an engineering squadron in 1962
  • Joint Services Signal Staff (1967-1997)
  • 17th Gurkha Signal Regiment
  • Queen's Gurkha Signals
    • 247 Squadron, QGS (1964-1967 until disbandment in HK, reformed in HK 1983)
    • 248 Squadron, QGS (1971-1976 until disbandment; reformed in 1971)
    • Hong Kong Gurkha Signal Squadron (formed in 1994 with the amalgamation of 247 & 248 Sqns, disbanded in 1997.)

Support Units edit

Installations edit

A list of British Army installations in Hong Kong:

  • Bonham Tower Barracks
  • Burma Lines - Queen's Hill Camp
  • Cassino Lines – likely named for Battle of Monte Cassino from the Second World War
  • Central Ordnance Munitions Depot
  • Flagstaff House 1978 – former British Forces HQ and known as Headquarters House 1846–1932 and built for Major General George Charles D'Aguilar; now known as Museum of Teaware.
  • Gallipoli Lines – Sha Tau Kok Road in Fanling, formerly San Wai Camp; San Wai/Tai Ling Range.
  • Gin Drinkers Line 1930s
  • Gun Club Hill Barracks – now PLA barracks
  • Lo Wu Camp (now the Lo Wu Correctional Institution)
  • Kohima Camp (Tai Po Tsai) – became the site of The Hong Kong University of Science and Technology
  • Lo Wu Observation Post, Sha Tau Kok Observation Post, Sandy Ridge Observation Post and Tai O Observation Post.
  • Lyemun Barracks or Lei Yue Mun Barracks 1840s – coast defence and now Museum of Coastal Defence and Lei Yue Mun Park and Holiday Village
  • Murray Battery
  • (Queen) Victoria Barracks 1846–1979 – parade grounds now site of Pacific Place, JW Marriott Hotel, Shangri-La Hotel and Hong Kong Park; the Barracks was converted to The Visual Arts Centre (Hong Kong Museum of Art). Victoria Barracks consisted of:
    • The Former Explosives Magazine complex, which is now part of the Asia Society Hong Kong Center.
    • Cassels Block - Originally named Block C, the former barracks for married British officers. The building is now the Hong Kong Visual Arts Centre. Likely named after Sir Robert Cassels, British Indian Army officer and Viceroy of India.
    • Rawlinson House - the former residence of the Deputy Commander of British Forces in Hong Kong. Now a marriage registry. Two Warrant Officers' Married Quarters were integrated with it into a single building in the 1960s.
    • Wavell House - former quarters for married British officers, converted in 1991 into the aviary support centre (Education Centre).
    • Montgomery Block - currently home to Mother's Choice Limited.
    • Roberts Block - now the Jockey Club New Life Hostel of the New Life Psychiatric Rehabilitation Association.
    • Alexander Block - Demolished.
    • Birdwood Block - married officers' quarters, Demolished.
    • Colvin Block - used by the Women's Royal Army Corps, now the site of the British Council and British Consulate-General complex.
    • Freyberg Block - was HQ Intelligence Services. Demolished.
    • Gort Block - living quarters. Demolished.
    • Hamilton Block - returned to the Hong Kong Government in 1967. Demolished.
    • Kitchener Block - accommodation for school teachers. Demolished.
    • Queen's Line - now Ching Yi To Barracks of the People's Liberation Army.
  • North Barracks 1840s–1887 – to the RN 1887–1959 and Hong Kong Government 1959–
  • Murray Barracks 1846–1982 – named for British Army Major-General Sir George Murray; the officers' quarters was moved from Central to Stanley, now known as Murray House
  • Osborn Barracks (Kowloon) 1945 – named for Winnipeg Grenadiers Company Sergeant Major John Robert Osborn VC of Canada who died in defending Hong Kong in 1941.
  • Perowne Barracks (Tuen Mun) – established in 1931 as the Tai Lam Camp. Named for British Army Major General Lancelot Perowne and once used by Tuen Mun Immigration Service Training School, now used by Crossroads International
  • Sek Kong Barracks
    • Headquarters 48 Gurkha Infantry Brigade
    • Training Depot Brigade of Gurkhas (TDBG)
    • Borneo Lines
    • Malaya Lines
    • British Forces Broadcasting Service
    • Services Sound and Vision Corporation
  • Sham Shui Po Barracks – has been WWII Japanese War Prison, Vietnamese Refugee Camp and now housing estates, commercial centre and government offices.
  • Saiwan Barracks 1844 – used for a short duration and abandoned for Lyemun Barracks.
  • Sai Wan War Cemetery
  • Stanley Military Cemetery
  • Stanley Fort (Hong Kong Island) 1841 – later served as Stanley Prison and WWII Japanese War Prison.
  • Wellington Barracks 1840s–1946 – to the RN as HMS Tamar 1946–1960s (demolished and replaced with HMS Tamar/Prince of Wales Building, now the Chinese People's Liberation Army Forces Hong Kong Building)
  • Navy, Army and Air Force Institutes

Royal Navy / Royal Marines edit

The Royal Navy and Royal Marines was stationed in Hong Kong right from the beginning of the establishment of Hong Kong as a British Colony. For the most part, the Royal Naval base was located in Hong Kong Island at HMS Tamar. The Prince of Wales Building was added later in the 1970s. Before the handover, the naval base was moved to Stonecutters Island next to the Government docks.

RN and RFA ships visited or posted to Hong Kong prior to the Second World War:

RN ships and land units in Hong Kong during the Second World War:

Auxiliary Patrol Vessels in Hong Kong during the Second World War:

  • APV Britannia
  • APV Chun Hsing
  • APV Frosty
  • APV Han Wo
  • APV Ho Hsing
  • APV Henriette
  • APV Indira
  • APV Margaret
  • APV Minnie
  • APV Perla
  • APV Poseidon
  • APV Shun Wo
  • HMS St Aubin
  • HMS St Sampson
  • APV Stanley
  • APV Teh Hsing

RN formations and units in Hong Kong (Post-Second World War):

  • China Squadron 1844–1941, 1945–1992
  • 3rd Frigate Squadron (1949 to 1963; 1972 to 1980)
  • Far East Fleet / Hong Kong Squadron 1969–1971
  • Dragon Squadron 1971–1992
  • Hong Kong Royal Naval Volunteer Reserves 1967–1996 – merge with RNR 1971
  • Side Girls Party 1933–1997
  • 120th Minesweeping Squadron 1958–1966 – transfer to Singapore
  • 6th Mine Countermeasure Squadron 1969–1997
  • 6th Patrol Craft Squadron 1970–1997
  • Operations and Training Base 1934–1997
  • British Pacific Fleet 1840s–1948 – to Singapore as Far East Station
  • Hong Kong Flotilla 1840s–1941, 1948–1992
  • China Station – 4th Submarine Flotilla, Yangtse Flotilla, West River Flotilla, 8th Destroyer Flotilla
  • 5th Cruiser Squadron
  • 1st Escort Flotilla
  • 4th Frigate Flotilla ?-1952
  • Frigate Squadron 1952–1976
  • Light Cruiser Squadron

RN and RFA ships visited or posted to Hong Kong after the Second World War:

Royal Marines:

A list of naval facilities used or built by the RN in Hong Kong:

  • Stonecutters Island
    • Royal Navy Radio Interception and Direction-finding Station (est. 1935)
    • HQ 415 Maritime Troop, Royal Corps of Transport
  • Prince of Wales Building 1978–1997 – known as Central Barracks of the PLA
  • Lamont and Hope Drydocks
  • Aberdeen Docks – destroyed
  • Dry Dock 1902–1959
  • Taikoo Dockyard – Hong Kong United Dockyards
  • Royal Navy Dockyards, Admiralty 1859–1902
  • Royal Navy Dockyards 1902–1959 – Kowloon Dockyard not part of Hung Hom area.
  • RN Coal storage yard, Stonecutters Island 1861–1959
  • RN Coal storage yard and Kowloon Naval Dockyards 1901–1959
  • Sai Wan Barracks 1844–1846
  • Wellington Barracks 1946–1978 – as HMS Tamar (demolished)
  • North Barracks 1850s–1856, 1887–1959 – from the Army and to HK Government 1959
  • Victoria Barracks
  • Redoubt and Lei Yue Mun Fortifications 1885–1887
  • Lei Yue Mun Fort 1887–1987
  • Reverse, Central, West and Pass Batteries 1880s
  • Brennan Torpedo station 1890 – Lei Yue Mun
  • Royal Naval Hospital, Wan Chai – demolished, now replaced by Ruttonjee Hospital
  • Seaman's Hospital 1843–1873 – replaced by Royal Naval Hospital
  • RMS Queen Mary 1945–1946 – as a hospital ship
  • War Memorial Hospital (Matilda) 1946–1959
  • British Military Hospital 1959–1995
  • Island Group Practice 1995–1997 – replace BMH
  • HMS Princess Charlotte and HMS Victor Emmanuel – Receiving Ships
  • Tidal Basin 1902–1959
  • Boat Basin 1902–1959
  • HM Victualling Yards 1859–1946

A list of facilities used or built by the RN in Hong Kong:

Royal Air Force edit

 
Base of RAF in Kai Tak (1945)
 
A Royal Hong Kong Auxiliary Air Force Aerospatiale Dauphin helicopter leaving its hangar during a Search and Rescue exercise in 1982.
 
The survivors of a simulated aircraft crash are hoisted aboard a Royal Air Force Westland Wessex HC Mk 2 helicopter from No. 28 (AC) Squadron in 1983.

The Royal Air Force was the smallest contingent of the British Forces and was stationed in both Kai Tak Airport as well as the airfield in the New Territories known as Sek Kong.

No. 28 (AC) Squadron[6] and the larger Royal Air Force infrastructure located to RAF Sek Kong in the late 1970s leaving Royal Air Force logistics elements to maintain operations at Kai Tak, e.g. RAF movers and suppliers remained to maintain the logistical link between RAF Hong Kong and the United Kingdom. The squadron flew up to 8 Westland Wessex HC Mk 2 helicopters from RAF Sek Kong. Tasks included support of the civil power, support of the British Forces and search and rescue.

About 20 years later, RAF personnel returned from Sek Kong to Kai Tak, mounting operations from that airport in the months prior to the 1997 handover.

In addition, the Hong Kong Government also maintained an "airforce". This airforce as per the land unit of RHKR (V), was an arm of the Hong Kong Government, supported by RAF personnel seconded to serve in the Hong Kong Auxiliary Air Force.

Royal Hong Kong Auxiliary Air Force 1970–1993 – handed over to GFS

  • Hong Kong Volunteer Defence Corps – Air Arm 1930–1949
  • Hong Kong Auxiliary Air Force 1949–1970 – see RHKAAF

Royal Air Force units which visited or were stationed in Hong Kong included:

Sources indicate that 444 Signals Unit (SU) formed officially within No. 90 (Signals) Group RAF, Strike Command with effect from 16 August 1971, and was established as a lodger unit at Stanley Fort, Hong Kong. The primary role of 444 SU was to act as a ground station for the Skynet satellite communications system, responsibility for operating the Skynet system having been vested in the RAF in the late 1960s, under the Rationalisation of Inter Services Telecommunications (RISTACOM) agreement. It would appear that the equipment operated by 444 SU had been located previously at RAF Bahrain (HMS Jufair).

On 1 May 1972, No. 90 (Signals) Group was transferred from RAF Strike Command to RAF Maintenance Command and as a consequence 444 SU became a Maintenance Command unit on this date. On 31 August 1973, both 90 (Signals) Group and Maintenance Command were disbanded, to be replaced on the following day by the new RAF Support Command. All of the units and locations previously controlled by the disbanded formations were transferred to Support Command with effect from 1 September 1973 and 444 SU therefore became a Support Command unit. This was to prove short-lived, however, for on 1 November 1973, 444 SU and the unit responsible for maintaining the Skynet ground station at RAF Gan – 6 SU – were both transferred to the command of the Air Officer Commanding in Chief Near East Air Force (NEAF). At this time 444 SU and 6 SU formed part of the Defence Communications Network (DCN) and the DCN elements of both units came under the functional control of the Controller DCN, Ministry of Defence.

On 1 August 1975, administrative and engineering responsibility for all of the units of RAF Hong Kong, including 444 SU, were transferred from NEAF to RAF Strike Command – functional control of these units being retained by the Vice Chief of the Air Staff via Commander RAF Hong Kong. Subsequently, with the disbandment of HQ NEAF on 31 March 1976, control of RAF Hong Kong and its component units were transferred in total to Strike Command. On 28 March 1976, RAF Gan closed and 6 SU disbanded formally on the same date, the latter's satellite communications equipment being transferred to 444 SU.

444SU was hosted at Stanley Fort by the British Army.

Sources indicate that 444 SU disbanded on the 31 December 1977.

  • Composite Signals Unit

A list of RAF Stations in Hong Kong:

A list of Royal Air Force operations facilities:

  • Tai Po Tsai
  • Cape Collinson
  • Batty's Belvedere
  • Kong Wei, RAF Sek Kong
  • Chung Hom Kok
  • Wang Fung Terrace, Tai Hang (Happy Valley)

Search and rescue operations conducted by the RAF and Royal Navy were later transferred to the Government Flying Service (GFS).

Other facilities edit

  • British Military Hospital, Hong Kong
  • Medical centres at Victoria Barracks, Lyemun Barracks, Stanley Fort, Whitfield Barracks, Sham Shui Po, Choy Hung, MRS Sek Kong and Lo Wu.
  • British Forces Broadcasting Service
  • Navy, Army and Air Force Institutes (NAAFI)
  • Blackdown Barracks, Hong Kong (彩虹軍營) – near Kai Tak; now is Rhythm Garden (采頤花園), car park building, and Canossa Primary School.
  • Mount Austin Barracks – near Peak Tram terminus at Victoria Peak
  • Royal Hong Kong Regimental Headquarters near Happy Valley – demolished 1995

China Fleet Club edit

Hong Kong became an important port of call for many naval ships passing through the Far East. Besides Lan Kwai Fong, Royal Navy sailors had their own entertainment facility called the "China Fleet Club".[8]

A timeline of the China Fleet Club:

  • 1900–1903 local Hong Kong businessman and Royal Navy's China Fleet to raise funds for a Royal Naval Canteen at Naval Docks, Hong Kong
  • 1929 old canteen building demolished and replaced with new building
  • 1929–1934 Temporary CFC at Gloucester Road
  • 1933 cornerstone laid by Admiral Sir Howard Kelly, G.B.E., K.C.B., C.M.G., M.V.O., then Commander-in-Chief, China Station;[9] new seven-storey China Fleet Club building called "The Old Blue"
  • 1941–1945 CFC serves as Japanese Naval HQ in Hong Kong during the Second World War
  • 1945 CFC re-occupied by RN
  • 1952 Coronation Annex added
  • 1982, 16 July The Final Demolition Party held in Club before move to Sun Hung Kai
  • 1982–1985 CFC relocated to temporary site at Sun Hung Kai Centre
  • 1985 25-storey Fleet House new home for CFC
  • 1986 Plans to relocate CFC to UK begins
  • 1989 Construction of China Fleet Country Club in Saltash begins
  • 1991 Construction of China Fleet Country Club in Saltash completed and opens in June
  • 1992 CFC in Hong Kong closes

See also edit

References edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ "Hong Kong veterans can now settle in UK after decades of campaigning".
  2. ^ "Grade Structure Review: Chapter 7, Government Flying Service" (PDF). Hong Kong Legislative Council. 2008. p. 179. Retrieved 19 May 2020.
  3. ^ "Grade Structure Review: Chapter 6, Fire Services Department" (PDF). Hong Kong Legislative Council. 2008. pp. 155–156. Retrieved 19 May 2020.
  4. ^ "Official Report of Proceedings" (PDF). Hong Kong Legislative Council. 24 February 1966.
  5. ^ Rinaldi, Richard A. (PDF). Orbat.com. p. 7. Archived from the original (PDF) on 5 March 2016. Retrieved 11 July 2014.
  6. ^ a b Delve 1994, p. 87.
  7. ^ Jefford 1988, p. 49.
  8. ^ "HMS Tamar and the China Fleet Club". Gun Plot. Retrieved 17 June 2017.
  9. ^ "China Fleet Club [1933-1982]". Gwulo: Old Hong Kong. Retrieved 19 May 2020.

Bibliography edit

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  • Cracknell, Philip. Battle for Hong Kong, December 1941. Chelford: Amberley Publishing, 2019.
  • Craig, Neil & Craig, Jo. Black Watch, Red Dawn: The Hong Kong Handover to China Hardcover. London: Brasseys, 1998.
  • Delve, K (1994). The Source Book of the RAF. Shrewsbury, UK: Airlife Publishing Ltd. ISBN 1-85310-451-5.
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  • Gregorian, Raffi. The British Army, the Gurkhas and Cold War strategy in the Far East, 1947–1954. New York : Palgrave, 2002.
  • Jefford, C.G. (1988). RAF Squadrons. A comprehensive record of the movement and equipment of all RAF squadrons and their antecedents since 1912. Shrewsbury: Airlife. ISBN 1-85310-053-6.
  • Jeffreys, Alan. The British Army in the Far East 1941-45. Oxford: Osprey Publishing, 2005.
  • Ko, Tim-keung, et al. ed. Serving Hong Kong: The Hong Kong Volunteers. Hong Kong: Hong Kong Museum of Coastal Defence, 2004.
  • Kwong, Chi Man & Tsoi, Yiu Lun. Eastern Fortress: A Military History of Hong Kong, 1840–1970. Hong Kong: University of Hong Kong Press, 2014.
  • Lord, Cliff & Watson, Graham. The Royal Corps of Signals: Unit Histories of the Corps (1920-2001) and its Antecedents. West Midlands: Helion & Company, 2003.
  • Melson, P.J. White Ensign Red Dragon: The History of the Royal Navy in Hong Kong 1841–1997. Hong Kong: Edinburgh Financial Publishing, 1997.
  • National Museum of the Royal Navy. The Royal Marines and Hong Kong: Over 150 Years from 1840 to 1997. Portsmouth: Royal Marines Historical Society Special Publication Number 19, 1997.
  • Oxley, D.H. Victoria Barracks, 1842–1979. Hong Kong: British Forces Hong Kong, 1979.
  • Parkinson, Jonathan. The Royal Navy, China Station: 1864 - 1941: As seen through the lives of the Commanders in Chief. Leicestershire: Matador, 2018.
  • Richardson, Sam S. The Royal Marines and Hong Kong, 1840–1997. Portsmouth: Royal Marines Historical Society, 1997.
  • Rollo, Denis. The Guns & Gunners of Hong Kong. Hong Kong: The Gunners' Roll of Hong Kong, 1991.

Further reading edit

  • Harland, Kathleen (1985). The Royal Navy in Hong Kong Since 1841. Liskeard, England: Maritime Books. ISBN 978-0-90777-119-7.

External links edit

  • British Forces Hong Kong on Facebook
  • China Fleet Club
  • Hong Kong
  • Hong Kong Military Service Corps[permanent dead link]
  • RAF Kai Tak
  • Royal Hong Kong Regiment The Volunteers Association
  • Stanley Fort
  • Argylls in Hong Kong

british, forces, overseas, hong, kong, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scho. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources British Forces Overseas Hong Kong news newspapers books scholar JSTOR February 2013 Learn how and when to remove this template message British Forces Overseas Hong Kong comprised the elements of the British Army Royal Navy including Royal Marines and Royal Air Force stationed in British Hong Kong The Governor of Hong Kong also assumed the position of the commander in chief of the forces and the Commander British Forces in Hong Kong took charge of the daily deployment of the troops Much of the British military left prior to the handover of Hong Kong to China in 1997 The present article focuses mainly on the British garrison in Hong Kong in the post Second World War era For more information concerning the British garrison during the Second World War and earlier see the Battle of Hong Kong British Forces Overseas Hong KongFlag of Hong Kong 1959 1997 Active26 January 1841 183 years ago 1841 01 26 30 June 1997 26 years ago 1997 06 30 Country British Hong KongAllegianceMonarchBranch Royal Navy British Army Royal Air ForceTypeCavalryInfantryArtilleryRoleTerritorial DefenceSizeOne Garrison during the Second World War One Brigade after 1945 Garrison HQGarrison All installmentsHQ Flagstaff House Residence of the CBF AnniversariesLiberation DayEquipmentArtilleryVesselsHelicopterEngagementsPacific War Battle of Hong KongCommandersCommander in chiefGovernor of Hong KongCommanding OfficerCommander British Forces in Hong Kong CBF Inaugural holder of CBFMajor General George D AguilarFinal holder of CBFMajor General Bryan DuttonNotablecommandersMajor General Christopher MaltbyBrigadier General John Lawson British Forces Overseas Hong KongTraditional Chinese駐港英軍Simplified Chinese驻港英军TranscriptionsStandard MandarinHanyu PinyinZhugǎng YingjunYue CantoneseJyutpingzyu3 gong2 jing1 gwan1 Contents 1 Overview 2 Responsibilities 3 Structure in 1989 4 Command structure 4 1 British Army formations 4 1 1 Second World War 4 1 2 Cold War 4 2 British Army units 4 2 1 Royal Armoured Corps 4 2 2 Infantry 4 2 3 Gurkhas 4 2 4 British Indian Army 4 2 5 Artillery 4 2 6 Engineers 4 2 7 Signals 4 2 8 Support Units 4 2 9 Installations 4 3 Royal Navy Royal Marines 4 4 Royal Air Force 4 5 Other facilities 4 6 China Fleet Club 5 See also 6 References 6 1 Citations 6 2 Bibliography 7 Further reading 8 External linksOverview editPrior to and during the Second World War the garrison was composed of British Army battalions and locally enlisted personnel LEPs who served as regular members in the Hong Kong Squadron of the Royal Navy or the Hong Kong Military Service Corps and their associate land units The Hong Kong Infantry Brigade served as the main garrison formation After the outbreak of the Second World War the garrison was reinforced with British Indian Army and Canadian Army units A second brigade the Kowloon Infantry Brigade was formed to assist in commanding the expanded force The garrison was defeated during the Battle of Hong Kong by the Empire of Japan After the Second World War and the end of the Japanese occupation of Hong Kong the British military reestablished a presence As a result of the Chinese Civil War the British Army raised the 40th Infantry Division and dispatched it to garrison Hong Kong It later left for combat in the Korean War and the defense of the territory was taken up by additional British forces who were rotated from Europe The garrison was further supplemented by LEPs and Gurkhas The latter came from Nepal but formed part of the British Army The size of the garrison during the Cold War fluctuated and ended up being based around one brigade The Royal Hong Kong Regiment a military unit which was part of the Hong Kong Government was trained and organised along the lines of a British Territorial Army unit As such it was supported by British Army regular personnel holding key positions These British Army personnel for their duration of service to the Royal Hong Kong Regiment were seconded to the Hong Kong Government In the post WWII era the majority of the regiment s members were local citizens of Chinese descent Responsibilities editBefore 1 July 1997 the British government had the political commitment to safeguard the territory against external and internal threats Commonwealth forces were also deployed to station in the territory shortly before the Second World War The greatest test was in 1941 when Japanese forces invaded Hong Kong leading to the 44 month long Japanese occupation of Hong Kong Internal Security was the responsibility of the Hong Kong Government in particular the Royal Hong Kong Police It was supported by British Forces in Hong Kong should it be called upon to do so During the Hong Kong 1967 riots in which 51 people were killed the British garrison supported the Royal Hong Kong Police in quelling the disturbance Until 1995 the safety of much of the Sino Hong Kong border was the responsibility of the British forces and as such contributed greatly to the interdiction of illegal immigrants II As the preparation of the handover of Hong Kong to China in 1997 that responsibility was passed on to the Hong Kong Police The Royal Navy played a significant role in the support of the Royal Hong Kong Police in anti smuggling operation in Hong Kong waters especially in the heyday of seaborne smuggling during the mid 1980s to mid 1990s Search and Rescue SAR was provided by all branches of the British Forces in Hong Kong may be called upon for aid to civil defence as well as search and rescue operations in times of emergency Prior to 1990 1991 British Forces British Army was responsible for patrolling and enforcing border control between Hong Kong and China This role was passed on the Hong Kong Police Force years before the handover in 1997 Some HK nationals who served in the British military were deployed overseas including Operation Granby 1 The territory has nevertheless maintained a Government Flying Service formerly the Royal Hong Kong Auxiliary Air Force that is responsible for search and rescue operations air ambulance services and other air services for the Hong Kong Government The GFS also took over some responsibilities from the Royal Air Force and the Army Air Corps 2 The Hong Kong Police Force also has a highly trained and equipped counter terrorism unit the Special Duties Unit trained by United Kingdom s SAS and SBS and a Marine Police force These forces have been heavily armed since before the handover in 1997 and are within the portfolio of the Secretary for Security which before 1973 was named Secretary for Defence The Fire Service Department also took over some diving rescue responsibilities from the British Forces Overseas 3 The Royal Hong Kong Regiment The Volunteers was disbanded in 1995 prior to the handover in 1997 It was funded by and was a branch of the Hong Kong Government yet under command of the Commander British Forces Structure in 1989 editMain article British Hong Kong Garrison Structure in 1989Command structure editThe Governor of Hong Kong being a representative of the British sovereign was the Commander in Chief of the British Forces in the colony The Governor was advised by the Commander British Forces in Hong Kong CBF on all military actions During the 1980s and 1990s the CBF was normally a career Major General or Lieutenant General from the British Army Until 1966 the CBF was an ex officio member of the Legislative Council 4 Throughout the years of British rule in Hong Kong a variety of British Army units spent various periods of time in the colony as resident units In latter stages of the post war period British army units were sent to Hong Kong on a rotational basis for a period of three years The following list contains resident units only and those which stayed in Hong Kong for short durations for re supply or acclimatisation during the Korean War Opium War Boxer Rebellion and the Malayan Emergency are not included in the list The majority of infantry battalions were Ghurkas who were permanently based in Hong Kong after Indian partition British Army formations edit Major formations of the British Army in Hong Kong included Second World War edit Headquarters China Command 1939 covered British military interests in Hong Kong Shanghai and Tientsin Hong Kong Infantry Brigade This was the primary British garrison in Hong Kong prior to and during the Second World War Kowloon Infantry Brigade This brigade was formed in 1941 after the garrison was reinforced C Force Canadian Army s reinforcement under British Command during the Battle of Hong Kong in 1941 Cold War edit 40th Division reformed in 1949 dispatched to Korea in 1950 26th Gurkha Infantry Brigade 1948 1950 27th Infantry Brigade circa 1949 28th Infantry Brigade arrived in Hong Kong in 1949 51st Infantry Brigade established circa 1950 disbanded 1976 48th Gurkha Infantry Brigade 1957 1976 renamed Gurkha Field Force 1976 97 returned to old title 1987 ca 1992 5 British Army units edit Royal Armoured Corps edit C Squadron The Royal Scots Greys 2 Dragoons 19 09 1962 not known 1st Royal Tank Regiment 1957 1960 C Sqn 1974 1976 3rd Royal Tank Regiment 1949 1950 7th Royal Tank Regiment 1952 1954 4th Hussars 1950 7th Hussars 1954 1957 16th 5th Lancers A Sqn 1963 1964 C Sqn 1973 1975 14th 20th King s Hussars 1970 73 17th 21st Lancers Dec 1959 1960 C Sqn 1961 1962 B Squadron Life Guards 1967 Infantry edit 28th North Gloucestershire Regiment of Foot circa late 1870s 74th Highland Regiment of Foot circa 1878 1st Battalion Royal Inniskilling Fusiliers 1881 1883 1947 1948 1st Battalion King s Shropshire Light Infantry 1892 1894 2nd Battalion Queen s Own Cameron Highlanders 1908 09 2nd Battalion Duke of Cornwall s Light Infantry 1914 2nd Battalion Middlesex Regiment 1917 18 1st Battalion East Surrey Regiment 1923 26 2nd Battalion Scots Guards 1926 28 2nd Battalion King s Own Scottish Borderers 1926 1930 1st Battalion King s Own Scottish Borderers 1949 1951 May to August 1965 1st Battalion South Wales Borderers 1930 1934 1963 1966 1st Battalion Royal Lincolnshire Regiment 1932 36 1st Battalion Seaforth Highlanders 1937 38 1st Battalion Middlesex Regiment 1937 1941 1949 1950 1951 1952 2nd Battalion Royal Scots The Royal Regiment 1938 41 1st Battalion Devonshire Regiment 1947 1st Battalion King s Shropshire Light Infantry 1949 1951 1st Battalion Cameronians Scottish Rifles 1949 1950 Fan Ling 1st Battalion The Argyll and Sutherland Highlanders Princess Louise s 1949 50 1951 52 1979 1st Battalion Royal Leicestershire Regiment 1949 1951 Norwegian Farm Camp 1st Battalion South Staffordshire Regiment 1949 1951 1st Battalion Wiltshire Regiment 1950 52 1st Battalion Royal Northumberland Fusiliers 1951 1952 1960 1962 1st Battalion Royal Ulster Rifles 1951 1954 1st Battalion Dorset Regiment 1952 1954 1st Battalion The Welch Regiment 1952 1954 1966 1968 1st Battalion Royal Norfolk Regiment 1952 1953 Norwegian Farm Camp 1st Battalion King s Own Royal Regiment Lancaster 1954 1956 Beas Stable Camp 1st Battalion North Staffordshire Regiment 1954 1957 1st Battalion Essex Regiment 1954 1957 Dodswell Ridge Camp 1st Battalion The Northamptonshire Regiment 1954 1957 1st Battalion The Green Howards 1956 1959 1st Battalion East Lancashire Regiment 1957 1958 amalgamated with The South Lancashire Regiment in HK to form The Lancashire Regiment 1st Battalion South Lancashire Regiment 1958 amalgamated with The East Lancashire Regiment in HK to form The Lancashire Regiment 1st Battalion Lancashire Regiment 1958 1961 formed in HK in 1958 with the amalgamation of The South Lancashire Regiment and The East Lancashire Regiment 1st Battalion Royal Warwickshire Regiment 1960 1962 1st Battalion Queen s Royal Surrey Regiment 1962 1964 1st Battalion Durham Light Infantry 1963 1965 3rd Battalion Green Jackets The Rifle Brigade February to June 1965 4 month acclimatisation before Jungle Warfare School training in Malaya 1st Battalion Queen s Own Buffs The Royal Kent Regiment 1965 1966 Gun Club Hill Barracks 1st Battalion Royal Hampshire Regiment 1966 1974 1976 2nd Battalion Queen s Regiment January to October 1967 Gun Club Hill Barracks 1st Battalion Lancashire Fusiliers 1967 69 1st Battalion Duke of Wellington s Regiment West Riding 1968 70 1st Battalion Royal Welch Fusiliers 1969 1972 1st Battalion Irish Guards 1970 72 2nd Battalion Grenadier Guards 1975 1976 Stanley Fort 1st Battalion Light Infantry 1975 77 1st Battalion Royal Green Jackets 1977 80 1st Battalion Parachute Regiment January to May 1980 4 month emergency tour 1st Battalion Queen s Own Highlanders Seaforth and Camerons 1980 1981 Stanley Fort 1st Battalion Scots Guards 1981 1984 Stanley Fort 1st Battalion Cheshire Regiment 1984 1986 Stanley Fort 1st Battalion Coldstream Guards 1986 1988 Stanley Fort 1st Battalion Duke of Edinburgh s Royal Regiment Berkshire amp Wiltshire 1988 1990 Stanley Fort 1st Battalion Royal Regiment of Wales 1990 1992 Stanley Fort 1st Battalion Black Watch Royal Highland Regiment 1993 1994 Stanley Fort 1997 1st Battalion Staffordshire Regiment 1996 1997 Stanley Fort Gurkhas edit 1st Battalion 2nd King Edward VII s Own Gurkha Rifles 1971 75 77 79 81 85 87 89 91 92 2nd Battalion 2nd King Edward VII s Own Gurkha Rifles 1953 57 57 62 66 68 72 75 77 81 83 85 87 91 1st Battalion 6th Queen Elizabeth s Own Gurkha Rifles 1956 57 65 73 75 77 79 83 85 87 89 93 2nd Battalion 6th Queen Elizabeth s Own Gurkha Rifles 1948 50 62 63 1969 amalgamated with the 1st Bn 1st Battalion 7th Duke of Edinburgh s Own Gurkha Rifles 1959 62 73 77 83 87 89 91 93 94 2nd Battalion 7th Duke of Edinburgh s Own Gurkha Rifles 1954 57 62 63 62 70 disbanded in Hong Kong in 1987 1st Battalion 10th Princess Mary s Own Gurkha Rifles 1957 60 69 73 75 79 81 83 85 89 91 93 2nd Battalion 10th Princess Mary s Own Gurkha Rifles 1948 50 1962 amalgamated with 1st Bn in 1968 1st Battalion The Royal Gurkha Rifles 1994 96 British Indian Army edit 5th Battalion 7th Rajput Regiment 1941 45 2nd Battalion 14th Punjab Regiment 1941 45 Indian Hospital Corps Indian Medical Service Royal Indian Army Service Corps Hong Kong Mule Corps RIASCArtillery edit Hong Kong and Singapore Royal Artillery 1847 to 1940s 3rd Regiment Royal Horse Artillery 1973 1975 Borneo Lines Sek Kong 4th Field Regiment RA 1961 1964 HQ amp 29 Bty at Fan Ling Camp 88 Bty amp 97 Bty at Dodwells Ridge Camp 8th Coast Regiment Royal Artillery Kowloon 1939 until captured by the Japanese in 1941 5th Heavy Anti Aircraft Regiment RA RAF Kai Tak circa 1939 5th Field Regiment RA 1958 1961 at Fanling Camp amp Dodwells Ridge Camp 14th Field Regiment RA 1949 1951 at Gun Club Hill Barracks amp Sek Kong 1953 1955 at Quarry Bay Camp 1960 1962 at Sek Kong 15th Observation Battery and 173rd Locating Battery 1950 at Lo Wu Camp 15th Medium Regiment RA 1955 1957 7 and 38 Med Btys at Gun Club Hill Barracks 18th Medium Regiment RA 1966 1969 40 and 52 Lt Btys at Borneo Lines Sek Kong RHQ disbanded in Hong Kong and Regiment placed into Suspended Animation 19th Field Regiment RA 1956 1958 25 28 and 67 Fd Btys at Quarry Bay Camp and Sek Kong Camps 20th Anti Tank Regiment RA 1952 1953 1955 with 12 45 and 107 Fd Btys at Sek Kong Camp 1975 1976 disbanded in HK in 1976 23rd Field Regiment RA 1949 1952 49 50 and 69 Fld Btys at Quarry Bay Camp 25th Field Regiment RA 1947 1955 35 54 and 93 Fld Btys at Gun Hill Club Barracks 1969 1971 at Borneo Lines Sek Kong 27th Heavy Regiment RA 1949 1957 Redesignated 27th HAA Regt RA in 1950 119 Bty to 34th LAA Regt RA in 1952 at Clear Water Bay and Stonecutters Island 32nd Medium Regiment RA 1952 1954 74 and 98 Med Btys at Gun Club Hill Barracks 1959 1961 46 50 and 74 Med Btys at Whitfield Barracks amp Gun Club Hill Barracks 34th Light Anti Aircraft Regiment RA 1949 1952 1961 1963 11 and 58 LAA Btys at Gun Club Hill Barracks 42nd Field Regiment RA 1955 1956 with 68 87 and 179 Fld Btys at Sek Kong Camp 45th Field Regiment RA 1951 1953 with 70 116 and 176 Fld Btys 1959 1961 47th Coast Regiment RA 1971 1973 with 3 4 Lt and 31 Med Btys at Borneo Lines Sek Kong 49th Anti Tank Regiment RA 1957 1961 with 55 127 and 143 Fld Btys at Borneo Lines Sek Kong 1964 1966 with 143 Bty at Dodwells Ridge Camp 58th Medium Regiment RA 1949 1951 with 118 and 175 Med Btys at Gun Club Hill Barracks 72nd Light Anti Air Regiment RA 1952 1955 with 31 206 and 216 LAA Btys at Gun Club Hill Barracks 74th Light Anti Air Regiment RA 1955 1958 with 158 and 161 LAA Btys at Whitfield Camp Engineers edit Royal Engineers and Queen s Gurkha Engineers 1 Field Squadron 22nd Fortress Company Royal Engineers circa 1939 40th Fortress Company Royal Engineers circa 1939 24 Field Engineer Regiment Royal Engineers 11 Field Squadron RE 1950 1951 Sek Kong formed by renumbering 50 Fd Sqn 24 Field Engineer Regiment 15 Field Park Squadron RE 1950 1958 formed by renumbering 46 Fd Park Sqn 50 Field Squadron RE 1949 1950 for by renumbering 11 Field Squadron 54 Independent Field Squadron RE 1950 circa 1958 formed by renumbering 25 Fd Sqn 54 Hong Kong Support Squadron RE 1971 until disbandment in 1975 56 Field Squadron RE 1950 1958 formed by numbering 37 Field Squadron Royal Engineers Postal and Courier Service British Forces Post Box 1 Queen s Gurkha Engineers formed in HK in 1952 as 50th Regiment RE renamed QGE in 1977 67 Squadron QGE disbanded in 1996 68 Squadron QGE disbanded in 1993 69 Squadron QGE disbanded in HK in 1968 and reformed as 69 Gurkha Independent Field Squadron in Chatham 70 Squadron QGE disbanded in 1993 Gurkha Training Squadron disbanded in 1971 Signals edit Royal Signals and Queen s Gurkha Signals 27th Signal Regiment Royal Signals embarked for Hong Kong in 1949 as the 40th Divisional Signal Regiment Amalgamated with Hong Kong Signal Squadron to form Hong Kong Signal Regiment 1950 Redesignated 27th Signal Regiment 1959 Renamed HQ Royal Signals Hong Kong 1960 Renamed 27th Signal Regiment 1971 disbanded in 1976 Hong Kong Independent Lines Squadron Royal Signals circa 1958 Independent Gurkha Brigade Squadron circa 1958 Gurkha Infantry Brigade Signal Squadron circa 1959 Detachments 19th Air Formation Signal Troop Royal Signals circa 1959 Detachments 232 Squadron Royal Signals circa 1959 HQ Royal Signals Hong Kong 1960 1967 252 Signal Squadron on the Hong Kong Island 253 Signal Squadron in Kowloon repurposed as an engineering squadron in 1962 Joint Services Signal Staff 1967 1997 17th Gurkha Signal Regiment Queen s Gurkha Signals 247 Squadron QGS 1964 1967 until disbandment in HK reformed in HK 1983 248 Squadron QGS 1971 1976 until disbandment reformed in 1971 Hong Kong Gurkha Signal Squadron formed in 1994 with the amalgamation of 247 amp 248 Sqns disbanded in 1997 Support Units edit Army Catering Corps Army Fire Service Army Legal Corps Army Legal Services Branch Army Air Corps 20 Flight AAC Shatin and Sek Kong 1960s No 660 Squadron AAC Shek Kong 1978 94 Army Physical Training Corps British Army Aid Group Government House Guard C Company Gurkha Transport Regiment 28 amp 31 Squadrons Hong Kong Military Service Corps 1962 1996 Hong Kong Chinese Regiment 1941 1948 Hong Kong Chinese Training Unit 1948 1962 Hong Kong Information Team an internal security anti smuggling and anti illegal immigration intelligence unit under the Hong Kong Military Service Corps with Locally Enlisted Personnel LEPS of Chinese descent drawn from a number of British Army units General List General Service Corps Intelligence Corps Queen Alexandra s Royal Army Nursing Corps Royal Army Chaplains Department Royal Army Dental Corps Royal Army Education Corps 75 Army Education Centre 28 Army Education Centre Victoria Army Education Centre Royal Army Ordnance Corps 6th Company Royal Army Ordnance Corps circa 1939 Sham Shui Po Ordnance Depot est 1946 6 Forward Ordnance Depot Kowloon Tong 1950 Renamed 6 Command Ordnance Depot in 1952 by combining 6 FOD and the Ammo Depot Ordnance Depot Hong Kong 1960 Kai Tak Depot est 1966 Composite Ordnance Depot est 1966 Royal Army Medical Corps British Military Hospital Hong Kong 27 Hong Kong Company Royal Army Medical Corps circa 1939 BMH Bowen Road 1907 1967 BMH Hong Kong Kowloon 1967 1996 18 Field Ambulance circa 1950s to 1972 Royal Army Pay Corps Royal Army Service Corps 10 Company RASC circa 1939 781 Company Civil Affairs GT RASC 1945 until disbandment in 1946 799 Company AD RASC circa 1945 3 Supply amp Petroleum Depot Argyle Street Kowloon 1950s 56 Hong Kong Company RASC 1953 circa 1960s at Causeway Bay Camp absorbed by 79th Company RASC in early 1960s 79 Company Water Transport RASC circa 1946 1959 circa 1962 absorbed by 56th Company in early 1960s 12 Hong Kong Company RASC Royal Army Veterinary Corps Defence Animal Support Unit Royal Corps of Transport and Gurkha Transport Regiment Queen s Own Gurkha Transport Regiment Detachment 71 Movement Control Squadron RCT circa 1965 31 Regiment RCT 1968 until disbandment in 1976 29 Squadron RCT 1965 until disbandment in 1993 Reduced to 414 Pack Transport Troop in 1968 reformed as a GT Sqn from the old island detachment of 56 Squadron the same year 414 Pack Transport Troop 29 Squadron RCT 1968 1976 Lo Wu Camp 56 Squadron RCT disbanded in 1976 personnel absorbed by 29 Sqn RCT 415 Maritime Troop est 1970s came under command Gurkha Transport Regiment in 1976 28 Squadron Gurkha Transport Regiment from 28 Company MT Gurkha RASC 1965 1993 31 Squadron Gurkha Transport Regiment relocated from Singapore to Hong Kong in 1971 disbanded in 1993 Royal Electrical and Mechanical Engineers 11 Infantry Workshop REME under 27 Infantry Brigade circa 1949 1950 at Sek Kong 16 Infantry Workshop circa 1950 at Sek Kong 17 Infantry Workshop circa 1960s 50 Command Workshop 1960s 1994 at Sham Shui Po and Sek Kong Light Aid Detachments to various Royal Artillery and Royal Armoured Corps units Royal Hong Kong Regiment Hong Kong Volunteers 1854 1878 Hong Kong Artillery and Rifle Volunteer Corps 1978 1917 Hong Kong Defence Corps 1917 1941 Hong Kong Volunteer Defence Corps 1941 1949 Hong Kong Defence Force 1949 1951 included air and naval units Royal Hong Kong Defence Force 1951 1961 Hong Kong Regiment 1961 1970 repurposed from infantry to reconnaissance Royal Hong Kong Regiment Volunteers 1970 1995 Royal Logistic Corps Hong Kong Postal amp Courier Squadron RLC 1993 until disbandment Royal Military Police 40th Infantry Division Provost Company Hong Kong Provost Company RMP Women s Royal Army CorpsInstallations edit A list of British Army installations in Hong Kong Bonham Tower Barracks Burma Lines Queen s Hill Camp Cassino Lines likely named for Battle of Monte Cassino from the Second World War Central Ordnance Munitions Depot Flagstaff House 1978 former British Forces HQ and known as Headquarters House 1846 1932 and built for Major General George Charles D Aguilar now known as Museum of Teaware Gallipoli Lines Sha Tau Kok Road in Fanling formerly San Wai Camp San Wai Tai Ling Range Gin Drinkers Line 1930s Gun Club Hill Barracks now PLA barracks Lo Wu Camp now the Lo Wu Correctional Institution Kohima Camp Tai Po Tsai became the site of The Hong Kong University of Science and Technology Lo Wu Observation Post Sha Tau Kok Observation Post Sandy Ridge Observation Post and Tai O Observation Post Lyemun Barracks or Lei Yue Mun Barracks 1840s coast defence and now Museum of Coastal Defence and Lei Yue Mun Park and Holiday Village Murray Battery Queen Victoria Barracks 1846 1979 parade grounds now site of Pacific Place JW Marriott Hotel Shangri La Hotel and Hong Kong Park the Barracks was converted to The Visual Arts Centre Hong Kong Museum of Art Victoria Barracks consisted of The Former Explosives Magazine complex which is now part of the Asia Society Hong Kong Center Cassels Block Originally named Block C the former barracks for married British officers The building is now the Hong Kong Visual Arts Centre Likely named after Sir Robert Cassels British Indian Army officer and Viceroy of India Rawlinson House the former residence of the Deputy Commander of British Forces in Hong Kong Now a marriage registry Two Warrant Officers Married Quarters were integrated with it into a single building in the 1960s Wavell House former quarters for married British officers converted in 1991 into the aviary support centre Education Centre Montgomery Block currently home to Mother s Choice Limited Roberts Block now the Jockey Club New Life Hostel of the New Life Psychiatric Rehabilitation Association Alexander Block Demolished Birdwood Block married officers quarters Demolished Colvin Block used by the Women s Royal Army Corps now the site of the British Council and British Consulate General complex Freyberg Block was HQ Intelligence Services Demolished Gort Block living quarters Demolished Hamilton Block returned to the Hong Kong Government in 1967 Demolished Kitchener Block accommodation for school teachers Demolished Queen s Line now Ching Yi To Barracks of the People s Liberation Army North Barracks 1840s 1887 to the RN 1887 1959 and Hong Kong Government 1959 Murray Barracks 1846 1982 named for British Army Major General Sir George Murray the officers quarters was moved from Central to Stanley now known as Murray House Osborn Barracks Kowloon 1945 named for Winnipeg Grenadiers Company Sergeant Major John Robert Osborn VC of Canada who died in defending Hong Kong in 1941 Perowne Barracks Tuen Mun established in 1931 as the Tai Lam Camp Named for British Army Major General Lancelot Perowne and once used by Tuen Mun Immigration Service Training School now used by Crossroads International Sek Kong Barracks Headquarters 48 Gurkha Infantry Brigade Training Depot Brigade of Gurkhas TDBG Borneo Lines Malaya Lines British Forces Broadcasting Service Services Sound and Vision Corporation Sham Shui Po Barracks has been WWII Japanese War Prison Vietnamese Refugee Camp and now housing estates commercial centre and government offices Saiwan Barracks 1844 used for a short duration and abandoned for Lyemun Barracks Sai Wan War Cemetery Stanley Military Cemetery Stanley Fort Hong Kong Island 1841 later served as Stanley Prison and WWII Japanese War Prison Wellington Barracks 1840s 1946 to the RN as HMS Tamar 1946 1960s demolished and replaced with HMS Tamar Prince of Wales Building now the Chinese People s Liberation Army Forces Hong Kong Building Navy Army and Air Force InstitutesRoyal Navy Royal Marines edit The Royal Navy and Royal Marines was stationed in Hong Kong right from the beginning of the establishment of Hong Kong as a British Colony For the most part the Royal Naval base was located in Hong Kong Island at HMS Tamar The Prince of Wales Building was added later in the 1970s Before the handover the naval base was moved to Stonecutters Island next to the Government docks RN and RFA ships visited or posted to Hong Kong prior to the Second World War HMS Sulphur 1841 HMS Minden circa 1841 HMS Hercules circa 1847 HMS Princess Charlotte circa 1858 HMS Ocean circa 1871 HMS Victor Emmanuel circa 1873 HMS Tamar circa 1897 HMS Astraea circa 1901 HMS Barfleur circa 1901 HMS Britomart circa 1901 HMS Centurion circa 1901 HMS Dido circa 1901 HMS Endymion circa 1901 HMS Glory circa 1901 HMS Humber circa 1901 HMS Otter circa 1901 HMS Terrible circa 1901 HMS Undaunted circa 1901 HMS Waterwitch circa 1901 HMS Sandpiper circa 1901 HMS Leviathan 1904 HMS Sutlej 1905 HMS Diadem 1906 HMS Taku circa 1901 sold in Hong Kong in 1916 HMS Thistle circa 1914 HMS Triumph circa 1914 HMS Titania 1920 26 RFA Maine 1927 HMS Tenedos circa 1939 transferred to Singapore before the Battle of Hong Kong RN ships and land units in Hong Kong during the Second World War HMS Aldgate HMS Barlight HMS Cicala HMS Cornflower HMS Moth HMS Redstart HMS Robin HMS Scout HMS Tern HMS Thanet HMS Thracian HMS Watergate Royal Naval Dockyard Police Hong Kong Dockyard Defence CorpsAuxiliary Patrol Vessels in Hong Kong during the Second World War APV Britannia APV Chun Hsing APV Frosty APV Han Wo APV Ho Hsing APV Henriette APV Indira APV Margaret APV Minnie APV Perla APV Poseidon APV Shun Wo HMS St Aubin HMS St Sampson APV Stanley APV Teh HsingRN formations and units in Hong Kong Post Second World War China Squadron 1844 1941 1945 1992 3rd Frigate Squadron 1949 to 1963 1972 to 1980 Far East Fleet Hong Kong Squadron 1969 1971 Dragon Squadron 1971 1992 Hong Kong Royal Naval Volunteer Reserves 1967 1996 merge with RNR 1971 Side Girls Party 1933 1997 120th Minesweeping Squadron 1958 1966 transfer to Singapore 6th Mine Countermeasure Squadron 1969 1997 6th Patrol Craft Squadron 1970 1997 Operations and Training Base 1934 1997 British Pacific Fleet 1840s 1948 to Singapore as Far East Station Hong Kong Flotilla 1840s 1941 1948 1992 China Station 4th Submarine Flotilla Yangtse Flotilla West River Flotilla 8th Destroyer Flotilla 5th Cruiser Squadron 1st Escort Flotilla 4th Frigate Flotilla 1952 Frigate Squadron 1952 1976 Light Cruiser SquadronRN and RFA ships visited or posted to Hong Kong after the Second World War HMS Challenger 1945 HMS Amethyst 1948 HMS Cardigan Bay circa 1951 HMS Dampier 1952 HMS Comus circa 1954 RFA Olna 1961 1963 HMS Lanton circa 1963 HMS Loch Killisport circa 1963 HMS Penston circa 1963 HMS Centaur 1964 HMS Blake circa 1974 HMS Chichester circa 1973 1976 HMS Boxer circa 1980 HMS Invincible 1992 HMS Newcastle 1992 HMS Beaver 1997 HMY Britannia 1986 1990 1997 HMS Chatham 1997 Royal Marines 40 Commando 3 Commando Brigade RM 1946 47 1949 1962 42 Commando 3 Commando Brigade RM 1945 1949 44 Commando 3 Commando Brigade RM 1945 1947 redesignated 40 Commando in 1947 45 Commando 3 Commando Brigade RM 1946 1947 1949 1950 No 3 Raiding Squadron RM 1978 1988 47 Royal MarinesA list of naval facilities used or built by the RN in Hong Kong Stonecutters Island Royal Navy Radio Interception and Direction finding Station est 1935 HQ 415 Maritime Troop Royal Corps of Transport Prince of Wales Building 1978 1997 known as Central Barracks of the PLA Lamont and Hope Drydocks Aberdeen Docks destroyed Dry Dock 1902 1959 Taikoo Dockyard Hong Kong United Dockyards Royal Navy Dockyards Admiralty 1859 1902 Royal Navy Dockyards 1902 1959 Kowloon Dockyard not part of Hung Hom area RN Coal storage yard Stonecutters Island 1861 1959 RN Coal storage yard and Kowloon Naval Dockyards 1901 1959 Sai Wan Barracks 1844 1846 Wellington Barracks 1946 1978 as HMS Tamar demolished North Barracks 1850s 1856 1887 1959 from the Army and to HK Government 1959 Victoria Barracks Redoubt and Lei Yue Mun Fortifications 1885 1887 Lei Yue Mun Fort 1887 1987 Reverse Central West and Pass Batteries 1880s Brennan Torpedo station 1890 Lei Yue Mun Royal Naval Hospital Wan Chai demolished now replaced by Ruttonjee Hospital Seaman s Hospital 1843 1873 replaced by Royal Naval Hospital RMS Queen Mary 1945 1946 as a hospital ship War Memorial Hospital Matilda 1946 1959 British Military Hospital 1959 1995 Island Group Practice 1995 1997 replace BMH HMS Princess Charlotte and HMS Victor Emmanuel Receiving Ships Tidal Basin 1902 1959 Boat Basin 1902 1959 HM Victualling Yards 1859 1946A list of facilities used or built by the RN in Hong Kong Lamont and Hope Drydocks Aberdeen Docks Royal Naval Hospital Wan Chai now Ruttonjee Sanatorium Seaman s Hospital 1843 1873 replaced by Royal Naval Hospital HMS Princess Charlotte and HMS Victor Emmanuel Receiving Ships HMS Tamar Receiving ship 1897 1941 HMS Nabcatcher Kai Tak 1945 1946 HMS Flycatcher Kai Tak 1947 HMS Minden 1841 mid 1840s hospital ship HMS Alligator 1840s 1865 hospital ship HMS Melville 1860s 1873 hospital ship East Indies Sqdn Royal Air Force edit nbsp Base of RAF in Kai Tak 1945 nbsp A Royal Hong Kong Auxiliary Air Force Aerospatiale Dauphin helicopter leaving its hangar during a Search and Rescue exercise in 1982 nbsp The survivors of a simulated aircraft crash are hoisted aboard a Royal Air Force Westland Wessex HC Mk 2 helicopter from No 28 AC Squadron in 1983 The Royal Air Force was the smallest contingent of the British Forces and was stationed in both Kai Tak Airport as well as the airfield in the New Territories known as Sek Kong No 28 AC Squadron 6 and the larger Royal Air Force infrastructure located to RAF Sek Kong in the late 1970s leaving Royal Air Force logistics elements to maintain operations at Kai Tak e g RAF movers and suppliers remained to maintain the logistical link between RAF Hong Kong and the United Kingdom The squadron flew up to 8 Westland Wessex HC Mk 2 helicopters from RAF Sek Kong Tasks included support of the civil power support of the British Forces and search and rescue About 20 years later RAF personnel returned from Sek Kong to Kai Tak mounting operations from that airport in the months prior to the 1997 handover In addition the Hong Kong Government also maintained an airforce This airforce as per the land unit of RHKR V was an arm of the Hong Kong Government supported by RAF personnel seconded to serve in the Hong Kong Auxiliary Air Force Royal Hong Kong Auxiliary Air Force 1970 1993 handed over to GFS Hong Kong Volunteer Defence Corps Air Arm 1930 1949 Hong Kong Auxiliary Air Force 1949 1970 see RHKAAFRoyal Air Force units which visited or were stationed in Hong Kong included No 681 Squadron RAF September December 1945 No 1331 Wing RAF Regiment circa 1946 No 96 Squadron RAF 1946 No 1430 Flying Boat Transport Flight RAF 1946 Japan Force Communications Flight RAF circa 1946 No 132 Squadron RAF 1945 1946 No 200 Staging Post RAF 1945 1946 No 215 Squadron Transport 1945 1946 Hong Kong Communication Flight Squadron RAF 1945 1947 No 88 Squadron RAF 1946 1951 No 209 Squadron Maritime Patrol 1946 1955 No 110 Squadron RAF 1947 No 81 Squadron RAF 1947 1958 No 1903 Flight RAF and No 656 Squadron RAF 1948 1949 No 28 Squadron RAF 1949 1951 1955 1957 1967 1968 1978 1996 1997 No 80 Squadron RAF 6 1949 1955 with Supermarine Spitfire F 24 amp de Havilland Hornet F 3 7 No 205 Squadron Maritime Reconnaissance 1949 1958 Royal Hong Kong Auxiliary Air Force 1949 1993 Hong Kong Auxiliary Flight 1949 1950 Hong Kong Auxiliary Squadron 1950 1953 Hong Kong Auxiliary Air Force Wing circa 1953 Hong Kong Fighter Squadron circa 1953 No 60 Squadron RAF 1961 1968 No 846 Squadron FAA 1963 1964 RAF Kai Tak No 103 Squadron RAF 1963 1969 No 110 Squadron RAF 1964 1969 No 45 Squadron Bomber 1965 1970 No 847 Squadron FAA 1970 RAF Kai Tak No 41 Squadron RAF 1973 McDonnell Douglas Phantom in UK service jets No 22 Squadron Anti shipping patrol 1996 1997 citation needed RAF Police No 60 Squadron No 681 Squadron Photo Reconnaissance 114th Hong Kong Squadron RAF No 367 Wireless Unit No 368 Wireless Unit No 117 Signals Unit Tai Mo Shan w e f January 1959 when it was relocated from Mount Davis West end of Hong Kong Island ASF Catering Squadron GEF Ground Radio Medical Supply Squadron No 444 Signals Unit Stanley Fort 1971 to 1977Sources indicate that 444 Signals Unit SU formed officially within No 90 Signals Group RAF Strike Command with effect from 16 August 1971 and was established as a lodger unit at Stanley Fort Hong Kong The primary role of 444 SU was to act as a ground station for the Skynet satellite communications system responsibility for operating the Skynet system having been vested in the RAF in the late 1960s under the Rationalisation of Inter Services Telecommunications RISTACOM agreement It would appear that the equipment operated by 444 SU had been located previously at RAF Bahrain HMS Jufair On 1 May 1972 No 90 Signals Group was transferred from RAF Strike Command to RAF Maintenance Command and as a consequence 444 SU became a Maintenance Command unit on this date On 31 August 1973 both 90 Signals Group and Maintenance Command were disbanded to be replaced on the following day by the new RAF Support Command All of the units and locations previously controlled by the disbanded formations were transferred to Support Command with effect from 1 September 1973 and 444 SU therefore became a Support Command unit This was to prove short lived however for on 1 November 1973 444 SU and the unit responsible for maintaining the Skynet ground station at RAF Gan 6 SU were both transferred to the command of the Air Officer Commanding in Chief Near East Air Force NEAF At this time 444 SU and 6 SU formed part of the Defence Communications Network DCN and the DCN elements of both units came under the functional control of the Controller DCN Ministry of Defence On 1 August 1975 administrative and engineering responsibility for all of the units of RAF Hong Kong including 444 SU were transferred from NEAF to RAF Strike Command functional control of these units being retained by the Vice Chief of the Air Staff via Commander RAF Hong Kong Subsequently with the disbandment of HQ NEAF on 31 March 1976 control of RAF Hong Kong and its component units were transferred in total to Strike Command On 28 March 1976 RAF Gan closed and 6 SU disbanded formally on the same date the latter s satellite communications equipment being transferred to 444 SU 444SU was hosted at Stanley Fort by the British Army Sources indicate that 444 SU disbanded on the 31 December 1977 Composite Signals UnitA list of RAF Stations in Hong Kong RAF North Point Hong Kong RAF Little Sai Wan RAF Mount Davis home of 117 Signals Unit relocated 1959 without living accommodation to RAF Tai Mo Shan RAF Sha Tin no ICAO code from 1949 1970s Severely damaged by Typhoon Wanda in 1962 Demolished to make way for Sha Tin New Town RAF Sek Kong VHSK served as Vietnamese Detention Centre 1980s RAF Kai Tak VHKT later as Kai Tak International AirportA list of Royal Air Force operations facilities Tai Po Tsai Cape Collinson Batty s Belvedere Kong Wei RAF Sek Kong Chung Hom Kok Wang Fung Terrace Tai Hang Happy Valley Search and rescue operations conducted by the RAF and Royal Navy were later transferred to the Government Flying Service GFS Other facilities edit British Military Hospital Hong Kong Medical centres at Victoria Barracks Lyemun Barracks Stanley Fort Whitfield Barracks Sham Shui Po Choy Hung MRS Sek Kong and Lo Wu British Forces Broadcasting Service Navy Army and Air Force Institutes NAAFI Blackdown Barracks Hong Kong 彩虹軍營 near Kai Tak now is Rhythm Garden 采頤花園 car park building and Canossa Primary School Mount Austin Barracks near Peak Tram terminus at Victoria Peak Royal Hong Kong Regimental Headquarters near Happy Valley demolished 1995China Fleet Club edit Hong Kong became an important port of call for many naval ships passing through the Far East Besides Lan Kwai Fong Royal Navy sailors had their own entertainment facility called the China Fleet Club 8 A timeline of the China Fleet Club 1900 1903 local Hong Kong businessman and Royal Navy s China Fleet to raise funds for a Royal Naval Canteen at Naval Docks Hong Kong 1929 old canteen building demolished and replaced with new building 1929 1934 Temporary CFC at Gloucester Road 1933 cornerstone laid by Admiral Sir Howard Kelly G B E K C B C M G M V O then Commander in Chief China Station 9 new seven storey China Fleet Club building called The Old Blue 1941 1945 CFC serves as Japanese Naval HQ in Hong Kong during the Second World War 1945 CFC re occupied by RN 1952 Coronation Annex added 1982 16 July The Final Demolition Party held in Club before move to Sun Hung Kai 1982 1985 CFC relocated to temporary site at Sun Hung Kai Centre 1985 25 storey Fleet House new home for CFC 1986 Plans to relocate CFC to UK begins 1989 Construction of China Fleet Country Club in Saltash begins 1991 Construction of China Fleet Country Club in Saltash completed and opens in June 1992 CFC in Hong Kong closesSee also editPeople s Liberation Army Hong Kong Garrison Military of Macau under Portuguese rule Hong Kong Defence Force Imperial Japanese Army References editCitations edit Hong Kong veterans can now settle in UK after decades of campaigning Grade Structure Review Chapter 7 Government Flying Service PDF Hong Kong Legislative Council 2008 p 179 Retrieved 19 May 2020 Grade Structure Review Chapter 6 Fire Services Department PDF Hong Kong Legislative Council 2008 pp 155 156 Retrieved 19 May 2020 Official Report of Proceedings PDF Hong Kong Legislative Council 24 February 1966 Rinaldi Richard A Gurka Regiments in the British Army Post World War II PDF Orbat com p 7 Archived from the original PDF on 5 March 2016 Retrieved 11 July 2014 a b Delve 1994 p 87 Jefford 1988 p 49 HMS Tamar and the China Fleet Club Gun Plot Retrieved 17 June 2017 China Fleet Club 1933 1982 Gwulo Old Hong Kong Retrieved 19 May 2020 Bibliography edit Alderson G L D History of Royal Air Force Kai Tak Hong Kong Royal Air Force Kai Tak 1972 Bruce Philip Second to None Hong Kong Oxford University Press 1991 Cracknell Philip Battle for Hong Kong December 1941 Chelford Amberley Publishing 2019 Craig Neil amp Craig Jo Black Watch Red Dawn The Hong Kong Handover to China Hardcover London Brasseys 1998 Delve K 1994 The Source Book of the RAF Shrewsbury UK Airlife Publishing Ltd ISBN 1 85310 451 5 Felton Mark China Station British Military in the Middle Kingdom 1839 1997 Barnsley Pen amp Sword 2013 Gregorian Raffi The British Army the Gurkhas and Cold War strategy in the Far East 1947 1954 New York Palgrave 2002 Jefford C G 1988 RAF Squadrons A comprehensive record of the movement and equipment of all RAF squadrons and their antecedents since 1912 Shrewsbury Airlife ISBN 1 85310 053 6 Jeffreys Alan The British Army in the Far East 1941 45 Oxford Osprey Publishing 2005 Ko Tim keung et al ed Serving Hong Kong The Hong Kong Volunteers Hong Kong Hong Kong Museum of Coastal Defence 2004 Kwong Chi Man amp Tsoi Yiu Lun Eastern Fortress A Military History of Hong Kong 1840 1970 Hong Kong University of Hong Kong Press 2014 Lord Cliff amp Watson Graham The Royal Corps of Signals Unit Histories of the Corps 1920 2001 and its Antecedents West Midlands Helion amp Company 2003 Melson P J White Ensign Red Dragon The History of the Royal Navy in Hong Kong 1841 1997 Hong Kong Edinburgh Financial Publishing 1997 National Museum of the Royal Navy The Royal Marines and Hong Kong Over 150 Years from 1840 to 1997 Portsmouth Royal Marines Historical Society Special Publication Number 19 1997 Oxley D H Victoria Barracks 1842 1979 Hong Kong British Forces Hong Kong 1979 Parkinson Jonathan The Royal Navy China Station 1864 1941 As seen through the lives of the Commanders in Chief Leicestershire Matador 2018 Richardson Sam S The Royal Marines and Hong Kong 1840 1997 Portsmouth Royal Marines Historical Society 1997 Rollo Denis The Guns amp Gunners of Hong Kong Hong Kong The Gunners Roll of Hong Kong 1991 Further reading editHarland Kathleen 1985 The Royal Navy in Hong Kong Since 1841 Liskeard England Maritime Books ISBN 978 0 90777 119 7 External links editBritish Forces Hong Kong on Facebook China Fleet Club Hong Kong Hong Kong Military Service Corps permanent dead link RAF Kai Tak Royal Hong Kong Regiment The Volunteers Association Stanley Fort Argylls in Hong Kong Hong Kong Gunners Association RAF Chinese Linguists in Hong Kong Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title British Forces Overseas Hong Kong amp oldid 1207031245, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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