Queensway
Queen’s Road is a collection of roads along the northern coast of Hong Kong Island, in Hong Kong, within the limit of Victoria City.
It was the first road in Hong Kong, constructed by the British between 1841 and 1843, spanning across Victoria City from Shek Tong Tsui to Wan Chai.
At various points along the route, Queen’s Road marks the original shoreline before land reclamation projects permanently extended land into Victoria Harbour.
The four sections of the roads, from west to east, are respectively: Queen’s Road West, Queen’s Road Central, Queensway, and Queen’s Road East. History
The road was originally 4 miles (6.5 km) long.
The Royal Engineers built the first section to Sai Ying Pun with the help of 300 coolies from Kowloon (Hong Kong), then a territory of China. This section of Queen’s Road ran parallel to the beach where Sir Henry Pottinger set up his tent in 1842.
Originally named Main Street, it was officially renamed Queen’s Road in March 1842 after Queen Victoria of the British Empire. It was mistakenly translated into Chinese as 皇后, meaning “queen consort”.
When Hong Kong was founded as a British Crown Colony in 1842, Queen’s Road was the hub of the island’s activity.
The development of this island had been haphazard: winding paths connected the Hong Kong Club for tai-pans and ran along squatter huts, military encampments and taverns.
The first governors built their homes along Queen’s Road; subsequently, the first post office and Christian churches soon arrived. Instead of a properly paved road, newcomers to Hong Kong found Queen’s Road as a pocked dirt path that was prone to dust clouds and puddles of mud. On Christmas Day 1878, a fire broke out and destroyed a large area of the slums along Queen’s Road.
An eyewitness account was recorded by Constance Gordon-Cumming in his 1886 book Wanderings in China. The fire raged for 17 hours and burnt down 400 houses across a 10 acres (4.0 ha) area. Thousands of residents were left homeless. Nevertheless, the devastated ruins were recycled for reclamation adjacent to the area (modern-day Bonham Strand).
After the Great Fire of 1878, Queen’s Road has shrugged its past and become home to some of Hong Kong’s most expensive land and famous buildings at that time.
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