(Redirected from Queen\'s Road Central):''This article is about a road in Hong Kong. For other uses, see
Queens Road.''

A painting of Queen's Road Central in 1865

Early male-only public toilet in Hong Kong. Built underground at the junction of Queen's Road Central and Wellington Street in Sheung Wan.
'Queen's Road' () is the first road in
Hong Kong built by the
British Empire between
1841 and
1843[1], spanning across
Victoria City from
Shek Tong Tsui to
Wan Chai. At most points, it marks the original shoreline before
land reclamation projects permanently extended the land into
Victoria Harbour. The road is split into four: 'Queen's Road West' (
Chinese: 皇后大道西), 'Queen's Road Central' (皇后大道中), '
Queensway' (金鐘道), and 'Queen's Road East' (皇后大道東), from west to east.
History
The Road was originally 4 miles (6.5 km) long in
1841. The
Royal Engineers built the first section to
Sai Ying Pun with the help of 300
coolies from
Kowloon. It ran parallel to the beach where
Sir Henry Pottinger setup his tent in
1842[1].
Named after
Queen Victoria of the British Empire, it was mistakenly translated into Chinese as 皇后 (Pronunciation in
Cantonese: wòhng hauh
? / wong4 hau6
?; Pronunciation in
Mandarin: huáng hòu
?) --
queen consort.
New arrivals to Hong Kong as late as the second half of the 19th century were surprised at the condition of the road. Instead of a proper road, as could only be expected of one named for the Queen in the largest British outpost east of
Singapore, travellers found a pocked dirt road prone to dust clouds and puddles of mud
[3].
When Hong Kong was founded as a
Crown Colony, Queen's Road was the hub of activity. Its development was haphazard, and its path winding as it made its way through the newly-founded city including the
Hong Kong Club for
tai-pans. Between squatter huts, military encampments, and taverns, the first governors build their homes along Queen's Road. The first post office and
Christian churches soon followed.
In
1878 a Christmas fire broke out destroying a large area of the slums. The eyewitness account was recorded by
Constance Frederica Gordon Cumming in the book
Wanderings in China. The fire raged for 17 hours burning down 400 houses covering 10 acres of area. It left thousands in the community homeless
[4]. The devastated structures in ruin were reused for
reclamation adjacent like the area around
Bonham Strand.
Queen's Road has shrugged its past and is now home to some of Hong Kong's most expensive land and famous buildings.
Queen's Road West
'Queen's Road West' (皇后大道西) runs from
Sheung Wan to Shek Tong Tsui beginning at the
Possession Street junction.
Queen's Road Central
'Queen's Road Central' (皇后大道中) runs from
Central to
Sheung Wan. It was one of the first roads to be built when the crown colony was founded (
Hollywood Road is another of the early roads). It was a major infrastructure of Queen's Town, later renamed the
City of Victoria.
Queen's Road Central intersects with the similarly named, and thus easily confused,
Queen Victoria Street, a short street that ends a few blocks near
One IFC.
Queen's Road Central merges with
Des Voeux Road Central to become Queensway at
Garden Road.
Queensway
Main articles: Queensway, Hong Kong
A section of Queen's Road East in what is now
Admiralty was re-routed and renamed as 'Queensway' (金鐘道) in
1967. It merges with the
Queen's Road Central and
Des Voeux Road Central at its west end and connects with
Hennessy Road and
Queen's Road East to the east.
Queen's Road East
'Queen's Road East' (皇后大道東) runs between
Happy Valley and
Wan Chai. Queens Road East forks to the south from Queensway near
Justice Drive, where Queensway turns into
Hennessy Road. It runs along the old northern shoreline of Hong Kong Island.
In pop culture
Queen's Road is an icon of British Colonial Hong Kong. In the transition period before
sovereignty transfer, there are rumours that all streets and roads related colonial figures like Queen's Road would be renamed to
Chinese communist's. 羅大祐, a pop song writer, has written a song 皇后大道東 (Queen's Road East) to describe the change in this transition period.
References
1. Lim, Patricia. [2002] (2002). Discovering Hong Hong's Cultural Heritage. Central, Hong Kong: Oxford University Press. ISBN Volume One 0-19-592723-0
2. Lim, Patricia. [2002] (2002). Discovering Hong Hong's Cultural Heritage. Central, Hong Kong: Oxford University Press. ISBN Volume One 0-19-592723-0
3. Morris, Jan. [1987] (1997). Hong Kong. ISBN 978-0679776482
4. Wiltshire, Trea. [First published 1987] (republished & reduced2003). Old Hong Kong - Volume One. Central, Hong Kong: Text Form Asia books Ltd. Page 66. ISBN Volume One 962-7283-59-2
See also
★
List of places named after Queen Victoria
★
List of streets and roads in Hong Kong
External links
★
Google Maps of Queen's Road