Media
172 year old Saiwan Boundary Marker Stone Found!
HKU surveyors propose the stone be made an AAB Grade I listed object
15 Dec 2015
Teachers and students of Department of Real Estate and Construction of the University of Hong Kong (HKU) discovered a long forgotten boundary marker stone from the very earliest days of the British presence in Hong Kong. This B.O. No4, boundary stone, is located in the Lei Yue Mun Park and Holiday Village in Sai Wan Shan (see Figure 1 below).
Documented in the earliest Hong Kong survey map some 172 years ago
Research by Dr Stephen N.G. Davies, Lecturer of the Department, has identified the stone’s provenance. “B.O.” stands for ‘Board of Ordnance’, the British military authority in charge of surveying and mapping before 1855. That clue led to its identification on Hong Kong’s oldest scientifically surveyed map, the Ordnance Map of Hong Kong of 1845 by Lt. Thomas Bernard Collinson Royal Engineers (see Figure 2 below).
Figure 1
The marker stone and its near Canadian and Irish contemporaries which still exist.(Source: Canada: Richard D. Merritt, On the common ground: The ongoing story of the commons in Niagara-on-the-Lake, Toronto: Dundurn, 2012, Ch.11 and p.95; Ireland: http://www.geograph.ie/photo/3031087; Hong Kong: Department of Real Estate & Construction, Faculty of Architecture, The University of Hong Kong)
In late 1843 or early 1844 Lt. Collinson had placed the stone exactly where the HKU students found it 172 years later. It had served as one of his survey’s 27 trigonometric stations on Hong Kong Island, as well as marking the northern boundary of the military land of the long abandoned Saiwan Barracks of which it is today the only surviving reminder.
Figure 2
The 4 sheets, 1:15,840, 1845/46 Ordnance Map of Hong Kong by Lt. T.B. Collinson, R.E., was one of the oldest scientifically surveyed map of Hong Kong.
(Source: Ordnance Map of HK and details - National Library of Scotland, UK)
Discovered by teachers and students of HKU undergraduate Common Core Course
In late September, in preparing for a course field trip of HKU’s common core course CCCH9031 “Property Rights, Built Heritage and Sustainable Development in Hong Kong”, Dr Davies identified the location of a “War Department boundary stone, B.O. No.4” on an 1895 building plan of Saiwan Redoubt in the British National Archives.
Students on the Department’s common core course, in groups led by Mr Chan Yiu-hung found the stone itself during the course field trip on 3rd October. The 172 year old stone was standing exactly where the 1895 map had showed it, despite the heavy bombardment the historic Redoubt had suffered in the Japanese invasion in 1941 and extensive post-war alterations.
On a subsequent visit, a team of professional land surveyors, led by Dr Ken Ching Siu-tong, an alumnus of the Department and a professional land surveyor, closely surveyed the stone to confirm Dr Davies’ identification. Precise geo-referencing process with respect to contemporary coordinate grid was performed in an ArcGIS platform showed the stone to be exactly where Lt Collinson had put it and mapped it. In addition, Sr Natalie Chan Wing-shan also identified an original survey benchmark, placed during the building of the Redoubt in 1895.
Recommend the stone be made an AAB Grade I listed object
The stone has suffered some damage over the years but all the original markings are still legible. However, unchecked growth of vegetation in the neglected Redoubt means a tree is now growing right beside the stone, threatening to push it over and further damage it.
The Department has informed the Antiquities and Monuments Office of its finding. Professor Chau Kwong-wing, Head of Department and Chair Professor, has sent the Commissioner for Heritage a recommendation, drafted by Dr Stephen N.G. Davies in consultation with Professors Lawrence Lai Wai-chung and Dr Daniel Ho Chi-wing, that the stone be made an AAB Grade I listed object.
For the powerpoint presentation, please click here
Academic contacts:
Department of Real Estate and Construction
Professor Lawrence Lai Wai-chung (Tel︰+852 2859 2146;Email︰wclai@hku.hk)
Associate Professor Dr Daniel Ho Chi-wing (Tel: +852 2859 2146; Email︰danielho@hku.hk)
Lecturer Dr Stephen N.G. Davies (Tel︰+852 2859 2146;Email︰daiwaisi@hku.hk)
Media enquiries:
Communication and Public Affairs Office
Ms Rhea Leung (Tel: +852 2857 8555/ +852 9022 7446; email: rhea.leung@hku.hk) or
Ms Julie Chu (Tel: +852 2859 2437/ +852 6347 2221; email:juliechu@hku.hk)