kai tak airport in the war years 1941-1946. kai tak before the war kai tak 1930 (left) the airport...

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Kai Tak Airport in the war years 1941-1946

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Page 1: Kai Tak Airport in the war years 1941-1946. Kai Tak before the war Kai Tak 1930 (left) The airport was constructed on reclaimed land. The Royal Army Force

Kai Tak Airport in the war years

1941-1946

Page 2: Kai Tak Airport in the war years 1941-1946. Kai Tak before the war Kai Tak 1930 (left) The airport was constructed on reclaimed land. The Royal Army Force

Kai Tak before the warKai Tak 1930 (left) The airport was constructedon reclaimed land. The Royal Army Force established its headquarters there.

Kai Tak 1930 (right) There was no actual runway in the beginning. Airplanes landed on the grassfield only.

Page 3: Kai Tak Airport in the war years 1941-1946. Kai Tak before the war Kai Tak 1930 (left) The airport was constructed on reclaimed land. The Royal Army Force

Kai Tak before the war (cont’d)

Kai Tak 1935

Page 4: Kai Tak Airport in the war years 1941-1946. Kai Tak before the war Kai Tak 1930 (left) The airport was constructed on reclaimed land. The Royal Army Force

In 1941… Kai Tak served as the military base for the

Royal Army Force in Hong Kong. Anti-craft gun emplacements and pill boxes w

ere built around the airfield. Other than the civil runway, the airfield was c

overed with obstacles to prohibit enemy landings.

Air raid shelters were installed along the main road.

Page 5: Kai Tak Airport in the war years 1941-1946. Kai Tak before the war Kai Tak 1930 (left) The airport was constructed on reclaimed land. The Royal Army Force

Only one airline in 1941… Only one airline - China National Aviation

Company (CNAC) - was still using the runway at the time.

Q: Can you guess who the passengers on CNAC were?

A: Rich refugees flying from China to HK!

Page 6: Kai Tak Airport in the war years 1941-1946. Kai Tak before the war Kai Tak 1930 (left) The airport was constructed on reclaimed land. The Royal Army Force

Japanese air raid attack! At 7am on 8 Dec 1941, Kai Tak received w

arning of a Japanese attack. At 8 am, 12 bombers and 36 fighters of the

Japanese Air Force flew to the Kai Tak aerodrome.

The fighters flew to the runway and fired at the barrack blocks, causing the planes to burst into flames.

Page 7: Kai Tak Airport in the war years 1941-1946. Kai Tak before the war Kai Tak 1930 (left) The airport was constructed on reclaimed land. The Royal Army Force

The bombers bombed the civil side of the airport.

When the air raid ended, the CNAC director ordered his men to push the 3 remaining planes, camouflage them with mud & straw, and transport CNAC staff & their families into China.

Japanese air raid attack (cont’d)

Page 8: Kai Tak Airport in the war years 1941-1946. Kai Tak before the war Kai Tak 1930 (left) The airport was constructed on reclaimed land. The Royal Army Force

The planes departed near night time & returned 3 hours later, refuelled by hand pump. Throughout the night, many CNAC staff and their families were saved.

By 10 Dec, when Kai Tak was abandoned, 275 people had been transported to safety by CNAC!

All of Kai Tak’s operations had stopped by then.

Japanese air raid attack (cont’d)

Page 9: Kai Tak Airport in the war years 1941-1946. Kai Tak before the war Kai Tak 1930 (left) The airport was constructed on reclaimed land. The Royal Army Force

On Christmas Day, 1941, Hong Kong surrendered to the Japanese.

Page 10: Kai Tak Airport in the war years 1941-1946. Kai Tak before the war Kai Tak 1930 (left) The airport was constructed on reclaimed land. The Royal Army Force

Kai Tak occupied by the Japanese

Q: Army engineers and the Public Works Dept dragged concrete pipes across the runway. Why?

A: To stop the Japanese from using the runway!

But Japanese military engineers repaired the airfield quickly.

Page 11: Kai Tak Airport in the war years 1941-1946. Kai Tak before the war Kai Tak 1930 (left) The airport was constructed on reclaimed land. The Royal Army Force

Expansion of Kai Tak In May 1942, the Japanese began expandin

g Kai Tak from a 180-acre field to a 380-acre field.

The original east-west runway was extended and a new runway, running north-south, was built.

Page 12: Kai Tak Airport in the war years 1941-1946. Kai Tak before the war Kai Tak 1930 (left) The airport was constructed on reclaimed land. The Royal Army Force

Expansion of Kai Tak (cont’d)

Brown-green area represents the extension made by the Japanese.

Page 13: Kai Tak Airport in the war years 1941-1946. Kai Tak before the war Kai Tak 1930 (left) The airport was constructed on reclaimed land. The Royal Army Force

Expansion of Kai Tak (cont’d)Q: Who do you think built the runways?

A: Prisoners-of-war!

Q: Why were the runways poorly constructed?

A: Because the POWs sabotaged their work.

Page 14: Kai Tak Airport in the war years 1941-1946. Kai Tak before the war Kai Tak 1930 (left) The airport was constructed on reclaimed land. The Royal Army Force

Land for Expansion In expanding Kai Tak, Sung Emperor’s Ter

race ( 宋王臺 ), a hill about 45 metres high with some small “sacred” rocks at its peak, had to removed.

The Japanese, knowing that the rocks were “sacred”, hired 50 monks to perform an exorcism in the area before removing the Terrace.

Page 15: Kai Tak Airport in the war years 1941-1946. Kai Tak before the war Kai Tak 1930 (left) The airport was constructed on reclaimed land. The Royal Army Force

Removal of 宋王臺

The largest rocks were engraved with “ 宋王臺” before they were removed. They were later placed in a park outside the airport.

Page 16: Kai Tak Airport in the war years 1941-1946. Kai Tak before the war Kai Tak 1930 (left) The airport was constructed on reclaimed land. The Royal Army Force

Impact of Kai Tak Expansion Many residential areas had to be demolishe

d due to the airport expansion, including Kowloon City, Sheung Sha Po, and Sha Po villages.

A committee was formed at the Kowloon District office to value the property to be demolished.

Page 17: Kai Tak Airport in the war years 1941-1946. Kai Tak before the war Kai Tak 1930 (left) The airport was constructed on reclaimed land. The Royal Army Force

Compensation for landowners The committee agreed that $4.2M military

yen plus 20 catties of rice per person was enough compensation for landowners whose houses would be destroyed.

On 25 Dec 1941, 1 Military Yen=HKD2.00On 24 July 1942, 1 Military Yen=HKD4.00

Page 18: Kai Tak Airport in the war years 1941-1946. Kai Tak before the war Kai Tak 1930 (left) The airport was constructed on reclaimed land. The Royal Army Force

Unfair compensation? The Japanese Government thought the

compensation was too much and cut it down to $1.4M military yen only!

From May 1942 - May 1943, landowners collected compensation. For those that did not come to collect, the Japanese paid a sum of $100,000 Military Yen to the HK Government as compensation.

Page 19: Kai Tak Airport in the war years 1941-1946. Kai Tak before the war Kai Tak 1930 (left) The airport was constructed on reclaimed land. The Royal Army Force

No compensation?!? No payment was made for land on which

there were no buildings, since the land was considered to belong to the British Govt.

No payment was made to farmland. Leaseholders were given two months’ notice to gather their crops before evacuating.

Page 20: Kai Tak Airport in the war years 1941-1946. Kai Tak before the war Kai Tak 1930 (left) The airport was constructed on reclaimed land. The Royal Army Force

Homeless people The Japanese put up new villages in places

such as Kowloon Tong and Ku Tung Chuen in response to the appeal of many homeless families.

At first the Japanese gave them food and seeds, but later stopped. Many people died as they were unable to earn their living by farming.

Page 21: Kai Tak Airport in the war years 1941-1946. Kai Tak before the war Kai Tak 1930 (left) The airport was constructed on reclaimed land. The Royal Army Force

Kai Tak 1945By 1945, both runways were complete, in use, and heavily protected by anti-aircraft guns.

This is the Hong Kong Landing Chart for 1945.

1st runway, running east-west, completed in 1939

2nd runway, running north-south, completed in 1945

Page 22: Kai Tak Airport in the war years 1941-1946. Kai Tak before the war Kai Tak 1930 (left) The airport was constructed on reclaimed land. The Royal Army Force

Japanese surrender On 15 August 1945, the Japanese finally surr

endered. By then, the Kai Tak airfield had become mu

ch bigger, but the buildings on the airfield had been blown up & communication lines cut.

Page 23: Kai Tak Airport in the war years 1941-1946. Kai Tak before the war Kai Tak 1930 (left) The airport was constructed on reclaimed land. The Royal Army Force

Recommencement of Kai Tak Commercial flights to Kai Tak resumed in Se

p 1945. In 1946, civil operations recommenced also.

This is the second runway built by prisoners-of-war.

Page 24: Kai Tak Airport in the war years 1941-1946. Kai Tak before the war Kai Tak 1930 (left) The airport was constructed on reclaimed land. The Royal Army Force

Civil Aviation Department Established on 1 May 1946 to regulate civil

aviation and Kai Tak operations

Kai Tak 1947

Page 25: Kai Tak Airport in the war years 1941-1946. Kai Tak before the war Kai Tak 1930 (left) The airport was constructed on reclaimed land. The Royal Army Force

Kai Tak Airport served HK for 73 years before closing down in 1998.

Page 26: Kai Tak Airport in the war years 1941-1946. Kai Tak before the war Kai Tak 1930 (left) The airport was constructed on reclaimed land. The Royal Army Force

The End