


Battle of Hong Kong
Contributor: C. Peter Chen
ww2dbaseIn 1841, the United Kingdom leased Hong Kong Island, Kowloon Peninsula, and surrounding land from China. Over the following 100 years, Hong Kong grew into a busy port city and became one of the symbols of British power in the Far East. Hong Kong was considered to be politically important; aside from being British territory, it was also important for the British to be present to remind China that the British stood near in support of China in the Second Sino-Japanese War, albeit indirectly. Nevertheless, British military leaders understood that it was not strategically important, thus at the eve of the Japanese invasion, the territory was only lightly defended with British, Indian, and Chinese troops. The garrison had 29 coastal guns, all deployed on Hong Kong Island, and was supported by a small naval contingent consisted of one destroyer, eight torpedo boats, and four gunboats. In Nov 1941, two Canadian infantry division arrived to reinforce the garrison, bolstering the strength to 15,000 men.
ww2dbaseJust before the start of the Pacific War, 52,000-strong Japanese 38th Division under the command of Takashi Sakai gathered just north of the border. Inaccurate British intelligence reported that only 20,000 men were present, thus providing the garrison a false sense of security.
ww2dbaseThe Invasion
ww2dbaseAt 0800 on 8 Dec 1941, eight hours after the Pearl Harbor attack, the Japanese troops poured across the border, engaging the British and Commonwealth troops dug in along the Gin Drinker's Line immediately behind the border. British Major General Christopher Michael Maltby lost the few aircraft he had under his command, therefore had a difficult campaign early on as he had no control of the air while his troops were out-numbered. During the night of 9 Dec, Japanese troops mounted a massed attack on the western portion of the defensive line, and the Gin Drinkers' Line collapsed by 10 Dec. On 11 Dec, as Japanese troops advanced southward along the Kowloon Peninsula, Maltby ordered the evacuation of all troops to Hong Kong Island. On 13 Dec the Rajputs of the British Indian Army, the last of the British troops on the mainland, fell back onto Hong Kong Island.
ww2dbaseAfter a failed call for surrender on 13 Dec, the Japanese again demanded surrender on 15 Dec. After receiving the rejection, Japanese artillery and aircraft conducted an intense bombardment on Hong Kong Island on 15 Dec. On 17 Dec, yet another demand for surrender was issued, but was again rejected. A light Japanese force crossed the Lye Mun Pass and landed on Hong Kong in the evening of 18 Dec, and a stronger beachhead was established by the next morning. On 19 Dec, the Japanese troops overran the key Wong Nai Chong Gap in the center of the island, thus dividing the British defense in half. By 20 Dec, the Japanese held control of the western half of the island. It was then that the worst of the atrocities began. At the Salesian Mission on the Chai Wan Road, the Japanese massacred nuns and members of the medical staff there after they had surrendered. As the Japanese captured the reservoir, the British garrison's water supply situation grew desperate quickly. On 24 Dec, Japanese soldiers entered the British field hospital at St. Stephen's College and tortured and killed over 60 injured soldiers, nurses, and doctors.
ww2dbaseIn the afternoon of 25 Dec 1941, later named "Black Christmas", Governor General of Hong Kong Sir Mark Aitchison Young surrendered at the third floor of the Peninsula Hong Kong hotel. In the 18-day battle, Japan suffered 2,754 casualties and the British 11,848. Rensuke Isogai was named the Japanese military governor of Hong Kong. Japanese atrocities remain rampant despite the end of fighting. Many women, including nuns, were reported raped and some killed. Some British officials were forced to dig their own graves before being executed. Ramon Muniz Lavelle, Argentinian commercial attaché to Tokyo, was in Hong Kong shortly after the initial battle; he documented incidences where British soldiers were bayoneted while they laid helplessly in their beds at the Stanley Hospital. He also reported witnessing British women, with their hands tied behind their backs, repeatedly raped by Japanese soldiers.
ww2dbaseEpilogue
ww2dbaseThe local Chinese waged a guerrilla war against Japanese occupation under the banner of two groups, Gangjiu and Dongjiang. Resistance continued until the day British rule was re-established in Hong Kong on 15 Aug 1945.
ww2dbaseSources: American Caesar, the Pacific Campaign, Thirty Seconds Over Tokyo, Wikipedia.
Last Major Update: Jun 2007
Battle of Hong Kong Mapa Interativo
Photographs
![]() | ![]() | ![]() | ![]() |
Maps
![]() |
Battle of Hong Kong Timeline
3 set 1941 | Canadian Lieutenant-General Arthur Grasett MC, DSO (1888-1971), the former General Officer Commanding in Hong Kong, suggested to the Chiefs of Staff in London, England, United Kingdom that with the addition of two or more battalions, the colony's garrison would be strong enough to resist, for an extensive period, any Japanese seige. He further affirmed that Canada might be prepared to provide the battalions. |
25 out 1941 | A Canadian brigade under the command of Brigadier John Lawson MC sailed from Vancouver, Canada to reinforce the garrison on Hong Kong. |
2 dez 1941 | Takashi Sakai was ordered to lead the Japanese 23rd Army, based in China, to cross the border into Hong Kong and to conquer it within 10 days of an outbreak of war with the United Kingdom. |
8 dez 1941 | Japanese forces invaded the British colony of Hong Kong. British and Canadian garrison at Hong Kong was hopelessly outnumbered and beyond reach of any Allied help. Within less than two days the defenders would be forced to retreat to Hong Kong island itself. |
9 dez 1941 | Japanese troops breached a western segment of the British Gin Drinker's Line, which stretched from the Gin Drinker's Bay (Zuijiu Wan) in the west to the White Sands Bay (Baisha Wan) in the east, at 225 High Ground north of Hong Kong Island. 27 prisoners were taken. |
10 dez 1941 | British troops withdrew onto Hong Kong island after the defensive Gin Drinker's Line collapsed. |
11 dez 1941 | Japanese troops advanced southward along the Kowloon Peninsula north of Hong Kong, capturing Stonecutter's Island. |
13 dez 1941 | Chinese troops mounted an offensive against Japanese troops in the Hong Kong area; earlier on the same day, the last British troops in Kowloon on the mainland were evacuated onto Hong Kong island. |
14 dez 1941 | The British authorities at Hong Kong refused the Japanese demand for surrender. |
15 dez 1941 | A group of 300 Japanese troops crossed the Lye Mun Channel onto Hong Kong island at 0300 hours, but the Allied defenders on the beach drove off this amphibious attack. Starting on this date, the Japanese artillery and aerial bombardment on the northern coast of Hong Kong island began. |
16 dez 1941 | The commanding officer's bunker of the Moxing Hill Coastal Battery on the west side of Hong Kong Island was destroyed by aerial bombing. |
16 dez 1941 | Japanese continued to bombard the northern shore of Hong Kong island by artillery and aircraft. |
17 dez 1941 | The Japanese artillery and aerial bombardment on the northern coast of Hong Kong island, which began on 15 Dec 1941, ceased at 1130 hours as the Japanese observed the raising of a white flag from the defensive positions on the beaches. At 1430 hours, Governor of Hong Kong Sir Mark Young again rejected the Japanese demand for surrender. The bombardment would resume shortly after. |
18 dez 1941 | Enquanto refinarias de petróleo na costa norte da Ilha de Hong Kong queimavam com fumaça preta espessa, 3.500 tropas japonesas cruzaram o Canal Lei Yue Mun e estabeleceram uma cabeça de ponte às 22:00 horas no sopé da Montanha Chai Wan, onde uma bateria costeira dava para o Canal Lei Yue Mun. Duas horas depois, outra força de 4.000 seguiria, dominando os defensores restantes na bateria. Cerca de 30 prisioneiros de guerra foram assassinados na Montanha Chai Wan. |
19 dez 1941 | As tropas japonesas alcançaram a Passagem de Wong Nai Chung na ilha central de Hong Kong, onde foram contidas por tropas canadenses e chinesas coloniais. Sete navios da Marinha Real Britânica (canhoneira fluvial HMS Tern, minador HMS Redstart, navio de barreira HMS Watergate, navio de barreira HMS Barlight, navio de barreira HMS Aldgate, rebocador HMS Poet Chaucer e rebocador HMS Alliance), juntamente com vários navios mercantes, foram afundados no porto de Hong Kong para evitar a captura japonesa. |
19 dez 1941 | No lado nordeste da Ilha de Hong Kong, na Casa Missionária Salesiana, que havia sido tomada pelo Exército Britânico em outubro de 1941 como um posto avançado de curativos sob o comando do Capitão S. Martin Banfill, tropas japonesas executaram por decapitação 26 membros da equipe médica masculina e 2 militares feridos. O pessoal médico feminino foi libertado após ser forçado a testemunhar a decapitação. |
20 dez 1941 | Após conter as tropas japonesas na Passagem de Wong Nai Chung, na ilha central de Hong Kong, por um dia, as tropas canadenses e chinesas coloniais começam a recuar, sofrendo pesadas baixas. No mar, os torpedeiros britânicos MTB 12 e MTB 26 foram afundados e os MTB 7, MTB 11 e MTB 18 foram danificados durante uma tentativa de interromper as operações de desembarque japonesas. |
21 dez 1941 | Enquanto as tropas canadenses e chinesas coloniais completavam a retirada de Wong Nai Chung Gap, no centro da ilha de Hong Kong, a ordem começou a ruir à medida que o pânico aumentava rapidamente. No mesmo dia, aeronaves japonesas afundaram a canhoneira fluvial britânica HMS Cicala, matando 1 e ferindo 1. |
23 dez 1941 | Tropas aliadas em Hong Kong recuaram para a linha final, "The Ridge", na Península de Stanley. Um hospital militar foi estabelecido no St Stephen's College na península para tratar soldados feridos. |
24 dez 1941 | As tropas japonesas penetraram na linha defensiva final aliada, "The Ridge", na Península de Stanley, na ilha de Hong Kong. No St Stephen's College, onde um hospital militar de emergência havia sido estabelecido, 56 soldados feridos, médicos e enfermeiras foram baionetados, enquanto várias civis foram estupradas. Perto da costa, o destróier britânico HMS Thracian foi danificado por aeronaves japonesas e foi forçado a encalhar para evitar o naufrágio. |
25 dez 1941 | O Contra-Almirante chinês Chan Chak liderou um grupo composto principalmente por militares britânicos para fora de Hong Kong, usando cinco lanchas torpedeiras da Marinha Real. Eles desembarcaram na costa da província de Guangdong, China, onde Chan os levaria a pé em direção à cidade de Huizhou. |
25 dez 1941 | Masaichi Niimi e Takashi Sakai foram nomeados co-governadores da Administração de Ocupação Japonesa de Hong Kong. |
25 dez 1941 | O Governador Britânico de Hong Kong, Sir Mark Young, e o Comandante das Forças Britânicas em Hong Kong, General Maltby, ordenaram a rendição da colônia às 15:15, que foi assinada pouco depois no quartel-general de campo japonês no hotel Peninsula Hong Kong por Young. Quase ao mesmo tempo, a canhoneira fluvial britânica HMS Robin foi afundada para evitar a captura. |
25 dez 1941 | Pessoal britânico da Bateria Costeira de Moxing Hill, no lado oeste da Ilha de Hong Kong, sabotou as armas operacionais restantes e abandonou a fortaleza. |
26 dez 1941 | General Takashi Sakai and Admiral Masaichi Niimi paraded through Victoria, Hong Kong with the troops of the Japanese 38th Infantry Division. |
26 dez 1941 | Japanese troops burned over 100 bodies of soldiers killed in combat, soldiers murdered, and medical personnel murdered over the past several days in and around St Stephen's College in southern Hong Kong; the college had served as a military hospital and one of the final British strongholds. |
29 dez 1941 | Chinese Rear Admiral Chan Chak arrived in Huizhou, Guangdong Province, China with a group of British officers and men who had escaped from Hong Kong four days prior. |
5 mar 1942 | The British government announced that, according to information shared with the United Kingdom by the Japanese government, there were 5,072 British, 1,689 Canadian, 3,829 Indian, and 357 men of other nationalities currently under captivity in Hong Kong as prisoners of war. |
Você gostou deste artigo ou achou este artigo útil? Se sim, considere nos apoiar no Patreon. Qualquer valor já vai ajudar! Obrigado. Por favor, ajude-nos a divulgar o site: Fique atualizado com WW2DB: |
Visitor Submitted Comments
25 Jul 2006 03:23:32 PM
could use some more info here
22 Aug 2007 08:52:07 AM
My uncle was in that Canadian garrison and never came home froma mine in Japan where he worked as a POW.
I live in China now (Aussie citizen) and know that the *** will never be forgiven here or elsewhere until they face their past like Germany did.
10 Apr 2008 04:20:04 AM
correct
22 Nov 2010 01:52:50 AM
Eat *** *** ! We know what you did in Hong Kong, Eat *** *** ! Muderer!
8 Dec 2010 04:52:23 AM
*** are just bad as you guys are.
1 Apr 2011 06:51:28 PM
a group of british army who had been prisoners of war in hong kong 1941-45 were brought to camp debert in nova scotia for rehabilitation before returning home. local residents invited them to their homes. my family entertained two who i got to know well. where can i find info on this event. one ex-prisoner's son is in contact with me and i am trying to get any info i can for him. any help would be appreciated.
26 Jun 2011 09:41:24 AM
http://news.webshots.com/album/579357179pPuqVa
10 Feb 2012 06:07:55 PM
My father was a portuguese volunteer and was captured in Hong Kong and was sent o Japan in the bloody coal mines for the duration of the war until USA freed him. I am Canadian now.
12 Nov 2012 11:54:36 AM
There's a good book on The Battle of Hong Kong published by Lulu on demand publishing. It's called "The Battle of Hong Kong" . Just go to www.lulu.com and search for the book. Lot's of good material.
5 Dec 2013 10:12:40 AM
how is the battle of hong kong significant to canada???? thanks:)
2 May 2014 11:46:49 AM
my father named shahinchi khan was an indian muslim soldier from royal indian arm services corp.he remained POW in japan from 1941 to 1945 but his name was not found in indian soldiers list. please help me to find his name.
16 Jun 2014 08:36:28 PM
My father L/Cpl George White fought at Wong Nai Chung Gap in the 3rd.Machine Gun Company HK Volunteers. He was Mentioned in Dispatches and as a POW in Japan survived the cruel abuse meted out by the Korean guards and Japanese.
27 Jan 2015 06:41:06 AM
Just a note to correct your entry of the 20th Dec 1941 in the Battle for Hong Kong. MTB 07 led the attack on the IJA landing craft resulting in the loss of MTB's 12 & 26.
This action took place on the morning of the 19th Dec 1941, NOT the 20th as stated. My father was at the controls of MTB 07 the lead boat and I have in my possession the Log book of MTB 07 covering July 1941 right through the battle and subsequent escape afterwards.
http://www.hongkongescape.org/Balaclava.htm
5 Nov 2015 05:53:52 AM
wheres hong kong ??
10 Apr 2016 05:37:52 PM
when was this article published
11 Jan 2019 05:30:39 AM
good
13 May 2019 08:46:48 PM
dude really good article bro i loved it man
6 Jun 2019 02:39:42 PM
How many total deaths were there out of Canadian, British, HK and other commonwealth soldiers..?
All visitor submitted comments are opinions of those making the submissions and do not reflect views of WW2DB.

» Chan, Chak
» Cohen, Morris
» Koga, Mineichi
» Kuribayashi, Tadamichi
» Niimi, Masaichi
» Sakai, Takashi
Location:
» Hong Kong
Ship Participants:
» Ikazuchi
» Isuzu
Related Book:
» American Caesar: Douglas MacArthur 1880-1964
- » 1,182 biografias
- » 337 eventos
- » 45,119 entradas na linha do tempo
- » 1,248 navios
- » 350 modelos de aeronaves
- » 207 modelos de veículos
- » 376 modelos de armas
- » 123 documentos históricos
- » 261 instalações
- » 470 resenhas de livros
- » 28,411 fotos
- » 365 mapas
Winston Churchill, on the RAF

Por favor, considere nos apoiar no Patreon. Mesmo R$1 por mês já faz uma grande diferença. Obrigado!

Ou, por favor, nos apoie adquirindo alguns produtos do WW2DB na TeeSpring. Obrigado!
19 Jun 2005 08:16:35 AM
articals about the event