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Sheung Wan Colonial & Medical Tour
Sheung Wan Colonial & Medical Tour
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Sheung Wan Colonial & Medical Tour

Visit hospitals and museums in Central and Sheung Wan to learn about Hong Kong's institutional history.

Explore the blend of Chinese and Western cultures in Sheung Wan, where historical buildings offer insight into Hong Kong’s early immigrant living conditions, temple functions, and the impact of plague on the city’s medical system.

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Tour overview

Step into Sheung Wan, where colonial governance, community organisation, and medical innovation shaped the foundations of modern Hong Kong. This guided walking tour traces the city’s early struggles with disease, public health, and social care, revealing how institutions emerged in response to crisis and necessity.

Beginning at Possession Street — the symbolic starting point of British rule — we explore how colonial authorities and Chinese elites negotiated power, welfare, and responsibility. Along narrow lanes and quiet gardens, you’ll uncover stories of plague outbreaks, burial rituals, charity networks, and the rise of Chinese-led institutions that challenged and complemented colonial systems.

From ancestral halls repurposed for community use to pioneering hospitals and medical museums, this tour shows how medicine became a battleground for trust, identity, and survival. Through these spaces, Sheung Wan emerges not just as a historic neighbourhood, but as a living archive of how Hong Kong learned to care for its people.

  • Learn how colonial rule and Chinese community leadership shaped Hong Kong’s early medical and welfare systems.

  • Explore sites linked to epidemics, public health reforms, and the birth of modern medicine in the city.

  • Discover the origins of Tung Wah Hospital and its crucial role in Chinese healthcare and social support.

  • Visit heritage buildings that reveal changing attitudes towards disease, death, and public hygiene.

  • Gain insight into how medical institutions reflected broader tensions between tradition, science, and colonial authority.

Selected highlights

Some of the points of interest include:

Possession Street

In 1841 the Union Jack flag was planted on Possession St, and claimed Hong Kong Island for the Crown.

Kwong Fuk Ancestral Hall

Founded by local merchants and residents in 1851, this temple houses the ancestral tablets of mainland Chinese who died in Hong Kong.

Pound Lane Public Toilet

Founded by local merchants and residents in 1851, this temple houses the ancestral tablets of mainland Chinese who died in Hong Kong. Pound Lane Public Toilet – One of Hong Kong’s earliest public sanitation facilities, reflecting the city’s efforts to improve hygiene and prevent disease.

Blake Garden

Blake Garden commemorates the outbreak of the the Bubonic plague, one of the most disastrous calamities that afflicted Hong Kong for three decades.

Tung Wah Hospital

The first western hospital to provide Chinese medicine services in China, the bedrock of Tung Wah Group of Hospitals (TWGHs), which is an important part of Hong Kong's societal development.

Hong Kong Museum of Medical Sciences

Formerly the Bacteriological Institute, it was dedicated to combating plague and infectious diseases, offering insights into the history of public health and medical development in Hong Kong.

History

  • Junior Secondary (Secondary 2)
    • Explain the characteristics of Chinese settlements, interethnic interactions, and the profound social impact of sanitary conditions in the late 19th century.
    • Recognise the significant impact of the plague on Hong Kong society and its medical system, and explain how architecture and policies evolved to meet social needs.
    • Explain how local Chinese leaders and medical professionals responded to public health crises and promoted a change in the status of the Chinese population, using Tung Wah Hospital as an example.

Tour Information

  • We reserve the right to make changes to the information, prices and itineraries of the tours as set out in our website and all printed promotional materials. Provided that such changes have been made prior to the confirmation of a booking, such changes shall be binding on the participants.
  • Any information or advice provided by us on matters including but not limited to walking routes, climate, clothing, travel documents, baggage, special equipment, etc. is given in good faith but without responsibility on the part of us.
  • All information provided on our website is correct to the best of our knowledge, but we cannot assure that such information would be free from errors or omission and we shall assume no responsibilities for any such errors of omission.
  • Our website may contain hyperlinks to other websites owned and operated by third parties. We have no control over, or associate with, such sites and we assume no responsibilities for the contents of such sites. The inclusion of such sites on our website does not imply our endorsement of such sites.
  • We do not warrant that our website would be free from computer viruses and we accept no liabilities or responsibilities for any loss or damage that may arise as a result.

Bad Weather Policy

  • If Typhoon Signal No. 8 or above, or a Red/Black Rainstorm Warning is issued three hours before the tour starts, the tour will be canceled.
  • If Typhoon Signal No. 8 or a Red/Black Rainstorm Warning is issued during the tour, the tour will be canceled immediately.
  • If the tour needs to be canceled due to other adverse weather conditions, we will contact you by phone at least 2.5 hours before the tour. (If there is no response, we will follow up with an SMS or email.)
  • If the tour is canceled due to adverse weather on the day, we will work with you to reschedule a new date within six months from the original tour date.

Tour Reminder

  • Please wear comfortable clothing and shoes for the walk. Bring an umbrella, a bottle of water and some snacks just in case.
  • Each participant may bring their own 3.5mm plug headphone if they have one for the wireless transmitter/receiver system which will be used on the tour. The guide will provide them a new one otherwise, but for hygienic and environmental reasons participants are strongly suggested to bring their own earphones if possible.
  • There is a possibility that our organization may take photographs or videos during the guided tour, and these captured images or footage may be used for future promotion and publicity. If participants do not agree with this arrangement, please inform the tour guide or organizer during registration and on the day of the event.
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