Double Island, Hong Kong

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File:Doubleisland.png
Location of Double Island in Hong Kong
File:Wong Wan Chau.jpg
View of Wong Wai Sai Teng (Template:Zh), a 136m high hill on Wong Wan Chau, from across Wong Wan (Template:Zh) bay.
File:Tung Wan, Double Island 12 Tung Wan, Double Island.jpg
Beach at Tung Wan (Template:Zh) of Double Island.
File:Tung Wan, Double Island 21 Port Island & Wong Chuk Kok Tsui & Double Island.jpg
Coast of Double Island at Tung Wan (Template:Zh).

Double Island or Wong Wan Chau (Template:Zh) is an island located in the north-eastern part of Hong Kong. Administratively, it is part of North District. Template:TOC limit

Geography

Double Island has an area of 2.13 km².[1] It is the second largest island in North District, the largest being Crooked Island. Its highest point is at 139 m.[2] Its western coast is facing Double Haven.

Wong Wan (Template:Zh) is a bay of Double Island. It is one of the 26 designated marine fish culture zones in Hong Kong.[3]

Conservation

Double Island became part of the Plover Cove (Extension) Country Park in 1979.[4]

Facilities

  • Outward Bound Hong Kong Adventure Base

History

Typhoon of 1858

It is wrongly suggested that it was the Double Island in Hong Kong's Double Haven (Yan Chau Tong, Template:Zh) where the September Typhoon of 1858 destroyed several well-known opium clippers, including the Anonyma, Gazelle, Pantaloon, and Mazeppa. Basil Lubbock's The Opium Clippers, cited in the original entry, is quite clear (p.347) that the Double Island in question was that at what was then called Swatow (today Shantou). The island is one of two that lie in the entrance to the river at Shantou and is the inner one, then called Masu. Today it is called Mayu (Template:Zh). For corroboration see Mayers & Dennys,[5] for the identity of Double Island. For the typhoon and the damage to the vessels, The Courier (Hobart, Tasmania), 22 December 1858, p.3 for a report of Mr Midwood, of the Commissariat service, resident on Double Island during the typhoon.

See also

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References

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  1. Survey and Mapping Office, Lands Department: Hong Kong geographic data sheet
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  4. Agriculture, Fisheries and Conservation Department: Plover Cove Country Park
  5. William Frederick Mayers and Nicholas Belfield Dennys, The Treaty Ports of China and Japan (Hong Kong: Shortrede, 1867), p.236