Colonial Hong Kong
The World’s Freest Country
Although nominally a British colony, Seventies Hong Kong enjoyed total autonomy and a fully free market economy under limited government. While mainland China was still in the late stages of the Cultural Revolution after Henry Kissinger’s initial contact, Hong Kong’s gross product exceeded that of all Chna.
Although large numbers of Chinese refugees swarmed into Hong Kong, its economy enabled them to make the most of their entrepreneurial spirit.


An Overcrowded Haven
L: Happy Valley Racetrack was virtually the only large open space in a city that consumed most of the space on its small island.










Niches for nature
Even then, the city had a few open spaces that offered relief from the crowds





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The refugees
L: These tenements housed Chinese refugees. Though there was little space for each person, life was infinitely preferable le to starvation on the mainland.






Around town
As an expatriate elite gave way to a rising local commercial class, Hong Kong became a chaotic mixture of new and old
























Tiger Balm gardens
Tiger Balm Garden, originally built as an advertisement fro a nineteenth-century liniment by Aw Boon Haw.






On the water
Because Hong Kong was located on islands at the mouth of the Pearl River, much of the city’s culture flows from the sea






























