Hongkong Post | |
Type: | Trading fund |
Genre: | Postal service |
Founder: | Royal Mail |
Location City: | Hong Kong |
Location: | Hongkong Post Headquarters, 2 Connaught Place Central[1] |
Key People: | Leonia Tai, Postmaster General and General Manager of the Post Office Trading Fund |
Area Served: | Hong Kong |
Industry: | Post, philately |
Products: | Mail delivery, philatelic products |
Services: | Postal services, philatelic services |
Revenue: | HKD$4,784,000,000 (2021/22) |
Num Employees: | 5,951 (2022) |
Parent: | Government of Hong Kong |
Owner: | Government of Hong Kong |
J: | Hoeng1 Gong2 Jau4 Zing3 |
Y: | Hēung góng yàuh jing |
P: | Xiānggǎng Yóuzhèng |
Also Known As: | Post Office |
T2: | 郵政署 |
S2: | 邮政署 |
J2: | jau4 zing3 cyu5 |
P2: | Yóuzhèngshǔ |
Hongkong Post is a government department of Hong Kong responsible for postal services, though operated as a trading fund. Founded in 1841, it was known as Postal Department or Post Office[2] before the handover of Hong Kong in 1997. It has been a sub-member of the Universal Postal Union since 1877, and is a separate entity from China Post.
Merchants traded in Hong Kong on the two sides of Victoria Harbour as early as before the British possession in 1842. They complained about the absence of proper postal services and therefore the Postal Department was established.
The department was founded on 28 August 1841, but the first post office (known as 書信館 at that time), situated near the current site of St. John's Cathedral, opened on 12 November 1841. At first, its right to operation belonged to the Royal Mail, until its transfer to the Postmaster General on 1 May 1860.
On 8 December 1862, the office issued the first set of Hong Kong postal stamps. Before this time, only British troops in Hong Kong could use British stamps, while other local residents did not have access to British stamps. Until the handover of Hong Kong to China in 1997, mail for British forces serving in the then-colony used the British Forces Post Office number, BFPO 1.[3]
The office introduced automated mail sorting in 1989, and machines were installed in the General Post Office.[4]
There is no post code system in Hong Kong, although one has been under consideration since 2000.[5]
Since August 1995, the office has operated as a trading fund and the full title of the head of the Office became "Postmaster General and general manager of the Post Office Trading Fund" .
See main article: Postage stamps and postal history of Hong Kong. During the colonial era, Hong Kong produced postage stamps simply bearing the name Hong Kong, printed alongside the likenesses (in profile) of the reigning monarchs of the United Kingdom, or royal symbols (for example, "EIIR").
Since Hong Kong's transfer of sovereignty to China in 1997, stamps issued have borne the name "Hong Kong, China". British Hong Kong postage stamps are no longer valid for prepayment of postage and cannot be repurchased by the Post Office.
See main article: List of Hong Kong post offices. As of 2023, Hongkong Post operates 122 post offices (including 3 mobile post offices) throughout Hong Kong.[6] The detailed locations and opening hours of the post offices are on the Hongkong Post website.
In mid-2021, Hongkong Post launched iPostal Kisok which offers an automated posting service and enables the public to post mail, purchase postage label and make postage enquiry round-the clock.[7] As of July 2023, there are 23 kiosks located across the city.[8]
Hong Kong imported post-boxes from the UK until the practice was discontinued in the 1980s. Before 1997, the post boxes were painted red, as in the United Kingdom, and were engraved with the royal cypher – for example, "EIIR" to represent Queen Elizabeth II. According to fans of Hong Kong's history, featuring the regal insignia on many of the George V and George VI post boxes in Hong Kong are unique as they are different in design from other British post boxes in the world. Since the transfer of sovereignty to China in 1997, the livery of the boxes became green, and were adorned with the new Hongkong Post logo.[9]
As of October 2015, there are 1,148 free-standing post-boxes in Hong Kong; only 59 colonial post boxes bearing the royal insignia were still in service.[9] In late 2014 Hongkong Post reaffirmed its policy that the remaining 59 colonial-era post boxes would only be replaced if they were seriously damaged or no longer meet the demand of its customers.[10]
This department of government said in March 2015 that it was considering covering up the regal insignia on these post boxes, on grounds that it was "not desirable to have postboxes that show various royal cyphers from different British reigns" and to "avoid confusion". Controversy ignited in September upon confirmation that royal cyphers would be covered up by fixing metal plates on all but seven of the historical post boxes. The decision was decried by the Conservancy Association, the Mailboxes Searching Team, and activists opposed to the push of pro-Beijing politicians to "de-colonialise" Hong Kong.[11] [12] According to legislator Claudia Mo of the Civic Party, senior HK Post officials she talked with affirmed that the order to obscure regal insignia on the 59 colonial post boxes came from the Commerce and Economic Development Bureau (CEDB), which Mo said pointed to a political and not administrative decision.[12]
In addition to making its income from traditional postal delivery, Hongkong Post also sells philatelic products, and is used by the Government and utility companies to accept payment from customers.
Hongkong Post Stamps was a division set up in 1974, charged with promoting and popularising stamp collecting, to meet the ever-increasing demand for Hong Kong stamps by collectors. The division conducts three main areas of work:
Owing to the territory's conservative stamp-issuing policy, stamp collecting in Hong Kong is a popular hobby. Different types of attractively designed stamp products are also popular with stamp collectors around the world.
Since 2000, Hongkong Post is a recognized root certificate authority and issues digital certificates under the trade name "e-Cert".[13]
Hongkong Post also provides services listed below:
1 | T. G. Fitzgibbon | 25 August 1841 | Clerk-in-Charge | |
2 | D. Mullaly | 8 October 1841 | ||
3 | Robert Edwards | April 1842 | ||
4 | F. Spring | 1843 | ||
5 | Thomas Jackson Scales | April 1844 | ||
6 | Thomas Hyland 海蘭 | 1846 | ||
7 | William Chapman | 14 May 1857 | ||
8 | Francis William Mitchell 蔑祖 | 24 November 1862 | ||
9 | Alfred Lister 李士達 | 24 April 1875 | ||
10 | Arthur Kennedy Travers 剌花士 | 1 January 1891 | ||
11 | Alexander MacDonald Thomson 譚臣 | 17 October 1896 | ||
12 | Cmdr. William Charles Holland Hastings 夏士廷 | 15 February 1899 | Died in office | |
13 | Lewis Audley Marsh Johnston 尊士頓 | 23 January 1903 | Died in office | |
14 | Charles McIlvaine Messer 馬沙 | 18 November 1908 | ||
15 | Edward Dudley Corscaden Wolfe 胡樂甫 | 19 April 1913 | ||
16 | Stewart Buckle Carne Ross 羅士 | 1 February 1917 | ||
17 | Michael James Breen 巴連 | 22 March 1924 | ||
18 | Geoffrey Robley Sayer 佘義 | 28 April 1928 | ||
19 | Norman Lockhart Smith 史美 | 12 October 1928 | ||
(17) | Michael James Breen 巴連 | 7 February 1930 | Second time | |
20 | Eric William Hamilton 韓美頓 | 18 July 1931 | ||
(17) | Michael James Breen 巴連 | 21 April 1932 | Third time | |
21 | William James Carrie 嘉利 | 3 June 1933 | ||
(17) | Michael James Breen 巴連 | 22 February 1934 | Fourth time | |
22 | Henry Robert Butters 畢打士 | 23 March 1936 | ||
23 | Edward Irvine Wynne-Jones 榮鐘士 | 12 December 1936 | ||
24 | Robert Andrew Dermod Forrest 富勵士 | 12 January 1940 | ||
(23) | Edward Irvine Wynne-Jones 榮鐘士 | 10 January 1941 | Second time | |
Hong Kong under Japanese occupation from 25 December 1941 to 15 August 1945 | ||||
(23) | Edward Irvine Wynne-Jones 榮鐘士 | 13 June 1946 | Third time | |
25 | John Henry Burkill Lee 李佐安 | 23 February 1948 | ||
26 | Leonard Charles Saville 沙惠予 | 8 March 1950 | ||
27 | Alfred George Crook 高旭 | 1 August 1958 | ||
28 | Cecil George Folwell 符偉略 | 22 March 1968 | ||
29 | Malki Addi 魏達賢 | 19 March 1971 | First non-European | |
30 | David John Kyle Bamford 潘富達 | 7 March 1977 | ||
31 | Arthur Cyril Heathcote 許富國 | 8 January 1980 | ||
32 | Hugh Gordon Ardley 歐德理 | 23 December 1982 | ||
33 | Gordon K. C. Siu 蕭炯柱 | 18 March 1988 | First ethnic Chinese | |
34 | Dominic S. W. Wong 黃星華 | 18 September 1989 | ||
35 | Michelangelo Pagliari 柏景年 | 11 May 1992 | ||
36 | Robert Footman 霍文 | 20 November 1995 | Last expatriate | |
37 | Luk Ping-chuen 陸炳泉 | 24 November 1998 | ||
38 | Allan Chiang Yam-wang 蔣任宏 | 31 March 2003 | ||
39 | Tam Wing-pong 譚榮邦 | 10 July 2006 | ||
40 | Clement Cheung Wan-ching 張雲正 | 14 September 2009 | ||
41 | Jessie Ting Yip Yin-mei 丁葉燕薇 | 3 October 2011 | First female | |
42 | Gordon Leung Chung-tai 梁松泰 | 10 July 2017 | ||
43 | Cathy Chu Man-ling 朱曼鈴 | 9 September 2019 | ||
44 | Leonia Tai Shuk-yiu戴淑嬈 | 2 September 2021 |