Update | From bullets to cash machines, HSBC’s 151-year history is closely aligned with the evolution of Hong Kong
HSBC has been part of Hong Kong life for 151 years, through two world wars and numerous economic crises. As one of the three note-issuing banks in the city, its logo is a familiar sight in wallets, while the two bronze lions, Stephen and Stitt, that guard its building and symbolise wealth and power, are icons in the city.
The bank’s founder was Thomas Sutherland, a Scotsman working in Hong Kong for a shipping firm. It started business on March 3, 1865, at a building at 1 Queen’s Road Central, a site it still occupies today.
The current building has an uninterrupted view of Victoria harbour, which according to Chinese traditional feng shui practise is vital for bringing wealth.
The two lions, meanwhile, would have a few tales of their own to tell if they could, including a near brush with “death”.
They were commissioned by the bank from a Shanghai-based British sculptor in 1935 for its then new Hong Kong headquarters building, which was the first air-conditioned building in the city.