All things old China - books, anecdotes, stories, podcasts, factoids & ramblings from the author Paul French

Talking Macao on ABC Radio National’s Late Night Live

Posted: June 24th, 2025 | No Comments »

Talking all things Macao old & new, as well as of course my new collection Destination Macao (Blacksmith Books), with David Marr on ABC Radio National’s Late Night Live…. click here

https://www.abc.net.au/listen/programs/latenightlive/macau-the-portuguese-city-in-southern-china-paul-french/105436538

Kowloon Tong’s Art Deco Legacy… SCMP Post Magazine

Posted: June 23rd, 2025 | No Comments »

My cover story in this weekend’s South China Morning Post magazine – the oft-overlooked art-deco treasures of Kowloon Tong (image by Jocelyn Tan)….link coming soon


Royal Asiatic Society Beijing Youtube – Paul French & Frances Wood Talk Wallis in China

Posted: June 22nd, 2025 | No Comments »

The video of myself and Frances talking about Wallis’s year in China, my book, China in the 1920s, all those nasty rumours around the abdication and a bonus – Frances’s own link to the Duchess!!

Click here to watch


‘Sweetheart’ silk panel, Shanghai 1927-28

Posted: June 21st, 2025 | No Comments »

British military embroidered ‘sweetheart’ silk panel and black and white photographic portrait Second Battalion the Suffolk Regiment, Shanghai Force 1927, ‘Defence China 1928. The Second Battalion, Suffolk Regiment, was ordered to China from Gibraltar in late 1926. The unit became part of the Shanghai Defence Force, an international force intended to protect the International Settlement during a period of unrest in China. It was a frenetic time – Chiang Kai-shek’s Northern Expedition and the Shanghai Massacre of 1927. After their time in Shanghai, the Second Battalion was sent to India in 1929.


Lionel Jupp’s Extraordinary China Life and Photos

Posted: June 20th, 2025 | No Comments »

Englishman Lionel Jupp (1878-1951) first arrived in China in 1895 and settled in Shanghai where he worked for S Moutrie, the musical instrument manufacturers and sellers who operated all over China, Japan and South East Asia (see previous posts on Moutrie here). He served in the volunteer Second British Brigade that was organised over concerns about the Boxers in 1900.

Jupp was also a great self-promoter and willing to comment to the newspapers on just about anything – tariffs!, Japanese aggression in 1910 etc. At some point he moved north and took over the management of the Empire Theatre, Tientsin (Tianjin)* and the Pavilion Theatre in Peking (which was, I think, actually a cinema). He then left China and went to America in 1917 where he publicly announced he was joining the British Army to fight in the First World War.

*The original Empire Theatre was destroyed by fire in 1921, rebuilt and is now the Tianjin Concert Hall – see below at bottom

While in Tientsin he also took up photography and made the slightly eccentric posed photos using his Chinese household staff below…. I assume some were used to promote the theatres or for amateur theatrical as they were posed as famous British music hall characters – Dan Leno – or in slapstick style japes. Jupp was the Secretary and Treasurer of the Tientsin Amateur Dramatic Club in the early 1920s when these photos were taken. And also below what appear to be some studies of street people in Tientsin (where the photos were developed at the Kodak Shop…).

Jupp retired and left China in 1924 after nearly 30 years in China (less WW1)

The Tianjin Concert Hall, formerly the Empire Theatre (1922)


Wallis Simpson in Essex – Sunday 29th June, 12,00pm (& the tale of Monkhams Hall)

Posted: June 19th, 2025 | No Comments »

I’ll be at the Essex Book Festival on Sunday 29th June, 12,00pm to tell story of Wallis Simpson’s controversial year in China, 1924-1925. The event will be in the amazing Layer Marney Tower near Colchester, built as a statement house by Henry, 1st Lord Marney, Henry VIII’s Lord Privy Seal, in the 1520s.

But I find wherever I got to talk there’s a Wallis link – Baltimore (born there), DC (lived there), NYC (partied there), Hong Kong (lived there too), Shanghai (of course), Beijing (lived there as well) and of course London. I’ve blogged before on Wallis’s links to Felixstowe in Suffolk (here, and I’m speaking there on the 28th) but what about Essex?

Well apparently one of the Prince of Wales’s little bolt holes with Wallis was Monkhams Hall, near Waltham Abbey in Essex, owned by one of Edward’s equerry’s. Sadly it’s been hacked up into apartments now (and is now private, which doesn’t matter as the interiors have all been thoroughly sterilized aesthetically) now but back then the house, built in 1824, was approached along a private, tree-lined driveway that eventually revealed a three winged stately home with gardens and an ornate fish pond.

Here it is now and below in 1938….


City of Devils Shanghai Walk

Posted: June 18th, 2025 | No Comments »

This coming Saturday (June 21, 2025 – 2pm), it’s the City of Devils tour with Historic Shanghai….

Based on my book City of Devils: A Shanghai Noir, you’ll be taken on a walk through the places and traces of the wild and wonderful story of Jack Riley, Joe Farren, and interwar, underworld Shanghai.

To get you in the proper frame of mind, here‘s Historic Shanghai’s 2020 interview with me on City of Devils, all about gangsters, Old Shanghai’s soundscape, rumor and gossip, and reading recs.

To book tickets and more info – info@historic-shanghai.com 

https://www.historic-shanghai.com/the-interview-paul…

To book the walk: https://jinshuju.com/f/b8cRF4


Talking Wallis with the World History Encyclopedia

Posted: June 17th, 2025 | No Comments »

Wow! Some people take on big projects!! A World History Encyclopedia!! And here’s my interview with them…. here (and if you can’t find time to read, there’s an audio link too….