Wheelock and Company

Wheelock and Company Limited is a Hong Kong-based financial real estate company. It was listed as #1249 on the Forbes 2000 list.

Wheelock and Company Limited
Public
Traded asSEHK: 20
Industry
  • Property development
  • Property investment
Founded1927 (1927)
Headquarters,
Area served
Hong Kong, Singapore
Key people
Douglas Woo (chairman and MD)[1]
Subsidiaries
Websitewww.wheelockcompany.com

The group's principal activities are property investment, property development, property management and agency, and investment holding. The group is also involved in distribution and retail businesses including Lane Crawford, Joyce and City'super. Operations are carried out in Hong Kong, the British Virgin Islands, the People's Republic of China and Singapore.

History

Wheelock and Company was created from the purchase of Wheelock and Marden Company Limited, a British Hong founded as Shanghai Tug and Lighter Limited in 1857 in Shanghai by Captain Thomas Reed Wheelock (born St. Stephen, New Brunswick 1843 – died 1920, Shanghai, China).[2] G.E. Marden founded Marden and Company in 1925 and merged with Thomas Wheelock's tug company to form Wheelock and Marden Company Limited in 1932. The new company operated other ships and later moved their operations to Hong Kong following World War II. The new company diversified from transportation to custom's clearing, container delivery, warehousing and travelling. Marden's son John L. Marden was once the head of the company. It was acquired by local tycoon Sir Yue-Kong Pao in 1985. Captain Wheelock married Edith Haswell Clarke in 1872 and had several children, including Geoffrey Wheelock and Florence Wheelock Ayscough.[3][4] Wheelock came to China following his brother Robert. Wheelock retired in 1889 to spend time in Boston and St. Andrew, New Brunswick.[3] Wheelock's departure from China was short and returned in 1897[3] died in 1920 in Shanghai.

Operations

Today's Wheelock and Company is a holding company with principal interests in real estate in Hong Kong, Singapore, China, and the UK. The company develops hotels, housing, and shopping centers through primary subsidiary The Wharf (Holdings) (of which Wheelock owns nearly half), as well as Wheelock Properties (more than 70%-owned). In addition to its property holdings, Wharf has interests in cable television, Internet access, and telecommunications providers in Hong Kong. Wharf also owns more than two-thirds of Modern Terminals, a shipping terminal operator in southern China.

gollark: My server randomly got assigned a different internal IPv4 address.
gollark: Good news, osmarks.net restored.
gollark: As in, what caused me to make that inference or what do I think the cause of the issue was?
gollark: Good news: the IP is right. Bad news: either I am now behind CGNAT or the router thing is wrong.
gollark: The cursor is slightly jittery and it may be taking as much as 100ms to do things.

See also

References

  1. Dominique Nguy (16 August 2016). "Wheelock sticks by home price forecast". The Standard. Retrieved 13 November 2016.
  2. Conclusion
  3. Shen, Lindsay (2012). "Knowledge is Pleasure: Florence Ayscough in Shanghai". ISBN 9789888139590. Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  4. Florence in SFU Digitized Collections, Simon Fraser University, Coll. Canada's Early Women Writers
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.