50 years of Plover Cove in pictures: how a sacrificed Hong Kong village rose from the ashes
An aerial view of the Plover Cove Reservoir in 1969 (above) and this year (bottom). Photos: David Ching, Dickson Lee
An aerial view of the Plover Cove Reservoir in 1969 (above) and this year (bottom). Photos: David Ching, Dickson Lee

Almost 50 years ago the people of Sam Mun Tsai lost their homes to Plover Cove Reservoir - but the past lives on in their new village

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In 1965, the 400 residents of Sam Mun Tsai were evicted from their homes, as the remote fishing village in Tai Po made way for a pioneering engineering project - the first ever reservoir carved from the sea: Plover Cove Reservoir.

Almost five decades on, hundreds of people who can trace their history to the lost village gathered in Sam Mun Tsai New Village, on an island less then 1km from their old home. As well as celebrating the Lunar New Year, they marked the 50th anniversary of the relocation of their ancestral village a little early - the actual date is not until July.

Joining the grand reunion were about 100 people who made an even more dramatic relocation, to Britain.

Now home to 2,000 people, the village made headlines in January when outsiders flocked to see a blue luminescent glow on its coastal waters. The spectacular sight was the result of an algal bloom caused by pollution.

But few visitors know the true story behind the village - that its tough fishermen sacrificed their way of life for the modern reservoir.

A look back through the South China Morning Post's photo archives offers a fascinating glimpse of the village that once stood.

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