Tai Po Market or Tai Po Hui is the name of the non-administrative area within the modern day Tai Po New Town in the Tai Po District, in the New Territories, Hong Kong. However, its exact location changed from time to time. It is considered as the town centre of the non-administrative area known as just Tai Po. The area was established as a market town, which closely related to the modern day residential and commercial area Tai Po Old Market and had some relation with the present-day area Tai Wo. However, all three area are not overlap, and divided by Lam Tsuen River or Tai Po Tai Wo Road. Tai Po Market, Tai Po Old Market and Tai Wo Estate are all within modern day Tai Po New Town.
History
The first Tai Po Hui was established by the Tang clanTai Po Tau branch in the Qing dynasty. In Kangxi Year edition of , the market town was also known as Tai Po Tau Hui. In Jiaqing Year edition of the book, the place was known as Tai Po Hui. The market town was located in the northern shore of the Lam Tsuen river mouth. However, non-Tang villages formed their own alliance, and established Tai Wo Shi in the south shore of the river. The alliance also built a bridge to connect the two market towns in 1896. Before the establishment of Tai Wo Shi, non-Tang villages were forbidden to establish shops in Tang's Tai Po Hui by the Qing government. It was said Tai Po Hui was one of the three major market towns of Hong Kong in the early Qing dynasty. The area around the two Tai Po market towns, as well as other minor market towns, were leased to the British Empire in 1898. The region is now known as the New Territories. The colonial government built the Tai Po Market railway station next to the Tai Wo Shi in 1913. The District Office of the colonial Hong Kong government, also within the proximity of both new and old Tai Po Hui. In modern day, the area around, the heart of the former Tai Wo Shi, was known as just Tai Po Hui, while the first market town of Tai Po, was known as Tai Po Kau Hu instead. However, the usage of Tai Po Hui / Tai Po Market also extended to area that covered that modern day election constituency Tai Po Hui, which included the 1960s built,, as well as. The railway station, also moved to the current site, east of the former place in the 1980s. To add more confusion to the name, government also opened an indoor wet market in in 2004, while its former location, was redeveloped into a public housing estate, where they are near to the Fu Shin Street. The two locations were belongs to the aforementioned Tai Po Hui constituency.
Tai Po Market (Tai Po Hui, formerly Tai Wo Shi)
Tai Wo Shi, at modern day, was established in 1892. The market town was later known as Tai Po Hui. The street currently consisted of post-Qing dynasty buildings, except a well and a Man Mo Temple. The temple, at the heart of the Fu Shin Street, is a declared monument of Hong Kong. The former railway station of the market town, was converted into Hong Kong Railway Museum in the 1980s. The market town Tai Wo Shi displaced the old Tai Po market town as the rural town centre of the area, which also took the ownership of the name Tai Po Hui. Some author credited the displacement was due to the accessibility of the new market. The New Territoriescircular road passes through Tai Wo Shi as Kwong Fuk Road, which connects to Tai Po Road in the south and in the north in the past, was constructed in the colonial area of the New Territories. Tai Po was one of the market towns that was selected to be expanded into a satellite town in 1972.
Tai Po Old Market (Tai Po Kau Hui)
Tai Po Old Market, in Xin'an Xianzhi, was also listed as villages along with Tai Po Tau. The former market town, which was established in 1672, was unable to observe in the modern day Tai Po Old Market. A Tin Hau Temple existed in the modern day Tai Po Old Market. The temple was established by the Tang clan Tai Po Tau branch before 1691. It was said an ancestral temple, the Temple of the Filial Son was demolished in the 1970s.