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Hiram's Highway () is a road in Hong Kong. It connects the town of Sai Kung to the Clear Water Bay Road at Ta Ku Ling. It connects the Po Tung Road in the north. A new straightened road, the New Hiram's Highway, near Nam Wai was opened recently to provide an alternative route, bypassing a steep, bendy section of the original road. Unlike other roads in Hong Kong with the word "Highway" as part of their names, the Hiram's Highway is not a motorway. It earned its name from its reconstruction of a Japanese track in the immediate post Second World War years by the Royal Marines using Japanese prisoner of war labour. The road was a reward to the people of Sai Kung for their resistance during the occupation. The officer in charge of construction, Major John Wynne-Potts, was nicknamed Hiram because he shared the name "Potts" with the "Hiram K. Potts" American brand of tinned sausages, although an alternate story exists whereby the officer in charge was nicknamed for his "addiction" to the sausages.〔 The road was named after him, Hence "Hiram's Highway". ==See also== * List of streets and roads in Hong Kong 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Hiram's Highway」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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