In 1898, Cheung Chau was leased to the
United Kingdom for 99 years (till 1997) under the
Second Convention of Peking, alongside some 200 other
outlying islands and the
New Territories. The island thus became part of
British Hong Kong. At that time, the island was mainly a
fishing village and had more residents living on
junks than on land. Cheung Chau had already been settled by people from other places in
Southern China; for example,
Hoklo, they are mainly fishing people;
Hakka people;
Chiu Chau; and
Yue Ca. The island slowly evolved into a commercial hub with merchants selling supplies to the local fishing people, boat repair and fishing gear as well as the place to do business for fishing people and small farmers of other nearby islands like
Lantau Island. At the time of the 1911 census, the population of Cheung Chau, both land and boat based, was 7,686. The number of males was 4,519. From the late-1990s to the early-2000s, a spate of suicide cases (usually by
charcoal-burning) took place inside rental holiday flats of the island's Bela Vista Villa on Tung Wan beach, seeing more than 25 suicide attempts and 20 deaths by 2008. Local newspapers soon dubbed the island "Death Island" and stories concerning
apparitions appeared. In 2005,
Islands District councillor Lam Kit-sing suggested converting the notorious villa into a
macabre tourist attraction, proposing a "ghost town" with a "charcoal-burning museum", Halloween-style fairs, and "haunted" flats for people to stay in. The plans quickly received strong opposition from residents, villa owners, and his fellow councillors, including criticism that they might create
copycat suicides. ==Sights==