- Yip Hon
Yip Hon (葉漢,born 1905 death
7 May 1997 ) was agambling tycoon inSouth China . His wealth was estimated to beHK$ 100 million. In his childhood, he stayed inKong Mun ofKwangtung and usually participated in gambling with hispocket money . He got a nick of "Kwai Wong" (鬼王), namely "Ghost King". [citebook|title=Blood Brothers: Crime, Business and Politics in Asia |author= Bertil Lintner|year= 2002|publisher=Allen & Unwin| pages=112|id=ISBN 1865084190|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=7NRQP0fDhekC&pg=RA1-PA112&ots=3hIQlfPZwW&dq=%22Yip+Hon%22&as_brr=3&ie=ISO-8859-1&output=html&sig=Y0somHZe1vi7Z6mBqOOkge6BzLM]In his adulthood, he was in
Macau and worked for acasino of gambling tycoonFu Lo Yung (傅老榕) and helped to crack down "Teng Sik Tong" (聽骰黨), a gang ofgambler s won by listeningdice . After the crack down, he became famous and went toShanghai . He gained a great sum of wealth in the casinos there by his technique in listening dice and opened his own casino.He closed his business in Shanghai and returned to Macau when the
Second Sino-Japanese War broke out. He soon got a casino license in Macau. He cooperated withStanley Ho ,Teddy Yip andHenry Fok to form Casino Lisboa. He later left the company after arguments over shares and the business. He then started a business in chariot racing and failed in the end. In 1988, he pioneered a gambling business inInternational waters by renting a cruiseshipPrincess of the Orient . He gained an initial success but was unable to deal with a large number of competitors later. He subsequently sold his business to Heung's Brothers.A story about him was that in the mid-1980s, he was gambling in Las Vegas in the
United States . He supposedly played for 32 hours continuously involving more than 3800 rounds ofBaccarat and ended up losing US$ 2 million. The owner of the casino offered him a Rolls-Royce if he could win back a million. Two days after, he won US$3 million, and the car, from the casino.He had a heart attack and died on 7th May 1997, at the age of 93, during research he was undertaking on horse-racing.
ee also
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Gambling in Macau References
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