Following the end of the British administration of Hong Kong in 1997, in 1998 the Diocese was succeeded by the Province of Hong Kong Sheng Kung Hui (commonly called the Hong Kong Anglican Church).
Hong Kong | University of Hong Kong | King Kong | Hong Kong Island | Legislative Council of Hong Kong | Hong Kong Polytechnic University | Hong Kong International Airport | Chinese University of Hong Kong | Kung Fu | Hong Kong First Division League | City University of Hong Kong | Kung Fu (TV series) | Chief Executive of Hong Kong | Hong Kong Sports Institute | Cinema of Hong Kong | Hans Küng | Kung Fu Hustle | Hui people | Hong Kong University of Science and Technology | Hong Kong dollar | District Councils of Hong Kong | Outlying Islands, Hong Kong | Kung Fu: The Legend Continues | Kung Fu Panda | King Kong (2005 film) | Hui | Hong Kong Coliseum | National Cheng Kung University | Japanese occupation of Hong Kong | Government of Hong Kong |
When it was founded, students of the college had their lessons in the Anglican St. John's Cathedral and the Anglican St. Paul's Co-educational College, with sponsorhsip from the United Board for Christian Higher Education in Asia of the United States, The Lingnan Foundation based in New York, and Association of Christian Universities and Colleges in Asia of London.
Peter Kwong Kong-kit GBS (Traditional Chinese: 鄺廣傑) was the Bishop of Hong Kong and Macau (1981) and, in 1998, was named as the first Archbishop of Hong Kong, Primate of Hong Kong Sheng Kung Hui (i.e. Anglican Church) and Bishop of the Diocese of Hong Kong Island.
This project was launched under a joint venture set up by both Hong Kong Sheng Kung Hui and Cheung Kong Holdings in 1993.
After passage at Legco, the school-based management policy ran into fierce oppositions from the Catholic, Anglican, Methodist and other major church organisations whose schools make up to one quarter of all schools in Hong Kong.