As the narrator says, that is the Cenotaph. It is dedicated to British soldiers who died in WWI (when WWI broke out, a group of mostly British young men left Singapore to fight in the war). A dedication to those who died in WWII was later added to the reverse side of the Cenotaph. The Lim Bo Seng memorial looks like a little Pagoda, very different from the Cenotaph.
Awesome video! Singapore looked surprisingly modern, good to see some familiar buildings like St. Andrew's church, the Raffles hotel. My grandmother was a teenager at the time!
Noteworthy, SG’s Lee Kuan Yew made it Policy to Marginalise & Oppress SG’s Muslims… It is Only AFTER LKY was caught red handed in 2010 & Paraded like a Common Street Criminal at SG’s Sikh Police Temple that SG Government Now Covertly taking steps to correct LKY’s Predatory Bad Habits & Racist Policies against Minorities….
this is great! Being a Singaporean and a video editor, its great to see some of the buildings still standing at its original place, and funny to see how the video was edited in the pass.
Unfortunately it did not show the kampong side of Singapore, mainly how well it thrives and the nice "ah ma's" that care for caucasian children or the coolies at boat quay. But a good insight into how Singapore was like in 1938... Thanks for putting this up!
wonder if there are any 80 or 90 year old you-tubers out there who saw this video...it must bring back so much memories. even for me, the sights of workers walking on planks with loads of goods on their shoulders brought back many fond memories of my childhood living next to boat quay
That was when "Bak Kut Teh" (pork bone soup/tea)) was born. Imagine having "Bak Kut Teh" without meat. That those bones came without meat were discarded bones sourced from the butcher and cost little. The enterprising Teochew hawkers added a lot of pepper and garlic and boiled it for hours into a broth that's heavenly. The main customers are the "coolies' (bare bodied men with strength of an ox) and it all started at River Valley Road which parallels Boat Quay docks side. The teh(tea) to counter the greasiness of the soup. The filler is of course is the big bowl of rice that comes with the soup. Eaten by the side of the road in squat position. What a life.
Singapore has changed soooo much! But the life in the past always appear better !! Those lucky souls who must have enjoyed the grand old peaceful times !!!
I am happy for being able to view these footages as it showed me what Singapore was liked when my great-grandfather first came to Singapore. The adults shown in these pictures might have passed on already and the kids might still be around. Singapore was and is still so beautiful. By the way, being ruled by the British was just something meant to happen sooner or later then because the world was so small. Now, with the advancement of technology, nobody should rule over anybody anymore.
at the end of the video the voice over says "a mighty guardian of the east" how much time did it take to be captured by the japanese? with a much smaller force too! its great that they saved these old videos. they are a joy to watch!
@sheeming The reference to the World War is the First World War (1914-1919). The Cenotaph was completed in 1922. The "stately Municipal Building, one of Singapore's newest constructions", was completed in 1929.
Thanks to this video,we can see that Singapore was a thriving cosmopolitan country already before the LKY govt came into power and was not a sleepy fishing village as described in the govt's narrative.
Sleepy fishing village is true. But it's in another era. It is like in ancient times before Sriwijaya came to power. Before the Trade Route from China to Middle East through sea in that region exist.
i like this video clip. i've seen most of the things shown except the rickshaws and the vintage cars, having grown up in the fifties. its unfortunate we do not have more such videos posted. singapore was such a relaxed city, its unfortunate this video did not show changi beach, one of my favourites. thats where the locals who are not club members go for a picnic and swim. how i miss the singapore of old................
A dedication to the soldiers who died in WWII was later added to the reverse side of the Cenotaph. The "Chopsticks" is the Civilian War Memorial dedicated to civilians who died during the Japanese Occupation - 4 pillars, 1 for each of the main races Chinese, Malay, Indian, Eurasians.
2:12 its says "singapore one of the cheapest shopping center in entire world".... Nowadays its not like that anymore singapore are one of the most expensive country in the entire world
At 5:09 one can see Sri Mariamman temple with the statue of two British Soldiers at the first roof tier. It seems now they have been replaced by Sepoys. Does any of you know the full story?
I may be wrong but the sound track and music appear as though they have been recently substituted and made to appear original. The narration accent is 'not quite right'.
I am sad with all angry comments written. So much anger and bitterness!! It is easy to sit in your chair and look back or condemn the government of Singapore - whether British or PAP. Have you heard of "armchair generals"?? I love Singapore and my heritage and am glad That I speak English thanks to the British and my Chinese thanks so my heritage.
Saya 33, dari Malaysia, yang masih ramai rakyat kaum Melayu Malaysia tidak mengetahui tentang hal ini, cuma saya saorang sahaja yang tahu sebab arwah atuk saya orang Singapura yang lahir pada tahun 1915 dahulu dan membesar di kawasan Geylang pada masa itu, saya warga Malaysia buat masa ini saya tinggal di Tmn Pelangi, Johor Bahru dan selama ini bekerja kat Singapura, tapi buat pada masa sekarang dah tersekat oleh covid19, saya terpaksa berihat kat rumah sebab pkp sampai bila pun belum tahu lagi, kalau tidak saya suka berjalan kat Singapura walau tidak bekerja atau bercuti kadang pergi ziarah kubur arwah atuk saya di perkuburan Islam Pusara Aman, Choa Chu Kang, Singapura, semasa kat Singapura saya bekerja di banyak tempat saperti di Woodlands, NTU, Science Park, Jurong / Tuas Industrial, East Coast Park, Pasir Panjang Distripark, Geylang Serai dan banyak tempat lagi, sekian sahaja, terima kasih!
I bought a Yamaha acoustic guitar and a Sony walkman in Singapore way back in 1980. There were so many beautiful and extravaganza shopping complexes and plazas at that time. Looking forward to visit Singapore again next year. God willing.
I beg to defer. I know some Singaporeans are proud and some like to list out the achievements of Singapore. But most of Singapore's achievements are there because Singaporeans, in general, are a very hard working lot. It's not fair to disregard the whole population as 'arrogant' because of a few boastful mouths.
The video focuses on the city centre in the south of SIngapore. He wasn't. Pasir Ris was a swamp. It isn't now. Maybe LKY was looking beyond the then commercialised areas. His team made the changes to the areas we now live in.
Not a tall building in sight and it looked more like a "Garden City" than it does now!!!Nice to be able to look at the sky without stretching the neck too far.
The cathedral is st Andrew's cathedral, not st George's as is suggested. I think this was a deliberate error, to steal Scotland's credit with regards to Singapore's early scottish pioneers. The cathedral was named st Andrew's ro recognise their contribution. I think what the director of this video has done is shocking,truly shocking.
great footage!!!! priceless!! one lorry didn't give way to the poor rickshaw man charge him (posthumously)) with failing to give way to major road rickshaw traffic!!!just look at those clean green electric trams..electric vehicles were more popular in those days, we have moved away from clean and green vehicles since then, are we going backwards in modernity now? wished the video lasted more than 11 mins!
"..the cheapest shopping centre in the world.." how times have changed since then.. as of 2020.. Singapore ranked as the most EXPENSIVE city to live in.
wowthse oldtemples restill heretoday in 2021 thechinesetemple siang lim see is at toa payoh andthe hundu one iss at south bridge road! and my father was onceoneofthose coolies who carriedte parcels from the bum boats ashore
This film was not shot in the 30s for sure. WWII and Japanese occupation was in early 40s. It's better for the uploader to edit the year of the film or it tarnishes the facts of such well-preserved video - smdragon Jan 14 2012 (Singapore)
My dad was posted to Singapore Sept 39 as RAF aircrew. He remembered being told that the Japanese would make poor night fighter pilots because of their eyesight! He also remembered being treated with great arrogance by the white women (he was a mere Flight Sgt) & was not allowed to enter Raffles by the front door! The superior aerodromes had grass runways so were unusable in Monsoon & no ground defence. He later escaped to Java & thence to India where he was chosen for a secret squadron.
The praised fortifications that made this the so-called "Gibraltar of the East" were ultimately useless when the Japanese attacked in 1941, and the comfortable life of "devoted" Chinese amahs for British residents would be ended with the surrender in 1942. When this movie was made, however, people believed such things could never happen.
Singapore is the cheapest city in the world....now it is very damn expensive!and from half a million population to a 5 million(maybe)is insane.BTW KEEP THIS VIDEO don't let it die,this video has rich moments and history
It must be a mistake. That is definitely St Andrew's Cathedral. St George's Church is also Anglican and also existed back then but it was and still is located in the Tanglin Village area.
because when you listen to the narrator he speaks about how Singapore is a fortress built by the British and that it was strongly defensible. this was in 1938 but 4 years later, the japanese invaded with a smaller force and captured it. so its funny, this supposed "fortress" fell so fast to the japanese.
You must give credit to a Malay Lieutenant named Adnan. He and his troops stalled the advancement of Japanese, giving the British enough time to escape. I hope to see a memoria, to his men on that Island to remember his sacrifice.
Me too! And I remember you and Peter. I worked at Jackson Wain with Rick Davis in the Chinese Chamber of Commerce building. A great time to be there wasn't it?
Not Fullerton hotel, it is Fullerton building not far from AIA building, Shellhouse near Finlayson Green, Clifford Pier, sometimes was call Johnson's pier too, if you were there, could see quite nice from the eastern morning cool breeze and evening western sunset view at that time, my late grand - pa have told me some story about the best of Singapore in the late 50's, before ended, I would like to congratulate and say thank's a lot to the PM Lee Shean Loong and all the cabinet ministers of Singapore, and also thank you to all my Singaporean friends, from me a Malay Muslim man 33, in Malaysia.
Ahhh... My mistake. My history is very very bad. As you would know, the effect on Singapore during WWI is almost none existence and so, that slipped my mind. There was only the 1915 mutiny by the British Indian troops garrisoned in Singapore that was recorded. I apologise to whoever is involved with the film.
That's true. The city generates heat. And the lack of wind and trees too. Try go to a small island in Indonesia and it's 1000 times more comfortable than SG.
+John Ong The migrants came to Singapore because the country the British founded was much better/safer and could offer a much better life than the countries they originated from (mainly china). The country and its infrastructure were very much developed by the time Singapore became independent. The notion that Singapore was a third world country under the british is nonsense and is mooted for political gain. It is important for a people to remember where they have come from and to celebrate that.
+John Ong There were plenty of wealthy Chinese living in beautiful houses. Plenty of Europeans living in slums in their own countries. By definition the Europeans in the colonies were wealthier.
@@johnong75 The vast majority of our ancestors came to Singapore after the arrival of the EIC and Raffles, not before. We need not to conjure up a "victim" mentality where none exists. Our forefathers were not brought in chains or press-ganged to come over here. They came willingly, often due to torrid conditions in their original homelands. Many ended up living mundane, dreary common lives. Is it not the same in any era? Many Asians made it very rich too! All in all, better the British colonial administration, with its relative benevolence and policy of non-interference, compared with contemporary empires such as the German Nazi Reich and the Japanese (Greater East Asia Co-Prosperity Sphere) empire.
old singapore is way more charming than the modern city it is today.. too bad they tear down all the beautiful colonial buildings as depicted in the clip
Do you wish to live in "old Singapore" or the present Singapore? Do you like to take rickshaws and trishaws or even bullock carts to work as labourers and Ah Mahs or driver Ahmads to the European families?
As the narrator says, that is the Cenotaph. It is dedicated to British soldiers who died in WWI (when WWI broke out, a group of mostly British young men left Singapore to fight in the war). A dedication to those who died in WWII was later added to the reverse side of the Cenotaph. The Lim Bo Seng memorial looks like a little Pagoda, very different from the Cenotaph.
Awesome video! Singapore looked surprisingly modern, good to see some familiar buildings like St. Andrew's church, the Raffles hotel. My grandmother was a teenager at the time!
I just saw my Tamil/Indian soldier appa marching !!!wow!😍😍😍
Film is good reminder that Singapore has always been a magnet for immigrants.
Noteworthy, SG’s Lee Kuan Yew made it Policy to Marginalise & Oppress SG’s Muslims… It is Only AFTER LKY was caught red handed in 2010 & Paraded like a Common Street Criminal at SG’s Sikh Police Temple that SG Government Now Covertly taking steps to correct LKY’s Predatory Bad Habits & Racist Policies against Minorities….
Truly fine quality short documentary. Excellent quality documentary photography. Thank you for a great look back. I just subscribed to your channel.
This is a wonderful glimpse into the past. I've visited Singapore 3 times and one day hope to live there.
THANK YOU for posting this!
this is great!
Being a Singaporean and a video editor, its great to see some of the buildings still standing at its original place, and funny to see how the video was edited in the pass.
Unfortunately it did not show the kampong side of Singapore, mainly how well it thrives and the nice "ah ma's" that care for caucasian children or the coolies at boat quay. But a good insight into how Singapore was like in 1938... Thanks for putting this up!
The less said about kampong the better....
Love those beautiful buildings, too bad most are gone with the wind!
Thank goodness GPO Clifford Pier and Raffles Hotel are standing tall 😆
this video clip is awesome !!!!
thank you so much
Fantastic video from the past...very clear on audio and visual...thanks😊👍
That was awesome memories & how time flies.....Thanks for sharing~
wonder if there are any 80 or 90 year old you-tubers out there who saw this video...it must bring back so much memories. even for me, the sights of workers walking on planks with loads of goods on their shoulders brought back many fond memories of my childhood living next to boat quay
That was when "Bak Kut Teh" (pork bone soup/tea)) was born. Imagine having "Bak Kut Teh" without meat. That those bones came without meat were discarded bones sourced from the butcher and cost little. The enterprising Teochew hawkers added a lot of pepper and garlic and boiled it for hours into a broth that's heavenly. The main customers are the "coolies' (bare bodied men with strength of an ox) and it all started at River Valley Road which parallels Boat Quay docks side. The teh(tea) to counter the greasiness of the soup. The filler is of course is the big bowl of rice that comes with the soup. Eaten by the side of the road in squat position. What a life.
Thanks for the nostalgic moments.
Such evocative and beautiful images. Thank you so much for this video.
Singapore has changed soooo much! But the life in the past always appear better !!
Those lucky souls who must have enjoyed the grand old peaceful times !!!
I am happy for being able to view these footages as it showed me what Singapore was liked when my great-grandfather first came to Singapore. The adults shown in these pictures might have passed on already and the kids might still be around. Singapore was and is still so beautiful. By the way, being ruled by the British was just something meant to happen sooner or later then because the world was so small. Now, with the advancement of technology, nobody should rule over anybody anymore.
at the end of the video the voice over says "a mighty guardian of the east" how much time did it take to be captured by the japanese? with a much smaller force too! its great that they saved these old videos. they are a joy to watch!
Watching this for my history class
@sheeming The reference to the World War is the First World War (1914-1919). The Cenotaph was completed in 1922. The "stately Municipal Building, one of Singapore's newest constructions", was completed in 1929.
Wait, we had BUILDINGS. And a thriving PORT? I thought we were a fishing village! What sorcery is this?
Impressive Film.. learned so much! Thank you!
These videos are great and how many more available at public domain website
Yes, those were the days......
Thanks to this video,we can see that Singapore was a thriving cosmopolitan country already before the LKY govt came into power and was not a sleepy fishing village as described in the govt's narrative.
Sleepy fishing village is true. But it's in another era. It is like in ancient times before Sriwijaya came to power. Before the Trade Route from China to Middle East through sea in that region exist.
Ah Ha, I think that you have to bear in mind the time frame reference. Was this movie made in 1819?
My grandmother was 10 at the time this happened in Singapore. She passed in 2015.
i like this video clip. i've seen most of the things shown except the rickshaws and the vintage cars, having grown up in the fifties.
its unfortunate we do not have more such videos posted. singapore was such a relaxed city, its unfortunate this video did not show changi beach, one of my favourites. thats where the locals who are not club members go for a picnic and swim.
how i miss the singapore of old................
watched the entire vid with mouth open. wow, we have really really come a long way.
Ang Cheng Ann I wish they didn’t destroy the architecture
enjoyed the vid a lot, thanks for posting
This video is amazing omg ♡
A dedication to the soldiers who died in WWII was later added to the reverse side of the Cenotaph. The "Chopsticks" is the Civilian War Memorial dedicated to civilians who died during the Japanese Occupation - 4 pillars, 1 for each of the main races Chinese, Malay, Indian, Eurasians.
2:12 its says "singapore one of the cheapest shopping center in entire world"....
Nowadays its not like that anymore singapore are one of the most expensive country in the entire world
At 5:09 one can see Sri Mariamman temple with the statue of two British Soldiers at the first roof tier. It seems now they have been replaced by Sepoys. Does any of you know the full story?
I visited this temple also but I didn't notice these soldiers
The building next to the Municipal Hall is NOT St George's but St Andrew's Cathedral.
Yes, you are right. The Municipal Hall is now known as City Hall.
I may be wrong but the sound track and music appear as though they have been recently substituted and made to appear original. The narration accent is 'not quite right'.
This is great thanks for posting.
Compare Singapore 1938 with Singapore 2009. You will see the big difference between these 71 years from then to now.
crackin' footage. Thanks for sharing
Like with the UAE is interesting to see the origins of this two economic miracles. Greetings from Italy 🇮🇹
I am sad with all angry comments written. So much anger and bitterness!!
It is easy to sit in your chair and look back or condemn the government of Singapore - whether British or PAP. Have you heard of "armchair generals"??
I love Singapore and my heritage and am glad That I speak English thanks to the
British and my Chinese thanks so my heritage.
If my father is still around, this film bring back some of his memories.......
good quality for a 1938 film !
Beautiful video. Love it !
MALAYA(NOW MALAYSIA N SINGAPORE)...so nostalgic☹😌✌🇲🇾🇸🇬
Saya 33, dari Malaysia, yang masih ramai rakyat kaum Melayu Malaysia tidak mengetahui tentang hal ini, cuma saya saorang sahaja yang tahu sebab arwah atuk saya orang Singapura yang lahir pada tahun 1915 dahulu dan membesar di kawasan Geylang pada masa itu, saya warga Malaysia buat masa ini saya tinggal di Tmn Pelangi, Johor Bahru dan selama ini bekerja kat Singapura, tapi buat pada masa sekarang dah tersekat oleh covid19, saya terpaksa berihat kat rumah sebab pkp sampai bila pun belum tahu lagi, kalau tidak saya suka berjalan kat Singapura walau tidak bekerja atau bercuti kadang pergi ziarah kubur arwah atuk saya di perkuburan Islam Pusara Aman, Choa Chu Kang, Singapura, semasa kat Singapura saya bekerja di banyak tempat saperti di Woodlands, NTU, Science Park, Jurong / Tuas Industrial, East Coast Park, Pasir Panjang Distripark, Geylang Serai dan banyak tempat lagi, sekian sahaja, terima kasih!
@@azizismail4612 ✌✊🇲🇾🇸🇬😐
At 8:39...that is St Andrews Catheral, not St George.
my place of birth.. my island....MY INSPIRATION. Hugh Oliveiro artist. 2017 Australia.
As a Singapore junkie, I love these old films. I can only wonder where the swimming pool and beach club were located.
Along tanjong rhu rd
First time seeing a moving old Singapore trolleybus. Great video!
Now it's Filipino and Indonesian 'ah ma's' caring for Singaporean children.
🤣🤣
Dig your ears deeper with no 'wax' obstructions for a cleaner clearer auditorial canals...Johore Sultan name was mentioned!
That is a very interesting video about Singapore and someday i want to go there
its been 10 years. did you?
I bought a Yamaha acoustic guitar and a Sony walkman in Singapore way back in 1980. There were so many beautiful and extravaganza shopping complexes and plazas at that time. Looking forward to visit Singapore again next year. God willing.
welcome back but lookout for overcharging conmen shops ask around several shops before buying..
Shops now display their prices for every item. Bargaining is rare except for smaller owner-occupier shops, but big supermarkets cannot bargain.
I beg to defer. I know some Singaporeans are proud and some like to list out the achievements of Singapore. But most of Singapore's achievements are there because Singaporeans, in general, are a very hard working lot. It's not fair to disregard the whole population as 'arrogant' because of a few boastful mouths.
Wow! Feeling nostalgic to see old videos like this 👍
@6drunkmen It is the world war 1 memorial. The tall pointed monument you see at 8:25 is in Victoria Theatre and Memorial Hall.
A lot of the referenced landmarks are still around, amazingly.
The video focuses on the city centre in the south of SIngapore.
He wasn't. Pasir Ris was a swamp. It isn't now. Maybe LKY was looking beyond the then commercialised areas. His team made the changes to the areas we now live in.
Not a tall building in sight and it looked more like a "Garden City" than it does now!!!Nice to be able to look at the sky without stretching the neck too far.
Thanks for this view into the past : ) Its not easy to find something like this.
I noticed at 00:11, it does show the year 1938 at the bottom but the time-frame for the end of the war is wrong.
This capture more buildings than the photos I saw from Jubilee Photo Studio last year...
Interesting and educational.
The cathedral is st Andrew's cathedral, not st George's as is suggested. I think this was a deliberate error, to steal Scotland's credit with regards to Singapore's early scottish pioneers. The cathedral was named st Andrew's ro recognise their contribution. I think what the director of this video has done is shocking,truly shocking.
This is one will be for the Geocaching people to find and identify as many of the places in this old footage.
great footage!!!! priceless!! one lorry didn't give way to the poor rickshaw man charge him (posthumously)) with failing to give way to major road rickshaw traffic!!!just look at those clean green electric trams..electric vehicles were more popular in those days, we have moved away from clean and green vehicles since then, are we going backwards in modernity now? wished the video lasted more than 11 mins!
"..the cheapest shopping centre in the world.." how times have changed since then.. as of 2020.. Singapore ranked as the most EXPENSIVE city to live in.
wowthse oldtemples restill heretoday in 2021 thechinesetemple siang lim see is at toa payoh andthe hundu one iss at south bridge road! and my father was onceoneofthose coolies who carriedte parcels from the bum boats ashore
what's with the world war one or two that you guys are discussing abt ?
can anyone tells me what's wrong ?
cause i dun understand.
is there possible to make a old video from black and white to color?
This film was not shot in the 30s for sure. WWII and Japanese occupation was in early 40s. It's better for the uploader to edit the year of the film or it tarnishes the facts of such well-preserved video - smdragon Jan 14 2012 (Singapore)
You can check up on André de la Varre the creator of the series.
I miss those days😢
Mate this was before the war how could you miss it
@@deathempire70 good question mate
We have to thank the british for establishing Singapore as a trading hub, as that has been our bread and butter for life.
God bless you and all of the men of the Crown Colony of Singapore who died fighting Nazi Germany and fascist Japan.
did you whatch manila yet?
My dad was posted to Singapore Sept 39 as RAF aircrew. He remembered being told that the Japanese would make poor night fighter pilots because of their eyesight! He also remembered being treated with great arrogance by the white women (he was a mere Flight Sgt) & was not allowed to enter Raffles by the front door! The superior aerodromes had grass runways so were unusable in Monsoon & no ground defence. He later escaped to Java & thence to India where he was chosen for a secret squadron.
It is amazing!
The praised fortifications that made this the so-called "Gibraltar of the East" were ultimately useless when the Japanese attacked in 1941, and the comfortable life of "devoted" Chinese amahs for British residents would be ended with the surrender in 1942. When this movie was made, however, people believed such things could never happen.
what i like about singapore is its multi-racialism and we live in harmony which is hardly found in other country. may singapore prosper more
My great grandmother was already an adult in thsi video
Singapore is the cheapest city in the world....now it is very damn expensive!and from half a million population to a 5 million(maybe)is insane.BTW KEEP THIS VIDEO don't let it die,this video has rich moments and history
Kuli and amah. Basically slaves and maids. Haha
scene 3:03 showed old singaporean more polite in road compare today segh!
Many thanks for our ancestor.
I stand corrected. Just shows that how much I need to pay attention in those history lectures.
Quite surprised to see how little has changed
It must be a mistake. That is definitely St Andrew's Cathedral. St George's Church is also Anglican and also existed back then but it was and still is located in the Tanglin Village area.
because when you listen to the narrator he speaks about how Singapore is a fortress built by the British and that it was strongly defensible. this was in 1938 but 4 years later, the japanese invaded with a smaller force and captured it. so its funny, this supposed "fortress" fell so fast to the japanese.
You must give credit to a Malay Lieutenant named Adnan. He and his troops stalled the advancement of Japanese, giving the British enough time to escape. I hope to see a memoria, to his men on that Island to remember his sacrifice.
I’m just here watching and trying to see if there’s any recognisable places lol
Me too! And I remember you and Peter. I worked at Jackson Wain with Rick Davis in the Chinese Chamber of Commerce building. A great time to be there wasn't it?
Thats the clifford pier and Fullerton hotel!
Not Fullerton hotel, it is Fullerton building not far from AIA building, Shellhouse near Finlayson Green, Clifford Pier, sometimes was call Johnson's pier too, if you were there, could see quite nice from the eastern morning cool breeze and evening western sunset view at that time, my late grand - pa have told me some story about the best of Singapore in the late 50's, before ended, I would like to congratulate and say thank's a lot to the PM Lee Shean Loong and all the cabinet ministers of Singapore, and also thank you to all my Singaporean friends, from me a Malay Muslim man 33, in Malaysia.
Ahhh... My mistake. My history is very very bad. As you would know, the effect on Singapore during WWI is almost none existence and so, that slipped my mind. There was only the 1915 mutiny by the British Indian troops garrisoned in Singapore that was recorded.
I apologise to whoever is involved with the film.
indeed it was'nt the Gibraltar of the East....Corregidor island in the philippines was a lot mightier with its batteries which stood out until may 42
Good thing he managed to escape. Appreciate his service during the war. =)
totally agreed!
That's true. The city generates heat. And the lack of wind and trees too. Try go to a small island in Indonesia and it's 1000 times more comfortable than SG.
@anjadijacks yes..there used to be this singapore, now, it's not singapore, it's work work work, singapore became a land of little identity
@111i1011 The foreigners are the reason your country is where it is. Appreciate it.
シンガポールにとっては、屈辱の時代!!
It's almost a given that the comments section is going to have british laments of how wonderful the colonies use to be...for them.
awesome video. History.
Singapore was already developed before Lee Kuan Yew I guess...lol
+Akbar Great Did you see those Victorian buildings, those are for the foreign masters Europeans. Asian lived in slums!
+John Ong The migrants came to Singapore because the country the British founded was much better/safer and could offer a much better life than the countries they originated from (mainly china). The country and its infrastructure were very much developed by the time Singapore became independent. The notion that Singapore was a third world country under the british is nonsense and is mooted for political gain. It is important for a people to remember where they have come from and to celebrate that.
+John Ong There were plenty of wealthy Chinese living in beautiful houses. Plenty of Europeans living in slums in their own countries. By definition the Europeans in the colonies were wealthier.
@@johnong75 The vast majority of our ancestors came to Singapore after the arrival of the EIC and Raffles, not before. We need not to conjure up a "victim" mentality where none exists. Our forefathers were not brought in chains or press-ganged to come over here. They came willingly, often due to torrid conditions in their original homelands. Many ended up living mundane, dreary common lives. Is it not the same in any era? Many Asians made it very rich too! All in all, better the British colonial administration, with its relative benevolence and policy of non-interference, compared with contemporary empires such as the German Nazi Reich and the Japanese (Greater East Asia Co-Prosperity Sphere) empire.
Actually was a Malay village of Johor Temenggung Abdul Rahman at Teluk Belanga.
old singapore is way more charming than the modern city it is today.. too bad they tear down all the beautiful colonial buildings as depicted in the clip
Do you wish to live in "old Singapore" or the present Singapore? Do you like to take rickshaws and trishaws or even bullock carts to work as labourers and Ah Mahs or driver Ahmads to the European families?