Katong was the location of many villas and mansions of the wealthy elite in the late 19th to the mid-20th centuries. They made their fortunes in the Far East and built seaside resorts, villas and manors along the beachfront of Katong, beginning from Katong Park to the end of the East Coast.
Katong's rich cultural mix has contributed to its unique cuisine. Katong is well known among locals as a food district with a variety of shophouse restaurants serving Peranakan cuisine and particularly, a spicy Singaporean noodle soup known as Katong laksa. Its famous icons include Joo Chiat Road's "food street", Dunman food center, Koon Seng Road & Everitt Road's Peranakan conservation house, Eurasian Heritage Gallery.[citation needed]
Etymology
Tanjong Katong derived from the popular beach shoreline along the East Coast. In Malay, Tanjong means cape whilst Katong refers to a now extinct species of turtles as well as "the effect of a sea mirage" when looking at the shoreline. [1] This coastal feature was located near the present Tanjong Katong Flyover across East Coast Parkway and has since disappeared due to land reclamation.[citation needed]
History
A watercolour painting of Katong facing the sea during the 1870s by John Edmund Taylor
The Katong district is known for its unique laksa dish
Katong Square's Conservation Building – currently tenanted by a Starbucks
Shophouses at Katong
In 1822, Sir Stamford Raffles designated a plot of land between the tip of Sandy Point (present day Tanjong Rhu) and Deep Water Point (present day Tanjong Katong) as a shipyard. In order to expedite the growth of the shipping industry, the Chinese settlers living there were given compensation for moving out. By the 1860s, the ship yards were flourishing.[1]
Many wealthy Chinese, English, Portuguese, Jewish, and Anglo-French settlers bought parcels of land in Katong beside the sea to cultivate plantations, and built business empires from trading in commodities such as cotton, coconut and gambier. One of them is the Wee family where Thiam Siew Avenue is named after them, now being The Continuum Condo.[2] Many of these plantations can be seen along Grove Road (now Mountbatten Road). In fact, one such plantation was the Grove Estate, a coconut plantation owned by Thomas Dunman, Singapore's first commissioner of police.[1]
Katong developed from a weekend seaside retreat into a home for the wealthy, who built immense colonial seaside bungalows away from the hustle and bustle of town life. The wealthy suburb stretched along Meyer Road and Mountbatten Road from Katong Park to Tanjong Katong. By 1928 Katong had grown to the extent that the Inspector-General of the Singapore Police Force H. Fairburn remarked: "The development of the area from Katong to Joo Chiat, which has been so rapid in the past two years, promises to continue, and from every point of view one sees the necessity of providing for a sub-divisional station in the suburb. The suburb at present possess no police station." From then on Katong encroached into Joo Chiat area from Tanjong Katong to Telok Kurau Road. East Coast Road (now divided into East Coast Road and Upper East Coast Road) had many upper-class family homes.
The present Katong area stretches from Mountbatten Road, East Coast Road to Siglap. The Joo Chiat area of Katong was formerly an ethnic enclave of Eurasians fleeing congestion, pollution, and overcrowding in Singapore after the Great Depression.
Kampong Amber
In the early twentieth century, Kampong Amber, a Malay fishing village between East Coast Road and Amber Road, was a prominent landmark in the coastal area of Katong.[3][4] The village was named after the adjacent Amber Road, which was in turn named after the clan name of Joseph Aaron Elias, a prominent property owner in early-20th-century Singapore.[5]
The inhabitants of Kampong Amber were mostly Malay fishermen, who lived in thatched timber houses on stilts, irregularly clustered into a porous urban fabric.[6] Between these houses were many large communal spaces, where the inhabitants spent much of their time, engaging in activities such as plucking beansprout, pounding chili paste, and talking to their neighbors.[7] Since the salty soil was unfriendly to agriculture, the villagers largely depended on the ocean for their livelihoods.[7]
Just across Amber Road were the beachfront bungalows of wealthy Peranakan businessmen, notably Lee Choon Guan and his wife, who owned the land which Kampong Amber sits on.[8][9][10] Mr and Mrs Lee allowed the villagers to live in Kampong Amber rent-free; as a show of appreciation, the villagers held an annual parade on Mrs Lee's birthday.[11]
As part of the 1971 Concept Plan, land reclamation along the East Coast was carried out between 1963 and 1985.[9] This reclaimed land transformed the swampy coastline with its foul smells into a scenic vista of white sandy beaches, and made it a desirable location for high-end residential developments;[7] at the same time, the reclaimed land and increased motor vehicle traffic on the road combined to separate the villagers of Kampong Amber from the ocean on which they depended.
As Singapore continued to industrialise through the 1970s, Kampong Amber was among the kampongs destroyed to make room for economic developments: first four- to eight-storey residential buildings, then high-rise flats.[8][9][12] The occupants were relocated to newly-built, government-subsidised flats.[7][13] In a 2003 master plan, the land was parcelled out for further development.[7]
A few remnants of earlier Kampong Amber survived the process of industrialization. The iconic car porch of the Butterfly House, a beachfront bungalow built in 1912 by Regent A. J. Bidwell, was incorporated into a new 18-storey condo.[14][15][16] Another surviving early Kampong Amber landmark is the Chinese Swimming Club, founded in 1909 and moved to a permanent site at Amber Road in 1921.[17] Originally a Chinese response to the European-only Singapore Swimming-club founded by the British in 1894,[18] the Chinese Swimming Club was sponsored by wealthy philanthropist Lee Choon Guan.[19] The club went on to become a social gathering place, a training location for many world-class athletes,[20][21] and a prominent local landmark that drew visits from figures including Prime MinisterLee Kuan Yew, PresidentWee Kim Wee, and President Tony Tan Keng Yam.[18] Today, the club extends membership to non-Chinese residents.
Highlights
The area is traditionally associated with the Eurasian and Peranakan community. However, many high-rise apartment blocks now stand alongside the traditional shophouses and Peranakan terrace houses. In 1993, the Joo Chiat neighbourhood which comprises the historical centre of Katong, with its uniquely Singaporean architecture mixing Chinese, Peranakan and English colonial styles, was designated a national heritage conservation area by the Singapore Government. The conservation area consists of many shop houses which are refurnished into cafes as well as specialty shops.
^ abcLow, Eunice. Life in Katong. Singapore: National Library Board, 2002. (Call no.: RSING 959.57 LIF)
^Lee, Peter. Rumah baba: Life in a Peranakan house. Singapore: National Heritage Board, 1998. p. 25. (Call no.: RSING 305.89510595 LEE)
^Lee, Kip Lin., and Gretchen Liu. The Singapore house, 1819–1942. Singapore: Times Editions [for] Preservation of Monuments Board, 1988. p. 193. (Call no.: RSING 728.095957 LEE)
^Lily, Kong (2001). Joo Chiat: A Living Legacy. Singapore: Joo Chiat Citizen's Consultative Committee.
^Kong, Lily, and T. C. Chang. Joo Chiat: a living legacy. Singapore: Joo Chiat Citizens' Consultative Committee in association with National Archives of Singapore, 2001. pp. 37, 111. (Call no.: RSING 959.57 KON)
^ abSingapore Chinese Swimming Club: 88 years and beyond . Singapore: Singapore Chinese Swimming Club, 1998. pp. 20, 22–36. (Call no.: RSING 797.200605957 SIN)
^Singapore Chinese Swimming Club: 88 years and beyond. Singapore: Singapore Chinese Swimming Club, 1998. pp. 20, 22–36. (Call no.: RSING 797.200605957 SIN)
^Singapore Chinese Swimming Club. (1998). Singapore Chinese Swimming Club: 88 years and beyond. Singapore: Singapore Chinese Swimming Club. pp. 116–125. (Call no.: RSING 797.200605957 SIN); $45m facelift for Chinese Swimming Club. (24 January 2002). The Straits Times, p. 6. Retrieved from NewspaperSG.