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Nankin Street
By Thulaja, Naidu Ratnala written on 2003-07-07
National Library Board Singapore
Comments on article: InfopediaTalk
Description
One of the early streets of Singapore, Nankin
Street appears on the original 1822 Raffles' town plan of
Singapore. The street runs parallel to Hokien Street and Chin
Chew Street on its either side. It is listed on the 1836
Coleman's Map of Singapore as Nankeen Street. It is not
known when and why this street was named after the Chinese city
of Nanking although some streets in the vicinity were named
after places in China. The street originally stretched up to
New Bridge Road and this portion of the road, from South Bridge
Road to New Bridge Road, was called Upper Nankin Street. A
Hakka secret society named Sung Bai Kun used to be located here
in the 19th century giving the street a notorious reputation.
The street's residents were supposedly so mired in poverty
and lived in such cramped spaces that it became the subject of
Sociologist Barrington Kaye in 1960 to give an in-depth view of
the slum problem in Chinatown. Samsui women who arrived in
Singapore from 1934 to 1949 made Upper Nankin Street and Upper
Chin Chew Street their residential quarters. Both Upper Nankin
Street and Upper Chin Chew Street were expunged to pave way for
the construction of the Hong Lim complex in 1980.
Nankin Street was remembered for being a food alley in the
early 20th century that served up food to its customers late in
the evenings. The short street currently is lined with a few
conserved 2 to 3-storey shophouses of architectural interest,
shops, eating places and residential units. The whole of one
side of the street is occupied by China Square Complex, an
office-cum-residential complex. Nankin Street being under the
Chinatown conservation area is under a revival phase by the
Singapore Tourism Board to bring back the glamour of 19th
century Chinatown to the present day.
Variant names
Chinese names: Siong Pek Kwan Koi (Hokkien) and
chhung-phak kai (Cantonese) meaning "the street of
Siong Pek". Siong Pek Kwan was an infamous secret society.
It was the Keh branch of a reputedly dangerous association
called Thien Thi Hoi.
Others: Black cloth street. The name came about because of the
Samsui women who lived here. Samsui women always wore black
coloured clothes
Author
Naidu Ratnala
Thulaja
References
Edwards, N., & Keys, P. (1988). Singapore: A guide to
buildings, streets, places (p. 455). Singapore: Times
Books International.
(Call no.: RSING 959.57 EDW)
Savage, V. R., & Yeoh, B. S. A. (2003). Toponymics: A
study of Singapore street names (pp. 273, 394, 395).
Singapore: Eastern Universities Press.
(Call no.: RSING 915.9570014 SAV)
Chinatown: An album of a Singapore community (pp. 48,
53-56) (1983). Singapore: Times Books International.
(Call no.: RSING 779. 995957 CHI)
Firmstone, H. W. (1905, January). Chinese names of streets and
places in Singapore and the Malay Peninsula. Journal of the
Straits Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society, 4, 112-113,
138-139.
(Call no.: RSING 959.5 FIR-[IC])
Chan, K. S. (1998, March 28). Best lor mee in town. The
Straits Times, Life, p. 9.
Further Readings
Wee, A. (1995, June 1). China Square project expected to be
finished by 2001. The Business Times, Singapore News,
p. 2.
'if looks could kill, I would have died for sure';
Instead, HDB's first feisty chairman Lim Kim San lived on
to break the backbone of Singapore's housing shortage in
the 1960s. Now its job is done, and the grand dame of public
housing is set to downsize. In a retrospective, we look at
HDB's hits and misses, and its changing mandate in housing
the nation over the years. (2003, March 16). The Straits
Times, Commentary.
List of Images
Chinatown: An album of a Singapore community (p. 53).
(1983). Singapore: Times Books International: Archives and Oral
History Dept.
(Call no.: RSING 779. 995957 CHI)
The information in this article is valid as at 2003 and correct
as far as we can ascertain from our sources. It is not intended
to be an exhaustive or complete history of the subject. Please
contact the Library for further reading materials on the topic.
Subject
Architecture and Landscape>>Streets and Places
Geography>>Population>>Urban Planning
Recreation>>Places of Interest
Street names--Singapore
Singapore--History
Urbanization--Singapore
Arts>>Architecture>>Area planning
Law and government>>National development>>City planning
People and communities>>Social groups and communities
>> South Bridge Road
>> New Bridge Road
>> Raffles Town Plan
>> Chin Chew Street
>> Singapore Tourism Board
