100 Years of the Chinese in Singapore (1923) (1st edition)

S$985.00

100 Years of the Chinese in Singapore (1923) (1st edition)

S$985.00

Title: One Hundred Years’ History of the Chinese in Singapore
Author: Song Ong Siang
Publisher: John Murray, London, 1923. First edition.
Condition: Hardcover, rebound in red leatherette. Very good. Scarce. A small closed tear to half-title page. Slight foxing and tanning to endpapers and edges, with a slight mark to fore-edge. Text very clean, binding tight. A thick book, overseas shipping will cost extra.

 

About the book:

A most scarce and influential book. As Wikipedia says, “Above all the contributions made, it was his monumental work on writing and publishing the 600-page book, One Hundred Years’ History of the Chinese in Singapore in 1923 that earned him a significant recognition in the annals of Singapore history. It remains an invaluable work of reference on Singapore history today”. Filled with photographs of important Chinese in Singapore at the time, along with their contributions to Singapore. Hard-to-find, rare, valuable and historically very important.

About the author (from Wikipedia):

Sir Ong-Siang Song was a lawyer and active citizen of the British Crown Colony of the Straits Settlements. He was a third-generation Straits Chinese or Peranakan Baba (Peranakan term for man), and the first ever Asian in Singapore to be knighted. Sir Song was noted for his worthy contributions to the development of the Singapore civil society, and was held in the highest esteem throughout the Colony.

Song was born on June 14, 1871 in Singapore to Song Hoot Kiam, the founder of the Straits Chinese Church (now Prinsep Street Presbyterian Church) and Ms Phan Fung Lean, a wife from Elder Song’s second marriage. He was the eldest son from Song Hoot Kiam’s second marriage – the youngest of the three sons of borne from Elder Song’s two marriages.

As a youth, Sir Ong-Siang studied at The Raffles Institution and briefly at Christian Brothers’ School (now St. Joseph’s institution). He was a brilliant student, and won the Guthrie Scholarship at the age of 12 – a record he had continued to hold for five consecutive years. The young Song was disqualified from the honor of being the first Queen’s Scholar – the honor went to Dr Lim Boon Keng – as he was under-aged at the time of the award. He was eventually awarded the Scholarship in 1888, becoming the only Chinese Queen’s Scholar to read law in England. He was an outstanding scholar at the Middle Temple and Downing College in Cambridge. In 1893 Sir Ong-Siang was called to the Bar, entering legal practice upon returning to Singapore. In that same year he set up the legal firm, Aitken and Ong Siang at the age of 22. Song was also a shareholder and trustee of the Anglo – Chinese Boarding School in 1904. In 1907 he married Helen Yeo in a military wedding – the first of its kind for a Chinese in Singapore.

Sir Ong-Siang was a devout Presbyterian. When the elder Song died in 1900 he succeeded his father as church elder, actively involving in the development of the Church choir and the church magazine. He was also a volunteer preacher, and served as Chairman of The Chinese Christian Association, formed in 1889 by the Elder Song.

Sir Ong-Siang played an active role in community service, and deeply concerned with the welfare of the Straits Chinese and female education. As he was effectively bilingual in Malay and English, he produced the first Romanized Malay-language newspaper, Bintang Timor in 1894. The paper only ran for less than a year due to lack of support. Three years later, Sir Ong-Siang and Dr Lim Boon Keng began the Straits Chinese Magazine, an English language newspaper which enjoyed popular support by the community for 11 years. He also found the Singapore Chinese Girls’ School together with Dr Lim and other prominent Straits Chinese gentlemen, in July 1899 on Hill Street. The school taught Romanised Malay, Chinese, Arithmetic, Geography, Music and Sewing to equip young girls for their future roles as wives and mothers.

Sir Ong-Siang continued to contribute to the society by founding the Chinese Philomathic Society, and Straits Chinese British Association, and the The Hullett Memorial Library (HML) in his alma mater The Raffles Institution together with Dr Lim Boon Keng in 1923. He also became the first Chinese Captain in the Chinese Volunteer Corps in Singapore.

His notable work to the society earned him a place as a Nominated Member of the Singapore’s Legislative Council in 1919 and again serving as Member from 1924-1927. For his outstanding work in the Colony, Sir Ong was conferred the O.B.E. in 1927, and the K.B.E. in 1936 by King George V.

Above all the contributions made, it was his monumental work on writing and publishing the 600-page book, One Hundred Years’ History of the Chinese in Singapore in 1923 that earned him a significant recognition in the annals of Singapore history. It remains an invaluable work of reference on Singapore history today.

Song died in 1941.