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Chinese Villages in the North
By Thulaja, Naidu Ratnala written on 2003-11-07
National Library Board Singapore
Comments on article: InfopediaTalk
Nee Soon Village
The origins of Nee Soon Village can be traced back
to 1850 when 44 acres of land in the kangkar (meaning
the land around the riverbank, river mouth or river's leg
in Teochew) in Seletar was purchased for gambier and pepper
plantations. Situated along the upper portions of the Seletar
waterway, the kangkar was made up of the area around the
junctions of Sembawang Road and Mandai Road. Apart from Nee
Soon Village, there were other surrounding villages, such as
Chye Kay Village, Mandai Tekong Village, Kampong Jalan Mata
Ayer, Heng Leh Pah Village, Bah Soon Pah Village, Hainan
Village, Hup Choon Kek Village, Kampong Telok Soo, Kum Mang Hng
Village, Kampong Jalan Kula Simpang, Sembawang Village and
Sungei Simpang Village.
The kangkar was the commercial centre of Nee Soon
estate all through the nineteenth century. Nee Soon estate grew
from the gambier and pepper plantations that started along the
Seletar River from the 1930s onwards. These plantations lured
employment-seeking immigrants who then set up settlements or
villages along the Sungei Seletar waterways. Villages were also
established along old roads such as Upper Thomson Road, Seletar
Road, Mandai Road, Yio Chu Kang Road, Sembawang Road, Bah Soon
Pah Road and Chye Kay Road.
Nee Soon Village was originally called Chan Chu Kang after its
owner, and was later named Nee Soon Village after Lim Nee Soon
for Nee Soon's contribution to the rubber industry. Lim Nee
Soon set up the Thong Aik Rubber Factory at the kangkar
in 1912, which was renamed as Nee Soon & Sons in the 1920s.
It was purchased by Lee Kong Chian in 1928 and its name was
changed to Lee Rubber. In the early 20th century, Bukit
Sembawang Rubber Company set up district offices in the
kangkar area, at Chye Kay Village and in the Bah Soon
Pah area. In the 1930s, attap houses were built in the
kangkar area and a bridge laid across the Seletar River
to enable communication between the kangkar and the
villages across it. A cinema called Pei Li Cinema was opened
here in the 1930s. It was renamed Seletar Cinema after being
purchased by Lim Chong Pang in the same decade.
After the war, the kangkar developed rapidly. In 1947,
Koh Chin Chong constructed the Nee Soon Market at the junction
of Thong Aik Road and Nee Soon Road which led to the
development of the road and its surroundings. Burnt down in
1979, a makeshift market was built there until it gave way to
urban redevelopment work that formed the Yishun New Town. With
the development of land transport in the post-war years, the
kangkar became one of the most densely populated rural
areas in Singapore. A taxi stand was built in the
kangkar in 1951. In 1953, the government reconstituted
the Rural Board and it looked into the development of villages.
As a result amenities like maternity clinics and standpipes
were added, and by 1955, all roads were officially named and
postal services established.
In the mid-1960s, traditional traders dealing with firewood,
laundry and bicycles gave way to motor-car and electrical
appliances dealers. Modern shophouses were also built,
replacing the attap and zinc ones. With the introduction of
television in Singapore in the mid-1960s, the charm of open air
cinemas and opera shows began to decline. Piped water,
electricity, refrigerator and hi-fi set joined the list of
daily necessities in Nee Soon Village. The signs of urban
development were seen in the English schools and the medical
and community facilities established here. Three community
centres were opened here in 1963, one at Bah Soon Pah, another
at Mandai Tekong and yet another at Ulu Seletar. Three more
community centres followed - the Nee Soon Community Centre in
1965, and the other two at Chye Kay Village and Kampong Sah Pah
Siam.
In 1976, the Yishun New Town Project was initiated by the
government. Made up of 919 ha of land, the Nee Soon estate was
converted into an urbanised town with public housing and
industries. Residents of Nee Soon Village were first relocated
to different places according to their profession before
construction of the New Town began in 1977.
Kangkar Village
Located at the end of Upper Serangoon Road, this kampong was
pulled down in 1984. It was a coastal village made up of attap
houses and was popular for its wholesale fish market. The
kampong was cleared to make way for the construction of the S$
11 million Ponggol fishing port.
Chye Kay Village
This village was located within the old Nee Soon estate or
present-day Yishun New Town. In 1905, Chen Chia Keng
(b. 21 October 1874, Jimei, Tong'an, Quanzhou, Fujian -
d. 12 August 1961, Beijing, China), set up a pineapple
canning factory in Nee Soon Village. To ensure a continuous
supply of pineapples for his factory, he purchased 500 acres of
land to plant pineapples. In 1907, when he learnt that rubber
was a profitable crop, he planted rubber between pineapple
plants. This plantation presumably provided employment to the
residents of Chye Kay Village. The villagers here constructed
the Chu Sion Tong Temple, which also served as a charity home
for the aged and destitute people. A school called the Lee
Cheng School was constructed here in the 1930s. Classes used to
be conducted on a wayang stage. It closed down during
the war and was re-established after the war with the Japanese
war-time offices being used as classrooms. In the early 1930s,
another school called Kwang Teck School was constructed here by
the Ngee Ann Kongsi. In 1948, the Lee Teck School was
constructed with funds donated by the residents of Chye Kay
Village. English schools were established in the kangkar
from the late 1940s onwards, beginning with the Sembawang
School along Sembawang Road. The main economic activities of
the villagers here were vegetable farming, fishing and orchid
farming.
Chong Pang Village
Part of Nee Soon estate, Chong Pang Village was originally
called the Westhill Village or Westhill estate. Westhill
Village was located at the twelfth milestone at Seletar
opposite the Sembawang Aerodrome. It was named by the
government as Chong Pang Village in 1956 as a tribute to Lim
Chong Pang (b. 6 June, 1904 Singapore - d. 1956
Singapore), the son of Lim Nee Soon. Lim Chong Pang was a
businessman who served as a member of the Rural Board from 1929
to 1938. Chong Pang Village centred around a row of shophouse
units which made up the village's business, commercial and
residential core. The western and south-western boundaries of
the village were next to the extensive Ulu Sembawang vegetable
and fruit farming regions. To the north of the village was the
former British Naval Base constructed in 1938.
Heavily dependent on the rubber plantations for their living,
the villagers were adversely affected by the collapse of the
rubber in 1935. Thankfully, the British Naval Base came into
the picture and provided plenty of employment. The construction
of the Paya Lebar Airport in 1953-1954 led to an exodus of
households from Paya Lebar into Chong Pang, leading to a
swelling of Chinese households in the village, even
outnumbering the Indians who were until then the majority of
the village's population. During the Japanese invasion,
many inhabitants fled the village for fear of being killed by
the Japanese soldiers. The area around Sultan Theatre, which
was built by Lim Chong Pang, was converted into a red-light
district and the theatre itself was used to store
ammunition.
In March 1989, the village was razed to the ground and in its
place today stands the Sembawang New Town. The present day
Chong Pang housing estate, known as Chong Pang Garden, is in
the Yishun New Town. Built in 1981, Chong Pang Garden is made
up of 923 housing units and is flanked by Sembawang Road,
Yishun Ave 5, Yishun Ave 2 and Yishun Ring Road on its four
sides.
Heng Leh Pah Village
Part of Nee Soon estate, this village was situated off Upper
Thomson Road. It was also called Phua Village. Phua Village was
home to the Heng San Temple. The villagers here brought along
their ancestral deity from their village in Nan An district in
Fujian and established this temple in the 1910s. The land
owners of this village took up coconut planting in the early
20th century. The government granted 50% land rebate for six
years to all land owners to grow coconuts. The coconut
plantations were useful to the pig farmers in this village as
well because coconut residue was used as pig feed. There was a
boom in pig farming after scientific methods were introduced in
the 1960s, resulting in more income for the pig farmers. In
1979 however, the government decided to restrict pig farming to
Lim Chu Kang and Ponggol.
Mandai Tekong village
Situated off Mandai Road, the Mandai Tekong Village boasted the
largest number of big vegetable farms than others in the Nee
Soon estate. Like Phua Village, the boom in pig farming in the
1960s also boosted the income of the villagers here until the
restriction in 1979. Traders would ply Mandai Tekong Village
and the villages in Bah Soon Pah to buy vegetables from the
farmers for sale in town. The villagers also took to
large-scale orchid farming in the 1960s.
Bah Soon Pah
The Bah Soon Pah area in the Nee Soon estate was made up of a
cluster of villages such as Kampong Telok Soo, a.k.a., Kampong
Kitin, and De Lu Shu Village. These villages were situated
around the Bah Soon Pah Road, off Sembawang Road. The villagers
in Bah Soon Pah reared chickens which became a thriving
business from the 1960s onwards. They also reared ducks and
grew vegetables. The low-lying swampy area favoured prawn and
fish breeding, leading to prawn and fish ponds. Similar ponds
were also found in Chye Kay Village and Heng Leh Pah Village.
Tropical fish breeding caught on In the 1960s. In 1934, the
villagers of Bah Soon Pah set up the Hua Shun Gong Fu De Ci
temple, a.k.a. Hua Shan Gong temple. In the 1930s, the Teochews
and Hokkiens set up the Chian Nan School and Hua Soon School
respectively.
Hup Choon Kek Village
Part of Nee Soon estate, this village was home to the Wei Leng
Keng temple, built in the 1930s.
Yio Chu Kang ("Chia Keng"
in the Chinese dialect) Village
Situated along Yio Chu Kang Road, it remained in existence
until the late 1980s.
Yew Tee Village
This village was located off Woodlands Road. Yew Tee
means "oil pond" in Teochew and the name came about
as this place was used by the Japanese to store oil during the
Occupation. Yew Tee became a household name with the
construction of the Yew Tee MRT station which is located where
the village used to be, near Stagmont Ring. It was once a
bustling village numbering 300 families. The residents worked
mainly as small-time vegetable and poultry farmers. When the
land in Yew was developed and new estates like Chua Chu Kang
and Jurong East came up, many residents began moving out. The
Yew Tee Community Centre, set up in 1963 and one of
Singapore's oldest community centres, closed down in 1998.
The closure was due to under-utilisation which reflect the
exodus of population from the area. In 1991, it was an obscure
sleepy village with less than 20 zinc-roofed houses.
Author
Naidu Ratnala Thulaja
References
Oral History Department. (1987). A pictorial history of
Nee Soon Community (pp. 107, 121-179). Singapore: The
grassroots organisations of Nee Soon Constituency, National
Archives, Oral History Department.
(Call no.: RSING 959.57 PIC)
Savage, V. R., & Yeoh, B. S. A. (2003). Toponymics: a
study of Singapore street names (p. 215). Singapore:
Eastern Universities Press.
(Call no.: SING 915.9570014 SAV)
Yeoh, S. A. B., & Kong, L. (Eds.). (1995). Portraits of
places : history, community and identity in Singapore
(pp.180-201). Singapore : Times Editions.
(Call no.: SING 959.57 POR)
Yap, N. (1988, April 5). Yew Tee CC calls it a day. The
Straits Times.
Station names for Woodlands line have ties to surroundings.
(1991, November 20). The Straits Times, p. 3.
Further Readings
Bungar, J. (1992, September 25). Yishun museum and video
tell Nee Soon story. The Straits Times, p. 33.
Different problems now that Nee Soon has grown from kampung to
town. (1995, September 22). The Straits Times, p.
34.
ProActive Media Pte Ltd. (n.d.). Ho Kah Leong - charity
calendar 1991. Retrieved November 07, 2003, from
www.living2000.com.sg/hkl/c1991.htm
Urban Redevelopment Authority. (2002). From kampong to
regional centre: Woodlands in the making. Retrieved
February 2, 2005, from
www.ura.gov.sg/skyline/skyline02/skyline02-02/text/sharing.html
Subject
Ethnic Communities
Architecture and Landscape>>Streets and Places
Villages--Singapore
Urbanization--Singapore
People and communities>>Social groups and communities
>> Lim Nee Soon
All Rights Reserved. National Library Board Singapore 2005.