Fort Canning Hill or Bukit Larangan (Forbidden Hill), as it was originally know, dominated the landscape of the island for centuries before being dwarfed by the tall structures of the concrete jungle that Singapore is today. Soldiers and rulers have always had a fixation with heights – for purposes of tactical and psychological domination. Hence, this hill, imposing at 47 meters height over the otherwise flat terrain, was used as the seat of power from the time the island was first inhabited.
Sejarah Melayu, an ancient Malaya text, mentions Sang Nila Utama, the son of Raja Chulana, a South Indian king, who became the ruler of Sumatra and took the title of Sri Tri Buana. He later founded the Kingdom of Singapura on the island earlier known as Temasek (Sea Town). He built his palace on the hill that became forbidden for common people. Later, when Stamford Raffles founded the modern city of Singapore in 1819, he too built his house on the same hill, which was thence called the Government Hill. In 1859, the house was demolished and a fortified garrison, named Fort Canning after the then Governor General and Viceroy of India Lord Canning, was established. The fort also housed 17 canons of various calibers for ceremonial and defence purposes. But these proved to be ineffective as the ships at sea could remain out of their range and easily bombard the town below the fort.
The fort was demolished in 1907 and in its place, several buildings came up in the 1920s to house headquarters of the Malaya Command. This included the administrative building, which is now Hotel Fort Canning, and the barracks, which is now an art centre. Also in 1938 was added and an underground command centre, which this post is actually about.
The story of the happenings this bunker or ‘battle box’ during the events that led up to the surrender of Singapore in 1942 is beautifully told in the one hour tour that I had the pleasure of taking recently.
Singapore was a key military base for the allies during WWII, the hub of allied war activities in South-East Asia and South-West Pacific – the other being Pearl Harbour in Hawaii.
On 7th December 1941, Japan attacked the latter, presumably to prevent Naval interference for its planned operations in South-East Asia. In a complementary move, on 8th December, Japanese invasion forces landed at Kota Bharu in the Malayan state of Kelantan and on the Thai coast of Singora and Pattani, while Japanese aircraft carried out several air raids including on the island. 10th December 1941, the Japanese aircraft sunk British battleship HMS Prince of Wales and cruiser HMS Repulse off Singapore. With this, as Lord Winston Churchill writes in his memoirs,
“There were no British or American capital ships in the Indian Ocean or the Pacific except the American survivors of Pearl Harbour, who were hastening back to California. Over all this vast expanse of waters Japan was supreme, and we everywhere were weak and naked.”
- Tweets by ragarwal
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I’m sure to visit the place when I go to Singhapura
Strongly recommended