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An A B C of Penang

George Town

GEORGE TOWN  is two words and not  "Georgetown." 

Armenian Street

YOUR BUS will probably dump you at the Beach Street end of Armenian Street for your tour of the Khoo Kongsi. Why Armenian? Because there were some Armenian traders from India who did business here. One of them was Dr Thaddeus Avertoom a medical practioner who also established in the 1880's  the George Town Dispensary, a wholesale and retail chemist and drugstore. After the
George Town Dispensarydoctor's death in 1915 the business continued in Penang (at Beach Street) and Ipoh (Belfield Street, now Jln Sultan Yussof) until recently.  When in Armenian Street visit the Cheah Kongsi (Cheah surname Hall) founded 1820. For some unknown reason the Penang Heritage signboard is not on the road but inside in the courtyard well past the gate. The Hall was recently restored. Next to it is the Red Pinang Culture House at No 18. A member of a  Goh family whose dwelling it once was tells us that Sun Yat Sen, the leader of the 1911 revolution that overthrew the Manchu empire once  sought refuge at No 18 after appearing at the Cheah Kongsi.

A little further is the Swatow Lodging House, a rare survivor of the hotels of the 19th century where immigrants put up on first landing in Penang. This one is "Swatow" meaning that it housed Teochew immigrants from the China port of Swatow.

Further on you will come across Penang's narrowest lane, the Soo Hong Lane.
 
Beaches

ONCE UPON a time the beaches of Penang were ecstatically described as golden. But don't give a damn people have turned them brown and filthy. Be warned that horse riding is allowed. So don't encourage your children to build sandTower blocks castles. As for swimming, water scooters -  another menace - roam wildly against the rules; so be careful.  In February, a water scooter cut into swimmers at Port Dickson sending the two of them to  hospital. A few years ago the diving instructor of a Penang swimming club had her shoulder badly cut by a water scooter while she was out at sea. It's safer to remain in the hotel swimming pool.

You will also notice 44 storey towering blocks of flats along Tanjung Bungah. Frightening sign posts that mark the progress of the 1985 Manhatten Project. Gradually, but slowly and surely, since the  siting of the Rasa Sayang Hotel on the sea side of the main road, Penang is being shut out from the sea  and enclosed in  a wall of brick and steel.

     High rise hotels - more
     forbidding than the ramparts
     of any colonial fortress -
     wall us from our beaches

     (from Cecil Rajendra's 'Canto of Progress')


Cheong Fatt Tse House

THE Cheong Fatt Tse house at Leith Street (Lian Hua Ho (Pool of Lotus Flowers) )  was formerly known by its Hokkien name of Thio Tiaw Suat but someone made the change to the Cantonese pronunciation. Said to have been built in 1866 the building was restored a few years back but you will notice that the floor, relaid with tiles of the 1920s, has not been restored to the original large squares of terra cotta. One of the sources of Thio Tiaw Suat's wealth was his membership of an opium farm (an opium outlet  through which the East India Company and the colonial government farmed out opium concessions).
He was consul of the Chinese emperor in Penang then consul general in Singapore and then elevated to the rank of minister of the emperor.  And don't swallow the yarn about the five two storeyed  terrace houses opposite being the servants' quarters.  Servants in 19th century Penang were lucky if they  had raised platforms to sleep on. The terrace houses were only built about 1926 and were occupied by well to do people, among them a doctor.

The historic road off Carnarvon Street called Hong Kong Street  was renamed  Cheong Fatt Tse Road when the latter road disappeared with the building of Komtar.

Leith Street

AT  the beginning of  Leith Street  stands the building which was once the house of Leong Fee , a wealthy tin miner . His son Ying Khean  built the  Italian style house at 32 Northam Road  nearby.  He loved Italy and even named  his  daughters Nice and Florence. He studied architecture at Cambridge in 1908. The bowling alley next door  occupies the site of elder brother Eng Khean's bungalow.

Leith Street was the street of Hakka millionaires.  The bungalow which now houses the Red Restaurant was formerly the residence of Mrs Tye Keat Kwong, widow of the eldest son of Tye Kee Yoon, remembered for his 1920s drive up the jungle path to the top of Penang Hill. One of the Hakka bungalows opposite is now the Cathay Hotel  whose owners generously permit viewing of the charming interior.


Myths


IF you are told that Baba and Nyonya are descended from Princess Hang Li Po who came sailing into Malacca on one of  Ming Admiral Cheng Ho's ships to  marry the Sultan,  take it with a pinch of salt.

Professor Wade's researches into Ming records failed to find evidence of such a  princess though there was evidence of other gifts to the Sultan from the Chinese Emperor.



Northam Road - Ranong House


Ranong House,  a heritage building along Northam Road, was  destroyed by a developer in 1993. Today, the facade of the 1921 building  has been restored from a photograph and is dwarfed by a high rise called Mayfair. Ranong House was the Penang residence of Sim Khim, son of the "Raja" or governor of Ranong, a rich Teochew named  Khaw Soo Cheang, the donor of Renong Ground given to the people of George Town for football; next door was the Esplanade exclusively for White cricket. But Renong ground is no more because the short sighted  authorities, I suspect in breach of trust, put up an ugly  building called the Dewan Sri Penang. The house  behind, facing the sea, was Chakrabong, the residence of another son Sim Bee,  Siam's High Commissioner.

A road  runnng parallel to Burma Road is named after him.


Ranong HouseKing Rama V appointed Khaw Soo Cheang Rajah of Ranong, conferring upon him the title, Phraya Damrong Sucharit Mahisornphakdi (Head of Palace Official). The king also decreed that his second son, Khaw Sim Kong, who was given the title Phraya Ratanasethi, should succeed him in due course.

Following his death, his second son, Khaw Sim Kong assumed the title Phraya Damrong Sucharit Mahisornphakdi and became the second Raja of Ranong. His other sons were also enobled by the King and appointed governors of three of the southern provinces of the country. Khaw Sim Khim, his fourth son, became Governor of Kra; Khaw Sim Teik, his fifth son, was appointed Governor of Langsuan; while his youngest son, Khaw Sim Bee, was made Governor of Trang. In 1892 Khaw Sim Bee was appointed High Commissioner of South Siam.

In 1916 when the Chinese in Siam were required to have Siamese names in order to be citizens of that country, Rama VI (King Vajiravudh) issued a Royal Decree on 1st July, 1916, giving the surname "Na Ranong" ("of Ranong") to all the descendants of Khaw Soo Cheang living in Siam. Thenceforth all the Khaws of Ranong in modern day Thailand are known by that name.

It was a rich and powerful family in Thailand whose properties included estates in Trang and a house on Penang Hill. Som Long succeeded Soo Cheang as governor of Ranong, Sim Khim was governor of Kraburi,  Sim Teik governor of Lang Suan and Sim Bee, the youngest son,  governor of Kraburi, governor of Trang and governor (Monthon) Phuket.  He was conferred with Thailand's highest honour, the title Phraya Ratsadanupradit Mahisornpakdi or The Grand Cross of the Most Exalted Order of the White Elephant. In Trang is the Phraya Ratsadanupradit Monument,  the only public monument in Thailand to be dedicated to a Chinese businessman..



  

Northam Road  - Goh Chan Lau


Goh Chan Lau today

You will see a building in ruins along the left side of Northam Road. This used to be the residence of Cheah Tek Thye  (b. 1860) who was educated at the Penang Free School, the St Xavier's Institution and Doveton. He
Goh Chan Lau originally had interests in insurance, coconut and rubber estates and was a municipal commissioner as well a member of the turf club. Popularly known as Goh Chan Lau (Five storeyed house), it became a hotel and in the late twenties became the Government English School where kids learnt to spell out  D O G - dog and C A T -  cat before graduating to the Hutchings School (now the State Museum).



Penang


 YOU will be told that the island of Penang is named after the pinang (areca nut) tree.  However, the researches of Dr David Jones of Adelaide University show that the name Penang derives from the Tanjong Penaigre Cape, after the ironwood tree (Mesua ferea) growing on the land. Today, old people on the Butterworth side still refer to  George Town as "Tanjong."  Ironwood trees used to line both sides of the road into the Botanic Gardens and it was from here that the Straits Settlements counsellor, Lim Cheng Ean,  obtained the plants which he planted along the Chung Ling School boundary when the new school building was opened before the second world war.#


Acknowledgments:

Respected Citizens by Dasia H Wright, Amassia, 2003

Photos: George Town Dispensary,Beach Street by Gryffindor;  Goh Chan Lau today - TPF;  Goh Chan Lau as residence of  Cheah Tek Thye -  Twentieth Impressions of British Malaya.

                       

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INDEX

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Index page     Artists 1930-1970     Book review    Cheung Pooi Yip    Choong Ai May    Countdown - a poem    Dismantling of justice   Food guide    An immigrant's story (4)       Letter from Pulau Tikus     The orang asli    Penang ABC    Pessoc's musicfest  
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The Penang File Issue  60