PRODUCT OVERVIEW
- ISBN 9789811467950
- Categories 25QT1, [2025], BX, BXOS, FEB25_1, History, MAR25_1, NA25Q1, New Arrivals OS, NF HIS, Non-Fiction, Non-Fiction: Humanities, P@ns1ng, SEPT24_1
- Author(s) Lee Geok Boi
- Publisher Landmark Books
- Pages 288
- Format Hardcover
- Dimensions 19.8cm x 3cm x 26.1cm
- Weight 1.319 kg
product description
This collection of 328 photographs shows the rhythm of daily life in Singapore between 1959 and 1965 – the pivotal time in its history when the city-state was granted internal self-rule by the British colonial government to the year it became a sovereign nation. This was when Singapore began its process of great development. Kampong folk moved into high-rise housing, new careers came with factories built in Jurong, the trading of stocks and shares began in Raffles Place, television was introduced to Singapore, and the new red-brick National Library opened on Stamford Road. Yet, some things remained unchanged. Bumboats still jostled on the fetid waters of the Singapore River, children played on five-foot-ways, families enjoyed the sea air along Queen Elizabeth Walk, and eating out at street-side hawker stalls was a way of life. For those who remember these scenes, this book will evoke a lost time. And for those who do not, it is a window to a simpler, unhurried life.

