Difference between revisions of "Fort Pasir Panjang" - New World Encyclopedia

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[[Image:Long Ya Men.jpg|220px|thumb|right|The symbolic replica of the ''[[Long Ya Men]]'' at Tanjong Berlayer near where Fort Pasir Panjang stands]]
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[[Image:Gun Emplacement-Singapore.jpg|220px|thumb|A gun emplacement of Fort Pasir Panjang outfitted with a 9.2-inch Rifled Breech Loading gun]]
  
'''Fort Pasir Panjang''' or '''Labrador Battery''', located at the southern tip of [[Singapore]] island, served as a key [[United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland|British]] coastal fort during the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. The Fort defended the western passageway into [[Keppel Harbour]] against pirates and rival naval powers. During the 1942 [[Battle of Pasir Panjang]], the British used the fort to support the [[Royal Malay Regiment|Malay Regiments]] against the Japanese at [[Bukit Chandu]]. In 1995, the Singapore National Heritage Board recognized the site as one of the eleven notable [[World War II]] sites in Singapore.<ref>Singapore, ''National heritage tours'' (Singapore: The Division, 1997)</ref>  
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'''Fort Pasir Panjang,''' or '''Labrador Battery,''' located at the southern tip of [[Singapore]] island, served as a key [[United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland|British]] coastal fort during the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. The Fort defended the western passageway into [[Keppel Harbor]] against pirates and rival naval powers. During the 1942 [[Battle of Pasir Panjang]], the British used the fort to support the [[Royal Malay Regiment|Malay Regiments]] against the Japanese at [[Bukit Chandu]]. In 1995, the Singapore National Heritage Board recognized the site as one of the eleven notable [[World War II]] sites in Singapore.<ref>Singapore, ''National Heritage Tours'' (Singapore: The Division, 1997).</ref>  
 
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{{toc}}
[[Great Britain]], which had carved out colonies throughout the world, understood the importance of coaling stations and coastal forts in strategic places. [[Singapore]] fit that need in excellent fashion. Britain widened the straights in 1848 in preparation for building defenses. In 1878, Britain build two forts to protect the main entrance into [[Singapore harbor]], one of them Fort Pasir Panjang. In that year, [[Japan]] experienced the [[Meiji Restoration]], a political earthquake that set Japan on the path of becoming a power equal to the [[Europe]]an and [[USA|America]]n powers. Inevitably, Japan and Great Britain, along with the USA and [[Russia]], would clash for control of Asia. The fall of Fort [[Battle of Pasir Panjang|Pasir Panjang]] to Japan, and subsequently the [[Battle of Singapore|fall of Singapore]], set a shock wave throughout the Allied Forces. Great Britain suffered possibly its single greatest defeat in its military history. The war in the [[War in the Pacific|Pacific]] continued from another three and a half years. When the guns silenced, Japan had lost its empire, including Singapore. Great Britain, although on the side of the victors, relinquished control of many of it's colonies soon after World World II ended. Singapore secured its own [[Independence of Singapore|independence]] in 1963.
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[[Great Britain]], which had carved out colonies throughout the world, understood the importance of coaling stations and coastal forts in strategic places. [[Singapore]] fit that need in excellent fashion. Britain widened the straights in 1848 in preparation for building defenses. In 1878, Britain built two forts to protect the main entrance into [[Singapore harbor]], one of them Fort Pasir Panjang. In that year, [[Japan]] experienced the [[Meiji Restoration]], a political earthquake that set Japan on the path of becoming a power equal to the [[Europe]]an and [[USA|America]]n powers. Inevitably, Japan and Great Britain, along with the U.S. and [[Russia]], would clash for control of Asia. The fall of Fort [[Battle of Pasir Panjang|Pasir Panjang]] to Japan, and subsequently the [[Battle of Singapore|fall of Singapore]], set a shock wave throughout the Allied Forces. Great Britain suffered possibly its single greatest defeat in its military history. The war in the [[War in the Pacific|Pacific]] continued from another three and a half years. When the guns silenced, Japan had lost its empire, including Singapore. Great Britain, although on the side of the victors, relinquished control of many of it's colonies soon after World World II ended. Singapore secured its own [[Independence of Singapore|independence]] in 1963.
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[[Image:Keppel Harbour locator map.PNG|thumb|right|220px|Map of Keppel Harbor.]]
  
 
==History==
 
==History==
<!--[[Image:Singapore-CIA WFB Map.png|thumb|right|220px|Singapore]]—>
 
[[Image:Keppel Harbour locator map.PNG|thumb|right|300px|Map of Keppel Harbour.]]
 
  
Fort Pasir Panjang had been originally called Labrador Battery, named after Labrador Bay. Two craggy [[granite]] outcrops, ''[[Long Ya Men]]'' (龙牙门), or ''Dragon's Teeth Gate'', formerly stood on each side of the entrance to the Keppel Harbour, at that time called New Harbour. Dragon's Teeth Gate served as a navigation landmark to mariners since ancient times.<ref>R. Ian Lloyd and Irene Hoe. 1985. ''Singapore from the air'' (Singapore: Times Eds), p. 44. </ref> The [[Straits Settlement]] [[Hydrographic survey|Surveyor]], John Thomson, subsequently blew up the two rock outcrops in August 1848 to widen the entrance to the harbor.<ref>{{cite news | title = Dragon's tooth replica to mark anniversary of Chinese explorer | date = 23 March 2005 | publisher = [[The Straits Times]]}}</ref> The British recognized Labrador's strategic value as early as 1843 when making plans to set up defenses to protect Singapore, an important trading post founded by Sir [[Stamford Raffles]] of the [[British East India Company]] in 1819.
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Fort Pasir Panjang originally was called Labrador Battery, named after Labrador Bay. Two craggy [[granite]] outcrops, ''[[Long Ya Men]]'' (龙牙门), or ''Dragon's Teeth Gate,'' formerly stood on each side of the entrance to the Keppel Harbor, at that time called New Harbor. Dragon's Teeth Gate served as a navigation landmark to mariners since ancient times.<ref>R. Ian Lloyd and Irene Hoe, ''Singapore From the Air'' (Singapore: Times Eds, 1985), 44. </ref> The [[Straits Settlement]] [[Hydrographic survey|Surveyor]], John Thomson, subsequently blew up the two rock outcrops in August 1848, to widen the entrance to the harbor.<ref>Dragon's tooth replica to mark anniversary of Chinese explorer, ''The Straits Times.''</ref> The British recognized Labrador's strategic value as early as 1843 when making plans to set up defenses to protect Singapore, an important trading post founded by Sir [[Stamford Raffles]] of the [[British East India Company]] in 1819.
  
 
===Piracy===
 
===Piracy===
The New Harbour had been renamed as Keppel Harbour in 1900 after [[Admiral]] [[Sir]] [[Henry Keppel]] of HMS ''Meander'', who carried out an on-site survey to build an anchorage in the harbor in the 1880s. In 1842, he had won renown for his successful campaigns against the pirates boldly harassing merchant ships in close proximity to the harbor. Piracy became less of a danger to the trade of Singapore only from the 1850s.<ref>Henry Keppel and James Brooke, ''The expedition to Borneo of H.M.S. Dido for the suppression of piracy: with extracts from the journal of James Brooke, esq. of Sarāwak'' (London: Chapman and Hall, 1846)</ref>
 
  
A white [[obelisk]], near the former site of Long Ya Men, marks the original Western Harbour limit. That obelisk still stands at Tanjong Berlayer Point ("Tanjong" means "land's end" in [[Malay language|Malay]]) to indicate the southernmost tip of the [[Asia]]n [[Continent]].<ref>{{cite web | url = http://infopedia.nlb.gov.sg/articles/SIP_14_2005-01-25.html | title = "Harbour Limit Marker" - ''Labrador Park/Fort Pasir Panjang'' | accessdate = 2008-07-15 | publisher = Vernon Cornelius-Takahama, National Library Board }}</ref>
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The New Harbor had been renamed as Keppel Harbor in 1900 after Admiral Sir [[Henry Keppel]] of HMS ''Meander,'' who carried out an on-site survey to build an anchorage in the harbor in the 1880s. In 1842, he had won renown for his successful campaigns against pirates harassing merchant ships close to the harbor entrance. His work rendered piracy less dangerous in the waters off Singapore from the 1850s.<ref>Henry Keppel and James Brooke, ''The Expedition to Borneo of H.M.S. Dido for the Suppression of Piracy: With Extracts from the Journal of James Brooke, esq. of Sarāwak'' (London: Chapman and Hall, 1846).</ref>
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A white [[obelisk]] stands near the former site of Long Ya Men marking the original Western Harbour boundary. That obelisk still stands at Tanjong Berlayer Point ("Tanjong" means "land's end" in [[Malay language|Malay]]) marking the southernmost tip of the Asian Continent.<ref>Infopedia, [http://infopedia.nlb.gov.sg/articles/SIP_14_2005-01-25.html Harbour Limit Marker,] Labrador Park/Fort Pasir Panjang. Retrieved July 15, 2008.</ref>
  
 
===Defenses===
 
===Defenses===
[[Image:Watch Tower-Singapore.jpg|220px|thumb|The Fort's watch tower located at the edge of the entrance of [[Singapore]]'s Keppel Harbour. The tower provided a commanding view of approaching ships entering into the harbor]]
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In 1878, British engineers placed forts on either side of the entrance to New Harbour in an attempt to strengthen coastal defenses in Singapore for protection against naval attack by European powers. They constructed Fort Pasir Panjang on Labrador and [[Fort Siloso]] on Pulau Blakang Mati (now [[Sentosa]]). The steep cliffs and thick [[mangrove]] [[swamps]] surrounding the two forts acted as excellent natural barriers against attackers.
In 1878, as part of the review of the defenses of Singapore against threats from European powers in the region, British engineers decided to place forts on either side of the entrance to New Harbour. Fort Pasir Panjang rose on Labrador and [[Fort Siloso]] on Pulau Blakang Mati (now [[Sentosa]]). The steep cliffs and thick [[mangrove]] [[swamps]] surrounding the two forts acted as an ideal natural barrier to attackers.
 
  
 
====Underwater mines====
 
====Underwater mines====
To strengthen the defense further, naval engineers laid [[Naval mine|mines]] in the waters between the two forts and the eastern entrance of the harbor in 1881. The mines tethered to the seabed but floated dangerously under the surface of the water, unseen by enemy marine vessels. To enable safe passage of ships, the British created a 'friendly safe channel' through the minefields. The work involved in the laying of minefields under the narrow channel (just 240 m apart) had actually led to rumors that tunnels running under the channels had been constructed to link the two forts.<ref>Lim, ''Labrador Park'', p. 26. </ref> Extant [[archival]] records have never been found to prove that the construction of those tunnels.<ref>Lim, ''Labrador Park'', p. 34. </ref>
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[[Image:Watch Tower-Singapore.jpg|220px|thumb|The Fort's watch tower located at the edge of the entrance of [[Singapore]]'s Keppel Harbor. The tower provided a commanding view of approaching ships entering into the harbor]]
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In 1881, British engineers laid [[Naval mine|mines]] in the waters between the two forts and at the eastern entrance of the harbor to further strengthen the defenses. They tethered the mines to the seabed, adjusted to float just under the surface of the water. The British created a "friendly safe channel" through the minefields. The mine field work led to speculation that a tunnel had been created under the channel, linking the two forts.<ref>Lim, ''Labrador Park,'' 26. </ref>
  
 
====Gun emplacements====
 
====Gun emplacements====
[[Image:Gun Emplacement-Singapore.jpg|220px|thumb|A gun emplacement of Fort Pasir Panjang outfitted with a 9.2-inch Rifled Breech Loading gun]]
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The 7th Coast Artillery Regiment made up the Faber Fire Command under [[Brigadier]] A.D. Curtiss.<ref name="Bose">Bose, in ''Labrador Park,'' 66.</ref> The British first installed the 7-inch Rifled Muzzle-Loading (R.M.L.) at Fort Pasir Panjang in 1878, providing a temporary defense, soon after mounting 9.2-inch Rifled Breech-Loading (R.B.L.) guns as the main firepower.<ref>A. G. Harfield, ''British & Indian Armies in the East Indies, 1685-1935'' (Chippenham, Wiltshire: Picton Pub., 1984), 232. </ref> Engineers eventually set up 2 × 6 in (152 mm) Q.F. guns in the emplacement. The 6-inch quick-firing gun represented cutting-edge artillery technology, enabling gunners to take out fast moving torpedo boats that came on the scene in the 1880s. The 6-inch quick-firing gun shells weighed 45 kilograms.<ref>Lim, ''Labrador Park,'' 44-48. </ref>
The Fort came under the operation of the 7th Coast Artillery Regiment, which received orders from Faber Fire Command led by [[Brigadier]] A.D. Curtiss.<ref name="Bose"> Bose, in "Labrador Park," p. 66. </ref>  
 
A gun emplacement serves as a position or platform specially prepared to support large heavy guns and [[artillery]]. The 7-inch Rifled Muzzle-Loading (R.M.L.) constituted the first type of gun put on Fort Pasir Panjang. The first two of those guns, installed in 1878, providing a temporary defense for the fort. The defense reviews of 1885 proposed that 9.2-inch Rifled Breech-Loading (R.B.L.) guns those guns be installed together with the 7-inch guns.
 
 
 
In 1896, a proposal called for the replacement of the 7-inch R.M.L. gun with two 6-inch Quick-Firing (Q.F.) guns. That came out of the suggestion that the 7-inch R.M.L. has neither sufficient range accuracy nor rapidity of fire for effective defense. Even the engineer of the Fort, H.E. McCallum referred to those guns as being ”the worst in the service”.<ref name="Nparks"> Information obtained from on-site information board by [[National Parks Board]].</ref>  
 
 
 
Engineers eventually modified the emplacement to contain 2 × 6 in (152 mm) Q.F. guns. That gun, the leading technology of its time, definitely performed better in terms of its accuracy and rapidity to counter the speedy motor torpedo boats that appeared in the 1880s. Each shell used by those 6-inch Q.F. weighed 45 kilograms.<ref> Lim, ''Labrador Park'', pp. 44-48. </ref>
 
  
 
:'''7-inch rifled muzzle-loading gun'''
 
:'''7-inch rifled muzzle-loading gun'''
Line 46: Line 40:
  
 
====The Casemate====
 
====The Casemate====
The [[Casemate]], built in 1886, served as an ammunition store for the guns and a shelter for [[Gunner (rank)|gunners]] and [[infantry]] groups stationed at the Fort. Situated at the highest point of the hill, the Casemate served the 9.2-inch R.M.L. guns nearby. The Casemate has four rooms, one of the rooms held the entrance to a tunnel that led to underground store rooms beneath the first emplacement.<ref> Lim, ''Labrador Park'', pp. 72—3. </ref> [[Lim Bo Seng]], a war hero of Singapore, had been a major brick supplier in the late 1930s, with his main client, the [[colonial]] government. Bricks supplied by Lim lay in certain sections of the Casemates at the Fort. His other projects included the construction of [[Alexandra Hospital]], the army [[barracks]] in [[Changi]] and many defense works in the 1930s.<ref> Lim, ''Labrador Park'', p. 130. </ref>
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The [[Casemate]], built in 1886, served as an ammunition store for the guns and a shelter for [[Gunner (rank)|gunners]] and [[infantry]] groups stationed at the Fort. Situated at the highest point of the hill, it served the 9.2-inch R.M.L. guns. One of the four rooms opened into a tunnel that led to underground store rooms beneath the first emplacement.<ref>Lim, ''Labrador Park,'' 72—73. </ref> Singaporean [[Lim Bo Seng]], a war hero, had been a major brick supplier for the [[colonial]] government in the late 1930s. Bricks Lim supplied had been used to build sections of the Casemate. His other projects included the construction of [[Alexandra Hospital]] and the army [[barracks]] in [[Changi]].<ref>Lim, ''Labrador Park,'' 130. </ref>
  
 
====Tunnels====
 
====Tunnels====
 
[[Image:Fort Tunnel-Singapore.jpg|220px|thumb|A hidden tunnel leading to the ammunition store below the gun emplacement of Fort Pasir Panjang]]
 
[[Image:Fort Tunnel-Singapore.jpg|220px|thumb|A hidden tunnel leading to the ammunition store below the gun emplacement of Fort Pasir Panjang]]
The [[tunnels]], constructed in 1886, lead to underground storerooms constructed to serve gun emplacements located directly above it. The tunnels serving ''Gun Emplacement III'' constitute the most extensive tunnel discovered at Labrador Park.<ref name="Nparks"/> Immediately upon entering the tunnel stands an enlarged chamber allowing for two-way traffic of soldiers, a counter distinction from the walkways in the tunnel which allowed single person passage. The tunnel then splits into two. One leads to the [[Cartridge (firearms)|cartridge]] storeroom and hoist area while the other leads to the shell storeroom and hoist area. The hoist uses a mechanical pulley system to lift the shells and cartridges from the underground room to the emplacement above it. The allocation of separation hoists for the shells and the cartridges allows for convenience and a more systematic operation of the gun above it.
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The tunnels constructed in 1886 access underground storerooms for the artillery pieces. The tunnels accessing the storage room for Gun Emplacement III is the most extensive tunnel discovered at Labrador Park.<ref>Chuck Thompson, ''The 25 Best World War II Sites: Pacific Theater: The Ultimate Traveler's Guide to Battlefields, Monuments and Museums'' (San Francisco, CA: Greenline Publications, 2002), 15.</ref> Immediately upon entering the tunnel the soldier entered a enlarged chamber allowing for two-way foot traffic. The tunnel splits into two, one branch leading into the [[Cartridge (firearms)|cartridge]] storeroom and hoist area while the other leads to the shell storeroom and hoist area. A mechanical pulley system hoists the shells and cartridges from the underground storeroom to the emplacement above it. Each artillery emplacement had a hoist dedicated to supply ammunition.
  
 
====Uses of the underground rooms====
 
====Uses of the underground rooms====
The underground storerooms played important roles in the Fort. For one, they protected [[ammunition]] from being ignited by enemy fire. Secondly, the use of hoists facilitated easy movement and retrieval of ammunition. Thirdly, the tunnel provided protection for the gunners not involved in the actual manning of the gun. Lastly, they help to protect the gun and gunners above from any accidental explosions in the underground room itself. The underground tunnels lead to the following areas:<ref name="Nparks"/>
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The underground tunnels lead to the following areas:
 
   
 
   
* Lighting room—Given the inflammable nature of the store, no naked flames were allowed in any rooms with the exception of this room.
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* '''Lighting room:''' The only room soldier could use an exposed flame.
* Cartridge room—For the storage of cartridges.  
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* '''Cartridge room:''' For the storage of cartridges.  
* Cartridge lift area—Where the hoist raising the cartridges to the emplacement aboveground was found.
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* '''Cartridge lift area:''' The area from which the hoist raised cartridges to the emplacement above ground.
* Filled shell store—For the storage of shells filled with gunpowder.
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* '''Filled shell store:''' For the storage of shells loaded with gunpowder and ready to fire.
* Shell lift area—Where the hoist raising the Filled Shells to the emplacement aboveground was found.
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* '''Shell lift area:''' The area from which hoist raised filled shells to the emplacement above ground.
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===Japanese Invasion===
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Before the onset of [[World War II]], the British upgraded Fort Pasir Panjang to Labrador [[Artillery battery|Battery]], placing tank obstacles, land mines and beach defenses around the Fort. They hastily established air bases and [[garrisons]] in [[British Malaya|Malaya]] to counter the [[Empire of Japan|Japanese invasion]] threat. In anticipation of a coastal attack, eleven forts and gun batteries protected the coast south of Singapore:
  
===Japanese invasion===
 
Before the onset of [[World War II]] (WWII), the British upgraded Fort Pasir Panjang to Labrador [[Artillery battery|Battery]], placing tank obstacles, land mines and beach defenses around the Fort. They hurriedly sited air bases and [[garrisons]] in [[British Malaya|Malaya]] to counter the [[Empire of Japan|Japanese invasion]] threat. In anticipation of a coastal attack, eleven forts and gun batteries protected the coastal south of Singapore:
 
[[Image:Singapore war-time landmarks.jpg|thumb|right|220px|Fort Labrador 1 km to the west]]
 
 
# Fort Pasir Panjang
 
# Fort Pasir Panjang
 
# Fort Siloso
 
# Fort Siloso
Line 76: Line 70:
 
# Fort Teregah
 
# Fort Teregah
  
By the eve of the Japanese invasion, Singapore had become one of the most [[fortified]] countries in the world.<ref> Lim, ''Labrador Park'', pp. 80—1. </ref>
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By the eve of the Japanese invasion, Singapore had become a highly fortified country, seemingly prepared to repel any attacking foe.<ref>Lim, ''Labrador Park,'' 80-1. </ref>
  
 
===Battle for Pasir Panjang===
 
===Battle for Pasir Panjang===
[[Image:Battle of Pasir Panjang.jpg|thumb|right|180px|Painting depicts hand-to-hand combat during the Battle of Pasir Panjang.]]
 
By 13 February 1942, the Japanese had already reached Pasir Panjang Ridge (present [[Kent Ridge Park]]) after destroying the [[Allied]] artillery force on Chwee Chian Hill (where [[Poh Ern Shih Temple]] stands today). That location stood near the Alexandra area where the main ammunition stores and a [[Alexandra Hospital|military hospital]] situated. The men of the 1st [[Battalion]], Charlie Company, [[Royal Malay Regiment|Malay Regiment]], led by [[Lieutenent]] [[Adnan Bin Saidi]] fought bravely to the last. They killed or wounded many Japanese soldiers. The guns from Labrador assisted the Malay Regiment in their 48-hour struggle against the Japanese by firing high explosive shells at enemy troops.<ref name="Bose"/> With Japanese reinforcements, the Japanese finally surrounded and [[massacred]] Malay Regiment. Three lucky ones, together with Lieutenant Abbas Abdul-Manan, managed to escape and later rejoined thirty surviving soldiers of a British battalion in the nearby area.
 
  
After their conquest of Pasir Panjang Ridge, the Japanese proceeded to march towards the city of Singapore for their final decisive thrust against remaining Allied forces there. Perched on a hill (near present Keppel Country Club) along [[Pasir Panjang Road]], the escaped Malay and British soldiers had gathered together and waited patiently to [[ambush]] the Japanese [[convoy]] heading towards the city. Using mounted [[Bofors]] guns, they let loose deluge of gunshots causing the Japanese to scramble for cover. The Japanese tanks attempted to move forward to engage the enemy but they could not advance forward due to the sea of dead and wounded blocking its way. About 100 Japanese soldiers died during the ambush before the Anglo-Malay force retreated to the city to join their fellow men for their final stand against the Japanese.<ref> Lim, ''Labrador Park'', pp. 88—9. </ref>
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By February 13, 1942, the Japanese had already reached Pasir Panjang Ridge (present [[Kent Ridge Park]]) after destroying the [[Allied]] artillery emplacement on Chwee Chian Hill where [[Poh Ern Shih Temple]] stands today. The main ammunition stores and Alexandra Hospital lay close by. The men of the 1st [[Battalion]], Charlie Company, [[Royal Malay Regiment|Malay Regiment]], led by [[Lieutenent]] [[Adnan Bin Saidi]] fought bravely to the last. They killed or wounded many Japanese soldiers. The guns from Labrador assisted the Malay Regiment in their 48-hour struggle against the Japanese by firing high explosive shells at the enemy forces.<ref name="Bose"/> Reinforced, the Japanese surrounded and [[massacred]] Malay Regiment. Three soldiers, together with Lieutenant Abbas Abdul-Manan, managed to escape and rejoin thirty soldiers from a British battalion nearby.
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[[Image:Sentosa-Fort Siloso.jpg|thumb|right|220px|Fort Siloso]]
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After the battle for Pasir Panjang Ridge, the Japanese marched toward Singapore to engage the remaining Allied forces. Perched on a hill near present Keppel Country Club along [[Pasir Panjang Road]], Malay and British soldiers prepared to ambush the Japanese [[convoy]] heading towards the city. Using mounted [[Bofors]] guns, they let loose a volley forcing the Japanese to take cover. Japanese tanks moved forward to engage the enemy, blocked by the dead and wounded covering the way. About 100 Japanese soldiers died during the ambush before the Anglo-Malay force retreated to the city to join forces for their final stand against the Japanese.<ref>Lim, ''Labrador Park,'' 88—9. </ref>
  
 
===Alexandra Hospital massacre===
 
===Alexandra Hospital massacre===
On 14 February 1942, seeking reprisal for their great loss and also retaliation against retreating soldiers from the 44th [[India]]n [[Brigade]] who had fired from [[Alexandra Hospital]], three groups of Japanese soldiers went on a blind [[running amok|rampage]]. Entering the hospital from the rear, they bayoneted everyone they found, soldiers, patients and medical staff.<ref> Patridge, "Alexandra Hospital Massacre," p. 60. </ref> They killed a British officer, Lieutenant W.E.J. Weston, who carried a white flag to meet them. Even a young patient, [[Corporal]] Holden, lying on an operating table died at the point of a bayonet. The Japanese massacred about 200 defenseless souls.<ref> Lim, "The Massacre at Alexandra Hospital," p. 90. </ref> Some managed to escape death by falling to the floor and pretending death.
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On February 14, 1942, seeking reprisal for losses suffered, and in retaliation for fire taken from [[Alexandra Hospital]] by the 44th [[India]]n [[Brigade]], Japanese soldiers went on a rampage throughout the hospital. Entering from the rear, they bayoneted everyone they found; soldiers, patients, and medical staff.<ref>Patridge, ''Alexandra Hospital Massacre,'' 60. </ref> They killed a British officer, Lieutenant W.E.J. Weston, who carried a white flag to meet them. A wounded soldier, [[Corporal]] Holden, died at the point of a bayonet while lying on an operating table. The Japanese massacred approximately 200 men, women, and children.<ref>Lim, ''The Massacre at Alexandra Hospital,'' 90. </ref> Some managed to escape death by acting dead.
  
The following day, [[Lieutenant-General]] [[Renya Mutaguchi]], [[Commander]] of the [[Japanese 18th Division]] toured the hospital and distributed tinned fruits, all the while apologizing profusely for the brutality of his soldiers and assured the staff of their safety. He also ordered the execution of the Japanese soldiers responsible for the massacre, within the hospital grounds.<ref> Bose, "Alexandra Hospital Massacre," pp. 68—9. </ref>
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The following day, [[Lieutenant-General]] [[Renya Mutaguchi]], [[Commander]] of the [[Japanese 18th Division]] toured the hospital and distributed tinned fruits, all the while apologizing profusely for the brutality of his soldiers and assured the staff of their safety. He also ordered the execution of the Japanese soldiers within the hospital grounds who had been responsible for the massacre.<ref>Bose, ''Alexandra Hospital Massacre,'' 68—9. </ref>
  
===Ineffective guns===
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===Artillery performance===
The guns of Labrador as well as those in other forts, in anticipation of a coastal attack, aimed seawards and had concrete barriers behind them. As such, the gunners had difficulty in traversing those guns to point northward on the advancing Japanese troops. In addition, officers had distributed more [[armour-piercing]] cartridges rather than [[high explosive]] (H.E.) rounds which prove more effective against the infantry. As a result, those guns served to no effect and saw little action during the [[Battle of Singapore]].
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The British, expecting an attack from the sea, set their defenses to handle that threat. When the Japanese attacked by land, they found themselves at a tremendous disadvantage. British command had aimed the guns defending Singapore seawards, constructing concrete barriers behind them. Gunners encountered difficulty turning their guns to fire northward on the advancing Japanese troops. Officers had distributed anti-ship [[armor-piercing]] cartridges rather than [[high explosive]] (H.E.) rounds, which prove more effective against infantry. As a result, the artillery proved ineffectual during the [[Battle of Singapore]].
  
 
==Aftermath==
 
==Aftermath==
Before the British surrendered to the Japanese on 15 February 1942, they destroyed all remaining coastal artillery in an operation aptly named ''Scorched Earth''. They burned and destroyed everything that might be of use to the invading Japanese. <ref>Lim, ''Labrador Park'', p. 115. </ref> After WWII, the British disbanded forts worldwide as advances in air defense systems rendered them obsolete. Today, the ruins of coastal fortifications still stand visible at Labrador Battery, [[Mount Faber]], [[Fort Siloso]] and [[Fort Canning]] that serve as a lasting reminder of their wartime legacy in Fortress Singapore.
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Before the British surrendered to the Japanese on February 15, 1942, they destroyed all coastal artillery in an operation named ''Scorched Earth''. They burned and destroyed everything that the invading Japanese might find useful.<ref>Lim, ''Labrador Park,'' 115. </ref> After World War II, the British disbanded forts worldwide as advances in air defense systems rendered them obsolete. Today, the abandoned emplacements at Labrador Battery, [[Mount Faber]], [[Fort Siloso]] and [[Fort Canning]] remain, serving as a sad reminder of the [[Battle of Singapore]].
  
 
==See also==
 
==See also==
Line 103: Line 98:
  
 
==Notes==
 
==Notes==
{{reflist|2}}
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<references/>
  
 
==References==
 
==References==
<div class="references-small">
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*Bose, Roman. ''Fortress Singapore—The Battlefield Guide'' Singapore: Times Book International, 1992. ISBN 9812043659.
*{{cite book | last = Bose | first = Roman | title = Fortress Singapore—The Battlefield Guide | publisher = Singapore: Times Book International | date = 1995 | isbn = 981-204-365-9 }}
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*Keppel, Henry, and James Brooke. ''The Expedition to Borneo of H.M.S. Dido for the Suppression of Piracy: With Extracts from the Journal of James Brooke, esq. of Sarāwak''. British Library, 2011  (original 1846). 978-1241733414.
* Keppel, Henry, and James Brooke. (1846). ''The expedition to Borneo of H.M.S. Dido for the suppression of piracy: with extracts from the journal of James Brooke, esq. of Sarāwak''. London: Chapman and Hall. OCLC 5186218.
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*Lim, David. ''Labrador Park—The Adventure Begins.'' Singapore: SNP Panpac, 2005. {{OCLC|60235886}}.
*{{cite book | last = Lim | first = David | title = Labrador Park—The Adventure Begins | publisher = Singapore: SNP Panpac | date = 2005 | isbn = 981-252-855-5 }}  
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*Lloyd, R. Ian, and Irene Hoe. ''Singapore from the Air.'' Singapore: Times Eds, 1985. ISBN 978-9971400125.
* Lloyd, R. Ian, and Irene Hoe. 1985. Singapore from the air. Singapore: Times Eds. ISBN 9789971400125.
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*Patridge, Jeff. ''Alexandra Hospital: From British Military to Civilian Institution 1938—1998.'' Singapore: Alexandra Hospital & Singapore Polytechnic Publication, 1998. ISBN 9810404301.
*{{cite book | last = Patridge | first = Jeff | title = Alexandra Hospital: From British Military to Civilian Institution 1938—1998 | publisher = Singapore: Alexandra Hospital & Singapore Polytechnic Publication | date = 1998 | isbn = 981-04-0430-1 }}
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*Thompson, Chuck. ''The 25 Best World War II Sites: Pacific Theater: The Ultimate Traveler's Guide to Battlefields, Monuments and Museums''. Greenline historic travel series. San Francisco, CA: Greenline Publications, 2002. ISBN 978-0966635263.
* Singapore. 1997. ''National heritage tours''. Singapore: The Division. ISBN 9789812237613.
 
</div>
 
  
 
==External links==
 
==External links==
 +
All links retrieved April 19, 2017.
 +
 +
* [http://sg.pagenation.com/sin/Pasir%20Panjang%20Park_103.7922_1.2759.map Pasir Panjang Park].
  
* [http://infopedia.nl.sg/articles/SIP_14_2005-01-25.html Labrador Park/Fort Pasir Panjang]. Retrieved July 19, 2008.
 
* [http://sg.pagenation.com/sin/Pasir%20Panjang%20Park_103.7922_1.2759.map Pasir Panjang Park]. Retrieved July 19, 2008.
 
* [http://www.ecologyasia.com/news-archives/2002/feb-02/straitstimes.asia1.com.sg_singapore_story_0,1870,104080,00.html Strait Times]. Retrieved July 19, 2008.
 
  
 
[[Category:History]]
 
[[Category:History]]

Revision as of 01:39, 24 September 2022

A gun emplacement of Fort Pasir Panjang outfitted with a 9.2-inch Rifled Breech Loading gun

Fort Pasir Panjang, or Labrador Battery, located at the southern tip of Singapore island, served as a key British coastal fort during the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. The Fort defended the western passageway into Keppel Harbor against pirates and rival naval powers. During the 1942 Battle of Pasir Panjang, the British used the fort to support the Malay Regiments against the Japanese at Bukit Chandu. In 1995, the Singapore National Heritage Board recognized the site as one of the eleven notable World War II sites in Singapore.[1]

Great Britain, which had carved out colonies throughout the world, understood the importance of coaling stations and coastal forts in strategic places. Singapore fit that need in excellent fashion. Britain widened the straights in 1848 in preparation for building defenses. In 1878, Britain built two forts to protect the main entrance into Singapore harbor, one of them Fort Pasir Panjang. In that year, Japan experienced the Meiji Restoration, a political earthquake that set Japan on the path of becoming a power equal to the European and American powers. Inevitably, Japan and Great Britain, along with the U.S. and Russia, would clash for control of Asia. The fall of Fort Pasir Panjang to Japan, and subsequently the fall of Singapore, set a shock wave throughout the Allied Forces. Great Britain suffered possibly its single greatest defeat in its military history. The war in the Pacific continued from another three and a half years. When the guns silenced, Japan had lost its empire, including Singapore. Great Britain, although on the side of the victors, relinquished control of many of it's colonies soon after World World II ended. Singapore secured its own independence in 1963.

Map of Keppel Harbor.

History

Fort Pasir Panjang originally was called Labrador Battery, named after Labrador Bay. Two craggy granite outcrops, Long Ya Men (龙牙门), or Dragon's Teeth Gate, formerly stood on each side of the entrance to the Keppel Harbor, at that time called New Harbor. Dragon's Teeth Gate served as a navigation landmark to mariners since ancient times.[2] The Straits Settlement Surveyor, John Thomson, subsequently blew up the two rock outcrops in August 1848, to widen the entrance to the harbor.[3] The British recognized Labrador's strategic value as early as 1843 when making plans to set up defenses to protect Singapore, an important trading post founded by Sir Stamford Raffles of the British East India Company in 1819.

Piracy

The New Harbor had been renamed as Keppel Harbor in 1900 after Admiral Sir Henry Keppel of HMS Meander, who carried out an on-site survey to build an anchorage in the harbor in the 1880s. In 1842, he had won renown for his successful campaigns against pirates harassing merchant ships close to the harbor entrance. His work rendered piracy less dangerous in the waters off Singapore from the 1850s.[4]

A white obelisk stands near the former site of Long Ya Men marking the original Western Harbour boundary. That obelisk still stands at Tanjong Berlayer Point ("Tanjong" means "land's end" in Malay) marking the southernmost tip of the Asian Continent.[5]

Defenses

In 1878, British engineers placed forts on either side of the entrance to New Harbour in an attempt to strengthen coastal defenses in Singapore for protection against naval attack by European powers. They constructed Fort Pasir Panjang on Labrador and Fort Siloso on Pulau Blakang Mati (now Sentosa). The steep cliffs and thick mangrove swamps surrounding the two forts acted as excellent natural barriers against attackers.

Underwater mines

The Fort's watch tower located at the edge of the entrance of Singapore's Keppel Harbor. The tower provided a commanding view of approaching ships entering into the harbor

In 1881, British engineers laid mines in the waters between the two forts and at the eastern entrance of the harbor to further strengthen the defenses. They tethered the mines to the seabed, adjusted to float just under the surface of the water. The British created a "friendly safe channel" through the minefields. The mine field work led to speculation that a tunnel had been created under the channel, linking the two forts.[6]

Gun emplacements

The 7th Coast Artillery Regiment made up the Faber Fire Command under Brigadier A.D. Curtiss.[7] The British first installed the 7-inch Rifled Muzzle-Loading (R.M.L.) at Fort Pasir Panjang in 1878, providing a temporary defense, soon after mounting 9.2-inch Rifled Breech-Loading (R.B.L.) guns as the main firepower.[8] Engineers eventually set up 2 × 6 in (152 mm) Q.F. guns in the emplacement. The 6-inch quick-firing gun represented cutting-edge artillery technology, enabling gunners to take out fast moving torpedo boats that came on the scene in the 1880s. The 6-inch quick-firing gun shells weighed 45 kilograms.[9]

7-inch rifled muzzle-loading gun
  • Weight: 6.5 tons.
  • Muzzle velocity: 1,500 feet per second (460 m/s).
  • Rounds per minute: 2-3
  • Type of ammunition used: Common shells, shrapnel shells and case shots.
6-inch quick-firing gun
  • Weight: 7 tons.
  • Muzzle velocity 2,150 feet per second (655 m/s).
  • Rounds per minute: 25-30.
  • Maximum range: 15,700 yards (14,400 m) on a central pivot.

The Casemate

The Casemate, built in 1886, served as an ammunition store for the guns and a shelter for gunners and infantry groups stationed at the Fort. Situated at the highest point of the hill, it served the 9.2-inch R.M.L. guns. One of the four rooms opened into a tunnel that led to underground store rooms beneath the first emplacement.[10] Singaporean Lim Bo Seng, a war hero, had been a major brick supplier for the colonial government in the late 1930s. Bricks Lim supplied had been used to build sections of the Casemate. His other projects included the construction of Alexandra Hospital and the army barracks in Changi.[11]

Tunnels

A hidden tunnel leading to the ammunition store below the gun emplacement of Fort Pasir Panjang

The tunnels constructed in 1886 access underground storerooms for the artillery pieces. The tunnels accessing the storage room for Gun Emplacement III is the most extensive tunnel discovered at Labrador Park.[12] Immediately upon entering the tunnel the soldier entered a enlarged chamber allowing for two-way foot traffic. The tunnel splits into two, one branch leading into the cartridge storeroom and hoist area while the other leads to the shell storeroom and hoist area. A mechanical pulley system hoists the shells and cartridges from the underground storeroom to the emplacement above it. Each artillery emplacement had a hoist dedicated to supply ammunition.

Uses of the underground rooms

The underground tunnels lead to the following areas:

  • Lighting room: The only room soldier could use an exposed flame.
  • Cartridge room: For the storage of cartridges.
  • Cartridge lift area: The area from which the hoist raised cartridges to the emplacement above ground.
  • Filled shell store: For the storage of shells loaded with gunpowder and ready to fire.
  • Shell lift area: The area from which hoist raised filled shells to the emplacement above ground.

Japanese Invasion

Before the onset of World War II, the British upgraded Fort Pasir Panjang to Labrador Battery, placing tank obstacles, land mines and beach defenses around the Fort. They hastily established air bases and garrisons in Malaya to counter the Japanese invasion threat. In anticipation of a coastal attack, eleven forts and gun batteries protected the coast south of Singapore:

  1. Fort Pasir Panjang
  2. Fort Siloso
  3. Mount Imbiah Battery
  4. Fort Serapong
  5. Fort Connaught
  6. Fort Canning
  7. Fullerton
  8. Palmer
  9. Faber Fire Command
  10. Fort Silingsing
  11. Fort Teregah

By the eve of the Japanese invasion, Singapore had become a highly fortified country, seemingly prepared to repel any attacking foe.[13]

Battle for Pasir Panjang

By February 13, 1942, the Japanese had already reached Pasir Panjang Ridge (present Kent Ridge Park) after destroying the Allied artillery emplacement on Chwee Chian Hill where Poh Ern Shih Temple stands today. The main ammunition stores and Alexandra Hospital lay close by. The men of the 1st Battalion, Charlie Company, Malay Regiment, led by Lieutenent Adnan Bin Saidi fought bravely to the last. They killed or wounded many Japanese soldiers. The guns from Labrador assisted the Malay Regiment in their 48-hour struggle against the Japanese by firing high explosive shells at the enemy forces.[7] Reinforced, the Japanese surrounded and massacred Malay Regiment. Three soldiers, together with Lieutenant Abbas Abdul-Manan, managed to escape and rejoin thirty soldiers from a British battalion nearby.

Fort Siloso

After the battle for Pasir Panjang Ridge, the Japanese marched toward Singapore to engage the remaining Allied forces. Perched on a hill near present Keppel Country Club along Pasir Panjang Road, Malay and British soldiers prepared to ambush the Japanese convoy heading towards the city. Using mounted Bofors guns, they let loose a volley forcing the Japanese to take cover. Japanese tanks moved forward to engage the enemy, blocked by the dead and wounded covering the way. About 100 Japanese soldiers died during the ambush before the Anglo-Malay force retreated to the city to join forces for their final stand against the Japanese.[14]

Alexandra Hospital massacre

On February 14, 1942, seeking reprisal for losses suffered, and in retaliation for fire taken from Alexandra Hospital by the 44th Indian Brigade, Japanese soldiers went on a rampage throughout the hospital. Entering from the rear, they bayoneted everyone they found; soldiers, patients, and medical staff.[15] They killed a British officer, Lieutenant W.E.J. Weston, who carried a white flag to meet them. A wounded soldier, Corporal Holden, died at the point of a bayonet while lying on an operating table. The Japanese massacred approximately 200 men, women, and children.[16] Some managed to escape death by acting dead.

The following day, Lieutenant-General Renya Mutaguchi, Commander of the Japanese 18th Division toured the hospital and distributed tinned fruits, all the while apologizing profusely for the brutality of his soldiers and assured the staff of their safety. He also ordered the execution of the Japanese soldiers within the hospital grounds who had been responsible for the massacre.[17]

Artillery performance

The British, expecting an attack from the sea, set their defenses to handle that threat. When the Japanese attacked by land, they found themselves at a tremendous disadvantage. British command had aimed the guns defending Singapore seawards, constructing concrete barriers behind them. Gunners encountered difficulty turning their guns to fire northward on the advancing Japanese troops. Officers had distributed anti-ship armor-piercing cartridges rather than high explosive (H.E.) rounds, which prove more effective against infantry. As a result, the artillery proved ineffectual during the Battle of Singapore.

Aftermath

Before the British surrendered to the Japanese on February 15, 1942, they destroyed all coastal artillery in an operation named Scorched Earth. They burned and destroyed everything that the invading Japanese might find useful.[18] After World War II, the British disbanded forts worldwide as advances in air defense systems rendered them obsolete. Today, the abandoned emplacements at Labrador Battery, Mount Faber, Fort Siloso and Fort Canning remain, serving as a sad reminder of the Battle of Singapore.

See also

Notes

  1. Singapore, National Heritage Tours (Singapore: The Division, 1997).
  2. R. Ian Lloyd and Irene Hoe, Singapore From the Air (Singapore: Times Eds, 1985), 44.
  3. Dragon's tooth replica to mark anniversary of Chinese explorer, The Straits Times.
  4. Henry Keppel and James Brooke, The Expedition to Borneo of H.M.S. Dido for the Suppression of Piracy: With Extracts from the Journal of James Brooke, esq. of Sarāwak (London: Chapman and Hall, 1846).
  5. Infopedia, Harbour Limit Marker, Labrador Park/Fort Pasir Panjang. Retrieved July 15, 2008.
  6. Lim, Labrador Park, 26.
  7. 7.0 7.1 Bose, in Labrador Park, 66.
  8. A. G. Harfield, British & Indian Armies in the East Indies, 1685-1935 (Chippenham, Wiltshire: Picton Pub., 1984), 232.
  9. Lim, Labrador Park, 44-48.
  10. Lim, Labrador Park, 72—73.
  11. Lim, Labrador Park, 130.
  12. Chuck Thompson, The 25 Best World War II Sites: Pacific Theater: The Ultimate Traveler's Guide to Battlefields, Monuments and Museums (San Francisco, CA: Greenline Publications, 2002), 15.
  13. Lim, Labrador Park, 80-1.
  14. Lim, Labrador Park, 88—9.
  15. Patridge, Alexandra Hospital Massacre, 60.
  16. Lim, The Massacre at Alexandra Hospital, 90.
  17. Bose, Alexandra Hospital Massacre, 68—9.
  18. Lim, Labrador Park, 115.

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Bose, Roman. Fortress Singapore—The Battlefield Guide Singapore: Times Book International, 1992. ISBN 9812043659.
  • Keppel, Henry, and James Brooke. The Expedition to Borneo of H.M.S. Dido for the Suppression of Piracy: With Extracts from the Journal of James Brooke, esq. of Sarāwak. British Library, 2011 (original 1846). 978-1241733414.
  • Lim, David. Labrador Park—The Adventure Begins. Singapore: SNP Panpac, 2005. OCLC 60235886.
  • Lloyd, R. Ian, and Irene Hoe. Singapore from the Air. Singapore: Times Eds, 1985. ISBN 978-9971400125.
  • Patridge, Jeff. Alexandra Hospital: From British Military to Civilian Institution 1938—1998. Singapore: Alexandra Hospital & Singapore Polytechnic Publication, 1998. ISBN 9810404301.
  • Thompson, Chuck. The 25 Best World War II Sites: Pacific Theater: The Ultimate Traveler's Guide to Battlefields, Monuments and Museums. Greenline historic travel series. San Francisco, CA: Greenline Publications, 2002. ISBN 978-0966635263.

External links

All links retrieved April 19, 2017.

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