- Sun Yat Sen Nanyang Memorial Hall
The Sun Yat Sen Nanyang Memorial Hall (zh-sp|s=孙中山南洋纪念馆|p=Sūn Zhōngshān Nányáng Jìniàn Guǎn, also known as Wan Qing Yuan, 晚晴园, and formerly as Sun Yat Sen Villa, 孙中山故居) is a double-storey colonial
villa at Balestier inSingapore . The villa is now amuseum commemorating Dr Sun Yat Sen who visited Singapore eight times between 1900 and 1911.History
The villa is believed to have been built by
businessman Boey Chuan Poh in 1880 to house his mistress, Bin Chan, from whom came the building's original name, "Bin Chan House".In 1905, the villa was bought by
rubber magnateTeo Eng Hock —great-granduncle of Minister for DefenceTeo Chee Hean —from atimber merchant for his aged mother, Mdm Tan Poh Neo. A fervent supporter of theChinese revolution movement to overthrow theQing dynasty inChina , Teo Eng Hock later offered the place as the Singapore branch of the "Tong Meng Hui", or theChinese Revolutionary Alliance , to Dr Sun Yat Sen for his revolutionary activities in February 1906 until the successfulXinhai Revolution in 1911. "Tong Meng Hui" was formed to help drum up support and raise money for the revolution. The villa later became the alliance'sSoutheast Asia headquarters.After the revolution in 1911, Mr Teo's business declined and he sold the 2,760 m² property. In March 1937, it was bought by a group of six leading Chinese businessmen in Singapore, including
philanthropist Lee Kong Chian , to be preserved as a historical site.During the
Japanese Occupation of Singapore inWorld War II , the villa was used as a communications hub by the Japanese.In the early 1950s, the villa was handed over to the Singapore Chinese Chamber of Commerce and Industry. The chamber turned it into a place of historical interest in 1965 after a major renovation and was known as Sun Yat Sen Villa.
Gazetted a national monument on
28 October 1994 , it symbolises the contributions of theoverseas Chinese to the revolutionary movement in China, as well as the inspiration of Dr. Sun's nationalist ideals on the people of Singapore, which was formerly a British Colony.The villa was closed in November 1997 for restoration at a cost of
S$ 7.5 million, and reopened in November 2001 as the Sun Yat Sen Nanyang Memorial Hall.un Yat Sen Nanyang Memorial Hall today
Today, the villa is home to a collection of at least 50
paintings ,calligraphy works andsculptures .One highlight is a 2-metre tall
bronze wallmural which spans 60 m to the back of the building and depicts Singapore's history from the 1840s to the 1940s. Sculpted by artists fromChina , it is probably Singapore's longest bronze mural. Work started as early as 1999 and was completed in early 2005. Costing nearlyS$ 1 million, the museum's most expensive artwork depicts scenes like Singapore as afishing village in the 1840s andJapan ese troops' purge of anti-Japanese elements during their occupation here in the 1940s.Scattered around the
garden grounds are severalbronze statues , including those ofmartyr s who helped Dr Sun, and a metre-tall sculpture of Dr Sun, seated on a chair, which was presented by theKuomintang in China back in 1937. More bronze sculptures of Dr Sun line the hallway leading to the museum's entrance.The second level of the museum displays oil and watercolour paintings and
calligraphy works by top Singaporean and Chinese artists, such as the late Singapore pioneer painter Liu Kang, well-known Buddhist monk and artist Reverend Song Nian, and Cultural Medallion-winning artists Ong Kim Seng andTan Swie Hian .Besides paintings in oil and water colour, and a bronze relief showing
rubber tappers at work in Malaya, some 400 otherphotographs , artefacts andaudio-visual equipment are also exhibited to tell the story of Dr Sun's success inSoutheast Asia , where he drummed up support for his revolution. These include more than 10 major oil paintings, including a showpiece 6 m-by-3 m in oil, showing Dr Sun speaking in 1907 totin miners andrubber plantation workers at Kampar inPerak in then Malaya.Most of the paintings, the bronze wall mural and the bronze statues and busts, worth over S$1.5 million, which were commissioned by the museum, were paid for by the
Lee Foundation .The museum receives about 2,000 visitors a month, mainly
students andtourists .ee also
*
Sun Yat-sen Mausoleum
*Sun Yat-sen Memorial Hall
*Sun Yat Sen Memorial House References
*"
The Straits Times ", "House of history",29 December 2005 External links
* [http://www.wanqingyuan.com.sg/english/index.html Sun Yat Sen Nanyang Memorial Hall]
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.