- Jackson Plan
The Jackson Plan of
1822 , also known as the "Plan of the Town of Singapore", was an urban plan forSingapore drawn up to maintain some order in the urban development of the fledgling but thrivingcolony founded just three years earlier. It was named afterLieutenant Philip Jackson, the colony's engineer and land surveyor tasked to oversee its physical development.Originally,
William Farquhar who had governed Singapore from1819 until1823 had allowed the colony to flourish under the sheer volume oftrade that passed through her port, but had not organised the colony, and thus it grew haphazardly. Upon his return in October1822 , the colony's founder,Sir Stamford Raffles , was displeased by the disorderliness, and formed a town Committee led by Lieutenant Jackson to revise the layout plan of the city. The Jackson Plan was thus formulated, created a plan of Singapore that would divide it into ethnic functional subdivisions and lay the colony out in agrid pattern. Ethnic residential areas were to be segregated into four areas.The
European Town had residents who consisted of European traders, Eurasians and rich Asians. There was also the "Chinese Kampong" for the ethnic Chinese, located in present-day Chinatown and south-east of theSingapore River .Chulia Kampong was where ethnicIndia ns originally resided and was located further north of the Chinese Kampong.Kampong Glam consisted ofMuslims , ethnic Malays andArab s who had migrated to Singapore, and was further divided into three parts, for theBugis , the Arabs and theSultan of Singapore .West of the European Town were administrative and commercial districts. Just west of the River, land was taken from a hill to reclaim a small portion of land which became the Commercial Square, which was later renamed
Raffles Place in Raffles' honour. This section, together with the European Town, evolved into the present-dayDowntown Core .Although the concept of racial segregation was later abandoned, the effects such as the layout of the streets and the distinction of each district still has present-day effects.
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