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Chasing the Dragon: The Scourge of Opium

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History

10 October 2015

The opium trade was a lucrative business in colonial Singapore. Gracie Lee examines its deleterious effects on the economic and social life of the city.

A Chinese man smoking opium, 1920. Opium-smoking was one of the three social ills – the other two being gambling and prostitution – that plagued the Chinese community in Chinatown in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Lim Kheng Chye Collection, courtesy of National Archives of Singapore.

A Chinese man smoking opium, 1920. Opium-smoking was one of the three social ills – the other two being gambling and prostitution – that plagued the Chinese community in Chinatown in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Lim Kheng Chye Collection, courtesy of National Archives of Singapore.

The Economic Importance of Opium

A coloured zincograph print of a poppy flower and a seed capsule (Papaver somniferum) by M. A. Burnett, 1853. Welcome Collection. Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0).

A coloured zincograph print of a poppy flower and a seed capsule (Papaver somniferum) by M. A. Burnett, 1853. Welcome Collection. Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0).

Opium Use in Asia

An advertising print for British India showing the cultivation of the opium poppy plant on the right, 1860–1925. Courtesy of the National Museum of Singapore, National Heritage Board.

An advertising print for British India showing the cultivation of the opium poppy plant on the right, 1860–1925. Courtesy of the National Museum of Singapore, National Heritage Board.

Opium Use in Singapore

Opium being moulded into balls and put into brass cups at the opium factory at Gulzarbagh in Patna, India. Painting by Shiva Lal, 1857. © Victoria and Albert Museum, London.

Opium being moulded into balls and put into brass cups at the opium factory at Gulzarbagh in Patna, India. Painting by Shiva Lal, 1857. © Victoria and Albert Museum, London.

Chinese men inhaling opium on a raised bed, c. 1870s. Courtesy of the National Museum of Singapore, National Heritage Board.

Chinese men inhaling opium on a raised bed, c. 1870s. Courtesy of the National Museum of Singapore, National Heritage Board.

The opium lamp heats and vapourises opium into fumes that are then inhaled. The opium pipe is made of ornate silver with a yixing pipe-bowl and ivory mouthpiece. All original artefacts courtesy of the National Museum of Singapore, National Heritage Board.

The opium lamp heats and vapourises opium into fumes that are then inhaled. The opium pipe is made of ornate silver with a yixing pipe-bowl and ivory mouthpiece. All original artefacts courtesy of the National Museum of Singapore, National Heritage Board.

The Effect on Colonial Society

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