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Raffles and the Founding of Singapore: An Exhibition of Raffles’ Letters

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Collection Highlights

7 July 2012

Nearly 200 years after he set foot on Singapore to establish a trading post for the British East India Company, Sir Thomas Stamford Bingley Raffles (1781–1826) continues to fascinate and intrigue us. How else can you explain our penchant for naming all manners of things after him?

Statue of Raffles by sculptor Thomas Woolner. Courtesy of John Bastin.

Statue of Raffles by sculptor Thomas Woolner. Courtesy of John Bastin.

Beyond the Visionary with Folded Arms

Raffles and the Malay States

Setbacks and Triumphs

Raffles sent Canning a memorandum entitled “Our Interests in the Eastern Archipelago”, which offered a blueprint on how Britain could secure its interests in the east, and proposed the establishment of a third British settlement.

Lord Moira, Marquess of Hastings. Roger Griffith & R. J. Beevor, Hastings of Hastings, London, 1829.

Lord Moira, Marquess of Hastings. Roger Griffith & R. J. Beevor, Hastings of Hastings, London, 1829.

Anxious Days and the Founding of Singapore

Raffles had despatched Major William Farquhar, former Commandant and Resident of Melaka, to survey the islands at the tip of the Malay Peninsula and Johor Lama [including] the Carimon Islands (Karimun) and Singapore.

Portrait of Major William Farquhar, c. 1830. Originally reproduced with the permission of Mrs B. Atkinson.

Portrait of Major William Farquhar, c. 1830. Originally reproduced with the permission of Mrs B. Atkinson.

The Letters on Show

Extract of a letter dated 15 April 1820, from Raffles to Henry Petty-Fitzmaurice, Third Marquess of Lansdowne. Raffles informs Lansdowne that there are now over 10,000 persons on the island and “no less than 173 sail of vessels of different descriptions”. Courtesy of the National Library Board. All rights reserved.

Extract of a letter dated 15 April 1820, from Raffles to Henry Petty-Fitzmaurice, Third Marquess of Lansdowne. Raffles informs Lansdowne that there are now over 10,000 persons on the island and “no less than 173 sail of vessels of different descriptions”. Courtesy of the National Library Board. All rights reserved.

Extract of a letter from Raffles to Lansdowne, dated 20 January 1823, in which Raffles lists some of Singapore’s achievements to date, among these the drafting of regulations to govern the island. Courtesy of the National Library Board. All rights reserved.

Extract of a letter from Raffles to Lansdowne, dated 20 January 1823, in which Raffles lists some of Singapore’s achievements to date, among these the drafting of regulations to govern the island. Courtesy of the National Library Board. All rights reserved.

Captain Daniel Ross’ survey map of Singapore Harbour, believed to be the earliest map of Singapore. The map was engraved by John Batement and originally published by James Horsburgh in 1820.

Captain Daniel Ross’ survey map of Singapore Harbour, believed to be the earliest map of Singapore. The map was engraved by John Batement and originally published by James Horsburgh in 1820.

The End

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