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1.
The bastion underneath left some clue on the ground that no grass
can grow
2. The bastion under excavation project
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South East Asia Archaeology and its wonderful
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The fate of the fort
The Tanjong Katong Fort, as one of Singapore's oldest, 19th
century colonial fort now is bearing the risk of being forgotten
again. For this unique Singapore's only 'true fort', the
authorities adopted a 'wait-and-see' approach in order to
determine further plans to excavate it or leave it alone.
According to historical research, this fort has already been
buried deliberately during the 127 years of its history. It was
built in 1879 by the British to fortify the south-eastern sea
shore from potential Russian invaders with firing cannons and
guns.
However, the first burial of the fort took place when it was later
abandoned in 1901 after the WW1 was over and the Russian threat
diminished. One simple way the British thought of preserving it is
by burying it under the soil. It costs less and thought to be a
better approach than destroying it given its large size.
The burial was a good job but. May be it was done in a hurry, some
part was not totally and deeply covered. A small bastion stuck out
above ground in the late 1960s. That was when at almost the same
time land reclamation in the East Coast took place. And the Katong
Park as in today was built on top of the fort.
It was in year 2001, a resident reported that he found some rocks
there but they were not like rocks. The seemingly concrete area
where the grass cannot grow on top resembles a part of a much
larger structure. It was indeed the 6000 square meter fort
sleeping underneath.
MJChow, a SPI Elite member said he has already noticed this
strange looking 'concrete' characteristic since his childhood days
in 1970's (that is 30 years before this person). He even saw
park-keepers used it conveniently as a burning area for grass,
branches and leaves after their routine park cleaning. Also
another clue of its existence is by the name Fort Road just
nearby.
It was until year 2001, public attention was brought to a possible
huge fort lying underneath Katong park. Some years elapsed, and in
year 2004, the Mountbatten Citizens Consultative Committee (CCC)
commissioned the archaeological digging that lasted for 10 months.
$200,000 was raised for this excavation project. But after the 10
months, no further plan was made in the next phase on what to do
with it. Mr. Jack Sim, president of the Restroom Association of
Singapore commented that "They go to all the trouble to dig it up
and then instead of making some kind of monument out of it, they
put everything back."
Second burial
Now that is the second burial to come for this almost forgotten
fort.
Mr Lim Chen Sian, the archaeologist who led the dig, said his team
had only been asked by the committee to find out how much of the
fort was still there. Chen said, "We
didn't know who was going to take over for the next phase, so we
thought the safest thing was to bury it back." This technique is
called "Backfilling" which is a common practice in archaeology to
protect finds.
The second burial is necessary when excavation were to be paused,
because the dug-out pits could breed mosquitoes. Also the pit
holes as deep as 2 meters, can get someone injured if he falls
onto it. But it was questioned that how can someone fall into the
pit when that area is well barricaded with solid railings?
A spokesman for the Preservation of Monuments Board confirmed that
it was deciding whether the fort can be declared a national
monument. But this is not as simple as it sounds. There is the
matter of balancing historical value against the income that the
site can earn if it were developed for other uses. National
Heritage Society president Kevin Tan said: 'No one knows whose
responsibility this fort is. No one is going to come forward and
be a hero.'
The fort will be forgotten again?
Before so, here is some documentation on the significant findings
about the fort that is one of Singapore's most important
archaeological finds. Experts call it Singapore's only 'true fort'
- one with protection all around. In its heyday, Fort Tanjong
Katong was completely surrounded by a moat. Others here were
simpler gun installations.
The fort is also the only one in Singapore to reflect 19th-century
military architecture. Other forts like Fort Siloso in Sentosa and
Fort Canning were built around the same time, but were upgraded at
points in their history. Fort Tanjong Katong, on the other hand,
was built but never used and therefore did not see any
alterations.
Fort Tanjong Katong has another claim: It is one of the most
complete forts found. The perimeter wall is intact, unlike Fort
Canning, where all that is left is a gate and a bit of wall.
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