Holland Drive Food Centre |
Hawkers in Singapore 1890. Image credit: National Archives of Singapore |
Colonial officers had a rather dim view of hawkers and hawker food, though they acknowledged that customers relished it 😄 From the beginning, colonial officers perceived street hawkers as a necessary evil because they provide an essential service for the public but needs to be controlled.
(For the record, "dogs, lizards and rats" were off the menu in Singapore long, long ago.)
During this era up to the Second World War, most of the street hawkers were already hawking food in their respective home countries. So, when they arrived in Singapore, they simply carried on their profession in their adopted home.
The dishes were pretty much "authentic" in the sense that they were very similar to what was sold in the home countries unless unavailability of ingredients dictated some tweaking of the recipe.
Examples of street hawker dishes from this era 1800s - 1945 were satay, char kway teow, bak chor mee, Teochew beef kway teow, etc.
There were a few exceptions like bak kut teh (meat bone tea) which was an herbal tonic concocted in the late 1800s as a cure-all for the overworked coolie's (indentured labourers) ailments.
Image credit: National Archives of Singapore |
Office of the Chinese Protectorate building at Havelock Road in 1911. Image credit: National Archives of Singapore |
The Office of the Chinese Protectorate was established in 1877 to deal with matters of the Chinese community like secret societies,
The fact that street hawkers came under the purview of the Office of the Chinese Protectorate tells us where the issue of hawkers stood in the minds of colonial officers (a pain in the neck that needed to be controlled, but ideally removed).
Image credit: National Archives of Singapore & Wikipedia |
Image credit: National Archives of Singapore |
Sir William John Ritche Simpson. Image credit: Wellcome Collection |
Simpson proposed creation of back alleys for street hawkers to reduce congestion of shop fronts and streets.
Leading from that, a set of by-laws governing street hawkers was promulgated in 1907.
At a routine Singapore Municipal Commission meeting on 11 Sep 1908, following up on the Simpson commission proposal to create and move street hawkers to back alleys, deputy president John Polglase suggested constructing "shelters for hawkers" at these back alleys.
John Polglase's "shelters for hawkers" proposal could be considered the birth of the idea of the hawker centre as we know it today.
Singapore New Bridge Road 1906. Image credit: National Archives of Singapore |
Municipal Health Office Middleton. Image credit: National Archives of Singapore |
👎Fouling up streets and five foot ways
👎Selling contaminated food which endangered public safety.
Then, the First World War came (1914 - 1918) and hygiene issues got put on the back burner.
Satay hawker in Singapore 1907. Image credit: National Archives of Singapore |
In 1919, Municipal Health Officer Middleton taking up John Polglase's idea of "shelters for hawkers" suggested that these could be built with priority given to house the "two basket hawkers".
Kreta Ayer in the 1910s. Image credit: National Archives of Singapore |
These hawker shelters were simple pitches for shelter from the elements and were supplied with piped water. It's a huge leap from plying the streets bare feet with two baskets on a bamboo pole slung across the shoulder. Street food hawkers paid a nominal rental to be allotted a space to trade inside.
People's Park Market in 1965. Image credit: National Archives of Singapore |
Balestier Food Centre |
The fact that the "hawker shelters" scheme expanded to well beyond Kreta Ayer and extended to 1935, showed that it was meeting the authorities' objectives.
Image credit: National Library Board Singapore |
The Report of the Committee Appointed to Investigate the Hawker Question in Singapore in 1931 found that there were more than 10,000 hawkers (6,043 licensed and some 4000 unlicensed) plying the streets. The six shelters housed a mere handful of 383 hawkers. (My own hunch is the number of unlicensed hawkers was likely to be underestimated and could be well over 4000 as declared.)
Japanese troops marching at Raffles Square in 1942. Image credit: National Archives of Singapore |
After the British returned in 1945, not much attention was paid to street hawkers until University of Malaya professor Thomas H. Silcock's Report of the Hawkers' Inquiry Commission in 1950.
Silcock's findings echoed the 1931 "Hawker Question" Committee's report about the issues of congestion, disruption, hygiene and threats to public health caused by street hawkers. But, by 1950, the situation was much more acute as the slow economic recovery of post-War Singapore forced many jobless people to resort to the hawker trade for survival.
Seng Poh Road Market (Tiong Bahru) under construction in 1950. Image credit: National Archives of Singapore |
Still there was not enough shelters to house the hawkers - the number of hawkers grossly outnumbered shelter spaces available.
Sin Kee Chicken Rice |
That was how Wong Yi Guan started selling Hainanese chicken rice in the streets of the Hainanese enclave around Middle Road, Purvis Street and Seah Street. That was also when Ng Juat Swee started to sell Nyonya laksa in the streets of Katong. Peranakans are very proud and protective of their cuisine and would loath to think of hawking them in the streets. But, the immediate post-War years put many people in dire economic straits.
Chili crab |
Examples of Singapore dishes from this melting pot are chili crab, fried Hokkien mee, Indian rojak, roti John, curry fish head, tu tu kueh etc.
Minister of Environment Lim Kim San visiting a hawker centre in 1975. Image credit: National Archives of Singapore |
Lim Kim San set up a hawker department with three sections overseeing licensing, planning and development (i.e. building hawker centres), and enforcement.
Glutton's Square in 1977. Image credit: National Archives of Singapore |
Newton Road Food Centre. Image credit: National Archives of Singapore |
Newton Road Food Centre featured in the movie Crazy Rich Asians (2018). Singaporeans don't really go there one leh..... 😜
Smith Street & Trengganu Street junction in 1983. Image credit: National Archives of Singapore |
Chinatown Complex in 1984. Image credit: National Archives of Singapore |
Today, Chinatown Complex is still one of the most popular hawker centres in Singapore.
Public health inspectors in 1963. Image credit: National Archives of Singapore |
Not all street hawkers want to be licensed and moved into hawker centres as there were fees involved (even though it was nominal). Health inspector raids can go awry and occasionally scuffles broke out.
Lim Kim San visiting a health inspector slashed by a hawker while on duty in 1975. Image credit: National Archives of Singapore |
Maxwell Food Centre. Image credit: National Archives of Singapore |
China Street Hum Jin Pang in 1986. Image credit: National Archives of Singapore |
There is a little irony that these were the same streets that John Polglase first proposed to build "shelters for hawkers" 78 years ago in 1908. The first earmarked were the last to move in.
Today, Maxwell Food Centre is one of the most famous hawker centres in Singapore. Many of the hawkers that moved in here in 1986 are still here (in 2022), including the most famous Hainanese chicken rice stall in the world.
Ong Boon Boon at the opening of Amoy Street Food Centre in 1983. Image credit: National Archives of Singapore |
It was a Herculean feat, a fine example of little Singapore's Can Do spirit - how the Little Red Dot solved seemingly impossible challenges with sheer effort and determination. In all, 108 hawker centres were built between 1971 and 1986.
Boat Quay Hawker Centre was built by the URA in 1973. Image credit: National Archives of Singapore |
Mission Accomplished, all street hawkers were now housed in hawker centres. No more hawker centres were built after 1986 until 25 years later in 2011.
Taisho Ramen at Maxwell Food Centre |
Bedok Interchange Hawker Centre |
The government announced in 2011, a plan to build 10 new hawker centres. In 2015, they announced plans to build an additional 10 more.
Why did the government decide to start building hawker centres again after a 25 year hiatus?
Hill Street Food Centre demolished in 2000. Image credit: National Archives of Singapore |
Pasir Ris Food Centre opened in 2018. Image credit: Wikipedia |
Marsiling Mall Food Centre was opened in 2018 |
For more than 100 years, street hawkers were maligned as a threat to public health and a problem to be solved. But over time, instead of disdain for humble hawker food, Singaporeans grew to identify themselves with Hainanese chicken rice, char kway teow, bak chor mee, roti John, Indian rojak, etc.
Singaporeans from all walks of life wear their love for hawker dishes like a badge of honour. You know the passion Singaporeans feel for their hawker food by how they respond when any other country try to claim it as their's.
Singapore hawker centre stall mix has always been a microcosm of Singapore's multicultural heritage. Indian, Malay, Chinese and Western food stalls operate side by side. Anyone and everyone can just walk right in, sit at any table to eat a meal - there are no fences, no boundaries.
Singapore hawker centres have become the community's space, everybody's space and have an essential role in community building. Expanding on the phrase "A family that eats together, stay together", Singaporeans have taken to heart that "a nation that eats together, is stronger together".
Maxwell Food Centre |
Singapore hawker centres have become the community's space, everybody's space and have an essential role in community building. Expanding on the phrase "A family that eats together, stay together", Singaporeans have taken to heart that "a nation that eats together, is stronger together".
Officially, hawker centers are dubbed "community dining rooms".
Politicians go to hawker centres when they want to meet the people.
I've also seen politicians and their families eat incognito at hawker centres just like every other citizen. In Singapore hawker centres, there is no privilege given for rank or social status (except for accommodating the elderly or disabled out of respect and courtesy). Everybody queue and take their own food back to their tables - the hawker centre is a great leveller.
Image credit: National Archives of Singapore |
I've also seen politicians and their families eat incognito at hawker centres just like every other citizen. In Singapore hawker centres, there is no privilege given for rank or social status (except for accommodating the elderly or disabled out of respect and courtesy). Everybody queue and take their own food back to their tables - the hawker centre is a great leveller.
Douglas Ng of Fishball Story |
While most pioneer street hawkers were forced into the trade by circumstances, more and more young Singaporeans are choosing the hawker trade as their career choice. Singaporeans increasingly see the hawker trade as a respectable essential service and viable profession. Many enter the trade to preserve their parents or grandparents' legacy.
Then, there is the overdue due recognition that hawker dishes and recipes are artisanal crafts worthy of deeper appreciation beyond meeting sustenance and palate pleasing needs. From a sentiment bubbling up from the ground, there is growing national consensus that hawker dishes and its whole cultural ecosystem need to be preserved for future generations. (So far, preservation of the craft is left pretty much to natural succession within the family but recently more effort have been channeled to do that more systematically and institutionally e.g. by Temasek Polytechnic, Institute of Technical Education or ITE etc.)
Meanwhile, not only did Singapore hawker food evolved from something to be tolerated (at best) to something truly loved by locals, its positive reputation abroad also grew.
Lien Ying Chow in 1991. Image credit: National Archives of Singapore |
The three hawkers dishes were very well received by international guests, in particular the Hainanese chicken rice. The success of Chatterbox's Hainanese chicken rice put Singapore chicken rice on the world map.
Back in 1971, it was a bold and visionary move to put humble street hawker dishes into a 5-Star hotel menu. The dishes were sold at premium prices and the legendary Chatterbox chicken rice is still the most expensive chicken rice in Singapore today.
But, by this move, Lien Ying Chow set in motion the change in public and the world's perception of Singapore street hawker food.
Rasa Singapura in the 1980s. Image credit: National Archives of Singapore |
SGT Kiang |
Rasa Singapura was one of my favourite lunch spots as I worked nearby in the 1980s. The food was delicious, the environment nice and prices were highly affordable. (Though I remember looking for a car park slot was a nightmare.)
(Ironically, the hugely successful Rasa Singapura Food Centre was demolished in 1989 to make way for Singapore Tourism Board's new headquarters, and it was never replaced.)
Hawker Chan in Chinatown Complex Food Centre |
Anthony Bourdain at the World Street Food Congress 2017 in Manila |
World Street Food Congress 2017 in Manila |
So, with a fortuitous confluence of ideas (opinion leaders, policy makers), infrastructure (hawker centres), practitioners (hawkers) and community of supporters (diners), it seemed natural that in Mar 2019, the Singapore government took the step to submit Singapore hawker culture for UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity inscription.
The inclusion of Singapore Hawker Culture in the UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage Inscription was confirmed on 16 Dec 2020.
In Sep 2022, Urban Hawker opened its doors bringing Singapore street food to the heart of New York City. Curated by KF Seetoh, founder of the World Street Food Congress and Makansutra, Urban Hawker was launched with 17 vendors representing Malay, Peranakan, Chinese, Indian, Asian-style Western favourites.
Acknowledgement: This post was inspired by and based on insights gleaned from professor Lai Chee Kien's seminal seminar "History of Hawker Centres in Singapore" held on 21 Jun 2020.
Reference:
Singapore Hawker Centers: Origins, Identity, Authenticity, and Distinction
Date: 23 Jun 2020
Update: 16 Dec 2020
Update: 6 Oct 2021
Update: 27 Oct 2022
Very informative, good insights and writing!
ReplyDeleteThank you
DeleteThis was very informative! It saved my essay, Thank you very much!
ReplyDeleteYou are most welcome. Wish you the best
DeleteMichael Pang-Larsen said on Tony Boey Facebook:
ReplyDelete"Great news. My heroes always from the early seventies whenI first spent hours with these humble guys watching them contributing to sustaining life in a wonderful enjoying manner for so many. I never understood why they didnt get a lot of praise and recognition, maybe people thought that the price would raise and the quality drop? When I first tasted a hawker meal on Changhi beach almost 50 years ago I dreamt of having a stall of my own. Later I wanted the whole world to come and experience the incredible food scene, in the eighties I presented a detailed prospect to STPB to have them highlight the hawker culture to be the pride of Singapore. So great that this honour from Unesco will be benificial for the way of being a hawker and attracting lots of talented people."