Lim Koon Teck

Lim Koon Teck(Chinese: 林坤德) (28 November 190429 October 1984) was a barrister-at-law, industrialist and politician in the Malaya and Singapore. He was the first Asian in the Straits Settlements to be appointed to the Colonial Legal Service. He was a magistrate at Penang and Crown Counsel, Singapore. After resigning government service, he joined the Lee Rubber Company. He was interested in introducing new construction methods, like lightweight concrete, to bring down building costs and was interested in helping to solve Singapore's housing shortage. These directed his commercial and political activities.[1]

Early life

Lim was born to a Teochew family on 28 November 1904,[2] in a small terraced shophouse at St. Gregory's Place, off Hill Street, opposite the Armenian Church,[3] in British Malayan Singapore, the eldest of the 14 children[4] of Lim Boon-Seng, a cloth merchant, and Tan Gek-Neo.[5]

Education

Lim entered St. Andrews School, before he was eight years old,[6] passing his Junior Cambridge in 1920 and his Senior Cambridge in 1922. After that he taught at St. Andrews School. In later years he would become the first Old Boy's representative on the Board of Governors of St. Andrew's School, Singapore.[7] Lim Lim became the 8th president of the Saint Andrew's School Old Boys Association (SAOBA ) in 1952 and concentrated on raising funds for the School Building Project and on the promotion of sports among members of the OBA. The play Lady Precious Stream was hosted again by the SAOBA raising $15,615 for the School Building Fund.

Academically he had done well so far, but his family did not have the means to afford him education overseas. Liau Chia-Heng (廖正興), a pepper merchant whom his father was friendly with at the Teochew Club, made a gift of $5,000 to help fund Lim's education abroad.

While Lim was interested in building things, and had wanted to study architecture; that was a six-year course, and all the money he had for his studies and living abroad were insufficient for that, so he decided to take up law instead.[8]

In June 1924 he passed the matriculation examination of London University and left for England by the Hakusan Maru on 19 August 1924, for law studies at the University College, London (UCL),

He passed his intermediate examination for the LL.B in 1925. He graduated with honours, was called to the Bar at Middle Temple in July 1927, and proceeded to return to Singapore.[9][10][11][12][13][14][15] Upon him qualifying as a barrister, his father moved the family to a rented house at 119 Emerald Hill Road, next-door to Seow Poh Leng, to reflect Lim's status.[16] After that he entered Government service.

Civil career

Lim Lim had been strongly recommended by Sir Song Ong-Siang, who was very fond of him.[17]

Lim was called to the Singapore Bar and was appointed deputy registrar of the supreme court, Singapore in January 1928.[18] He was offered $500 a month but was not given the housing and transport allowances that appeared reserved for expatriates.[19] He was appointed to the additional responsibility of Sheriff for Singapore in 1928 and 1929.[20][21] His application to the Colonial Legal Service, however, was not approved.

He was appointed acting registrar during the absence on leave of Registrar W. A. N. Davies in December 1933, through 1935, and took on the added appointment of Sheriff in succession to D. F. J. Ess in August 1935.[22][23][24]

By 1936, Lim, who was by then Senior Deputy Registrar, was again appointed Acting Registrar of the Supreme Court in the Straits Settlements Civil Service, upon the departure of W. A. N. Davies and at this time it was thought that he would be eventually appointed Registrar.[25][26][27][28][29][30]

Lim sat for and passed in Malay in August 1936,[31] and was appointed Registrar of the Straits Settlements High Court in January 1937.[32][33] He was then made Deputy Public Trustee, Singapore in the middle of 1937,[34] and was then transferred to Penang to serve as Second Magistrate there.[35] By January 1939 he had been moved down to Third Magistrate.[36]

In May 1940, Lim was transferred from his position as Third Police Magistrate in Penang to Malacca to act as District Judge and Registrar, Supreme Court,[37] but this was temporary.

Lim's accommodation at Malacca is a large bungalow house at 1 Pringgit Hill, was just below the house of the Resident. The houses of all other civil servants were situated below Lim's and they were not happy with that. Subsequently, Lim was transferred back to Penang.[38]

Once more he was Third Police Magistrate at Penang.[39] In October 1940 he was appointed Magistrate at Penang.[40]

In 1941, Lim was finally promoted to Colonial Legal Service.[41]

After World War II was over and the British returned to Penang, the local government was reformed with the previous administration except for Lim. After reestablishment of the local government, the British Military Police took Lim away for investigations relating to collaboration with the Japanese. He was freed after about five hours in solitary confinement in an area usually reserved for condemned prisoners awaiting hanging. His wife, Betty, had called up a Judge, who in turn called the Chiefs of the Military Police and the British Military Administration. Lim put his case for wrongful imprisonment before a Judge who cleared him of all suspicion and praised him for having saved the lives of British soldiers.[42]

There were not enough Public Prosecutors right after the Japanese Occupation and at one time there was an eight-month backlog of cases. Despite all that had been done to him and the way he had been treated in the past, Lim responded to the Government's appeal and voluntarily went back, on a part-time basis, working for about six months, as Crown Counsel or Public Prosecutor - he was paid half what full-time prosecutors got. But he did not accept the Attorney-General's invitation to return full-tile to the legal profession – even with the promise of the Solicitor-General's position a few years after rejoining, Lim could make $100,000 a year outside compared to, at most, $12,000 a year back in Government service.[43]

He was member of The Committee, appointed in April 1947 by Governor Sir Franklin Charles Gimson, to report on housing in Singapore and draw up a preliminary plan for building to relieve the housing shortage. The Committee was chaired by C. W. A. Sennett (the then Commissioner of Lands and Chairman of the Singapore Rural Board). Other members of The Committee included E. C. Cooper representing the Singapore Chamber of Commerce, R. Jumabhoy representing the Indian Chamber of Commerce, S. I. O. Algasoff (Municipal Commissioner), and Teo Cheng-Tian. Lim represented the interests of the Singapore Chinese Chamber of Commerce.[44][45] The Committee issued its report in August 1948.[46] The Committee's programmes for 1950–1953, were approved by Sir Patrick Abercrombie, British town planner.[47] By June 1947 The Committee had inspected possible sites for their $50,000,000 plan to re-house 50,000 low-income members of the population.[48]

By December 1947 Lim was made deputy public prosecutor. He was then informed that he would be appointed Ipoh District judge, but, a month after that, still prejudiced against him being local, Lim was informed that he was being posted to Seremban as registrar of the high court, there, instead – the lowest post in the Malayan Civil Service. Lim objected.[49][50][51] Lim wrote a letter of complaint for being sent to the lowest possible post despite all he had done to keep order in Penang, the lives he had saved, and his being cleared of all charges of collaboration. He also noted his ill-health. A copy of the letter was sent to the acting chief justice in Kuala Lumpur. In less than a week he received a letter putting him on early retirement at full pension, at just 42 years of age, which was unheard of.[52] He provided the same testimony before the Malayanisation Commission in January 1956[53]

Volunteer Corps

Lim had joined the Volunteer Corps at the same time as he joined Government service in Singapore. While he started as a Private, owing to the high position he held, he was given special training and was promoted, in October 1929, to Second Lieutenant in charge of a Company of 40 men, just a month later.[54][55] He was promoted to Lieutenant from 25 October 1932.[56]

World War II

After World War II started in 1941, the British started withdrawing from Malaya. On 13 December 1941, fearing the very real possibility of execution for being a magistrate and an officer of the Straits Settlements Volunteer Corps “C” Company, Lim and his family prepared to board a ferry and leave with the rest of the troops only to be refused entry and told that the ferry was for "whites" only.[57] After the departure of the British, Lim Cheng Ean and Lim cordoned off the main shopping and harbour districts in order to stop looting.[58][59]

Before the British left, they asked Lim to stay back to keep law and order among the people, and to hand Penang over to the Japanese when the latter arrived.

Japanese occupation

As the Japanese army reached Penang, Lim Lim and his volunteers of Company “C” were to become the accepted backbone of law and order in the tiny village of Ayer Itam on which the population of George Town had descended.[60] On 17 December 1941 Lim organised 80 members of "D" (Chinese) Company of the 3rd Battalion, Straits Settlements Volunteer Force (Penang and Province Wellesley Volunteer Corps) to look after 80,000 evacuees who had fled to Ayer Itam from George Town.[61][62][63][64]

A Japanese Lieutenant with 10 men arrived from the mainland on a sampan. Lim approached the officer and handed over Penang to him. He was asked to take the Lieutenant around and he did so, taking him all over Ayer Itam, after which the officer, having observed that everything was peaceful, instructed Lim to carry on with his Government of the place which he did for about a month before the Japanese took complete control.[65]

Eventually the Magistrate Court began again. Lim had been offered to take up the post or be taken away by the Japanese Military Police. Conditions in prison were so bad that Lim avoided sending people there, preferring to let them off with a warning and an extremely light sentence. The Japanese noticed this and after a few months he was replaced with a Malay who became magistrate. They made Lim the Civil District Judge in Penang with a jurisdiction of $500. As no cases of this nature happened, owing to the Japanese occupation, Lim had no cases to try for the rest of tenure at Penang. There had been a gang, looting the homes of the rich, all over Penang. They were caught, taken to the police headquarters, where they were tied up and then publicly beheaded by the lieutenant who had taken over the island. There was no serious trouble from anyone after that.[66]

Saving the lives of 50 British soldiers

Three days after the Japanese had taken Penang Island, the prison superintendent approached Lim and informed him that almost 50 young English soldiers between 18 and 20 years of age, together with a few British residents from Penang Hill who had not heard of the invasion, were squeezed together in the prison, had not eaten in three days, and were dying. Lim approached the Japanese lieutenant whom he had handed over the island to, and pleaded their case. He was allowed to feed them and this he did out of the stores of food in the godowns controlled by his men. When the Japanese discovered that he was giving those prisoners more than vegetables, salt and rice – he had introduced a bit of pork bone that he got from the roadside market – they objected.

Lim then went to the Penang General Hospital and discovered a Dr. Evans who had not run away when the others did. Explaining that the prisoners would not live long on the diet they had been allowed, Dr. Evans suggested adding Bovril or some other meat stock into the soup. And this worked. In their weakened state they were susceptible to disease. He then spoke to his superior, a Japanese county court judge who had been made chief judge of the Northern part of the Malayan peninsula. Lim showed him a book on international law, pointing out that prisoners-of-war should not receive the same treatment as criminals. The prisoners were then removed to Singapore, where they might receive better food and treatment, two weeks after that.[67]

War damage compensation

When the Joint Malayan Committee on War Damage Compensation was put together in 1946, Lim was then elected by the Singapore Chinese Chamber of Commerce to represent Chinese mercantile interests on the committee.[68] Lee Rubber had receipts of payments for all its premiums on its $15 million insured but the head of the committee did not want to do anything until all claims were in and so he sat on everything for a year while Lim scurried around getting hold of all the other directors of big companies in Singapore and have them prepare and submit their claims. Then Lim was sent to London to address the authorities there. He related his experience and a senior officer of Lloyd's was sent to Singapore to replace the head of the Claims Committee. All claims were settled within two months, the first being those of Lee Rubber, who recovered $13 million. It seems clear that Lee Rubber did not expect to have recovered this much. Lee Kong-Chian gave Lim $500,000 in appreciation for managing to recover as much as he had.[69]

Champion of low-cost homes for low-income people

He often criticised Government spending where he felt it was excessive, was sympathetic to the plight of the less fortunate who struggled to have their own homes and encouraged savings among wage-earners. In November 1954, Singapore United Rubber Estates Limited and Sembawang Rubber Estate Limited, two Singapore rubber companies with a joint-multimillion-dollar plan to build low cost houses for sale to the public on installment, appointed Lim to be on their respective Boards of Directors in London.[70][71][72][73] In March 1955 he said that his life's ambition was to build low-cost houses for low-salaried wage-earners. He was, at that time associated with two housing estates whose object was to build 2,000 to 3,000 houses for people with low incomes, and factories producing building materials.[74][75] By the end of 1955, one of those, Phoo Yong Estate, off the sixth mile Bukit Timah Road, became home to 150 low income families. The houses in estate were priced at $6,000, $8,500 and $12,000. The estates were the property of Lee Kong Chian, to whom Lim was legal adviser.[76][77] In 1952, he had demonstrated that low cost housing for low-income wage-earners was a very real possibility. By 15 November, over 1,500 people had come to see the block of four cheap "package" houses completed in 140 hours by 10 workers at cost of $2,000 each. Eace of these came with a bedroom, sitting room, store, kitchen and bathroom, and if wood were to be substituted for steel in the house frame, a lavatory could be added on for free. The estimated labour cost was $500, but, if he chose to, a homeowner could build it himself with the help of an experienced labourer. The estimated cost for installation of light and water was $300 and the amount of land needed was only 500 square feet.[78][79][80][81][82]

Expanding Lee Kong Chian's business

Lee Kong Chian, who had been in America during the war, stopped at Penang before proceeding to Singapore. Lim used to have lunch with Lee Kong-Chian when the former was still Deputy Registrar at Singapore. Kong-Chian decided to stay a night at Penang and used that time in discussion with Lim. At that point Kong-Chian offered Lim a job as the former's lawyer. It was 1946 and Lim returned to Singapore under the employ of Lee Kong-Chian.[83]

Lim's connection with Lee Kong-Chian went back a long way. They had served together at the Garden Club when the latter was President and the former a member of the Election and the Management committees.[84][85] Kong-Chian was also associated with Lim's father-in-law, Seow Poh Leng, the two of them having been established businessmen and had served together as long-time members of the Singapore Chinese Chamber of Commerce,[86] Chinese Association,[87] Straits Settlements Association,[88][89] Singapore Chinese Recreation Club,[90] board of directors of the Singapore Chinese Girls' School,[91] board of directors of the Overseas Chinese Banking Corporation Limited,[92] founded earlier by Poh Leng, Rotary Club,[93] Chinese Swimming Club,[94] and the Garden Club, where Lim also served.[95]

Lim was more of a personal assistant than a legal advisor – Lee Rubber had its own solicitors. Initially Lim was occupied in attending to Lee Kong-Chian's war claims and buying land very cheaply at auctions – no one had much money at that time.[96]

During the Japanese occupation Lee Rubber's property had been seized by the Japanese for their own use. All Japanese property had then been held by the returning British to be used to pay out war damage compensation. After recovering $13 million out of the $15 million claimed, there was very little legal work to be done or legal advice to be given. Lee Kong-Chian gave Lim a very free hand. And with all the free time he had, Lim soon found things to do.[97]

Lim told Kong-Chian about pepper and how he would like to deal in pepper produce. With a nod from the latter, Lim started the Lee Produce Company, a profitable venture, exporting produce to London.[98]

He saw an opportunity in real-estate and Lim soon spent most of his time acquiring property for Lee Kong-Chian, including the Chequer's Hotel, purchased at 24 cents an acre. He attended auctions and bought mostly vacant land. Lim became a Director and took a closer interest in the company. Lim told Kong-Chian of his love for building houses, especially to help lowly-paid people like clerks, own their own homes. Kong-Chian told Lim that he had 50 acres across from Hume Industries on Bukit Timah Road that could be developed.

In 1949, with a nod from Lee Kong-Chian, Lim, all by himself, started and ran a factory, on 50 acres of land at Elias Road, to manufacture concrete blocks. The factory turned out 1,000 special concrete blocks a day at a time when there was a shortage of bricks and homes. His objective was to help build more houses at prices within reach of the working man which he saw as the best way of solving the housing shortage problem.[99] He helped solve problems of delays at the Singapore Improvement Trust's Tiong Bahru project caused by a brick shortage by supplying them with 2,000 light cellular concrete blocks.[100]

Concrete block terraced houses were built on 25 acres and sold (without sewage) for $6,000 each, and semi-detached houses (with sewage) for $10,000. When the Salvation army approached Lim for help in building a Home for Boys he turned to Kong-Chian who agreed to give them the other 25 acres.[101]

He bought land cheaply and when others had a genuine need, he would bring their plight to the attention of Lee Kong-Chian. People knew that the way to get to Lee Kong-Chian was through Lim Lim and so when the Government wanted land for a school adjacent to Chequer's Hotel, they approached Lim. Kong-Chian agreed and the school was named Lee Kuo Chuan School, after Kong-Chian's father. A few acres at the back of the Hotel were sold to the Straits Times at $6 per square foot. And, 12 acres with some shophouses were acquired by Government at approximately $1 per square foot.[102]

Bukit Sembawang Estates Limited

In 1968, he became Chairman of newly formed Bukit Sembawang Estates Limited, listed on the Singapore Stock Exchange. The company's first year ended 31 March 1969 with a profit and after acquiring Bukit Sembawang Rubber Co. Lt.d of Britain. He served as Chairman till his death.[103][104][105][106][107][108][109][110]

Lim heard that Bukit Sembawang Rubber Estate had short-sold 500 acres to a syndicate for $3,000 an acre, the price the Admiralty and Air Force had paid the estate for much more land that was used for the Seletar Navy and Air bases. He knew that the price ought to have been at least double. He informed Lee Kong-Chian who was dismayed. Lee Kong-Chain had a lot of shares in Bukit Sembawang Estate. At his suggestion Lim went to London to address the Board of Drectors there and was appointed a Director with a responsibility for Sales.[111]

Lim's interest in taking up the Directorship with Sembawang Estate was to help people through the construction of low-cost housing. His first project involved 100 acres at Sembawang, Upper Thomson Road, entirely built under his supervision, and sold at prices below that being charged by the syndicate who had bought the land earlier (for Serangoon Gardens estate). between eight and nine hundred houses, selling for between eight and twelve thousand dollars, were sold.[112]

Lim then looked at Yio Chu Kang Road and began there with Mimosa Park, with the same idea. To sell cheap houses. Lim was happy to be able to help those less well-to-do get a roof over their heads. He did all he could to keep the price of houses down, often selling 10 to 15 percent below what other developers were charging. Over a thousand houses were built and sold that way.[113]

Building Society of Malaya, Limited

Lim was a Director of the Building Society of Malaya, Limited, for a great many years. The Building Society of Malaya, formed in 1938 by S. H. Peck, closed down in 1942, when Singapore fell. The Society's slogan was, "Don't Pay Rent - Buy Your Own Home," and its closely mimicked the methods of British building societies. The Society was re-organised and reopened in August 1948. Lim, together with Lee Kong-Chian, W. Munro and Ng Sen-Choy were associated with S. H. Peck, as Directors.[114][115][116][117][118][119][120][121]

Other official roles

Corporate directorships

  • Director, Lee Rubber[122]
  • Director, Lee Engineers[123]
  • Director, Chinese Bankers Trust Co.[124]
  • Director, Hume Industries (Far East) Limited, in 1967[125][126]
  • Director, British and Malayan Trustees Limited[127]
  • Director of Singapore Land and Investment Company Limited[128]

Non-corporate roles

  • Vice-president and patron, Singapore Arts Theatre.[129]
  • Fund-raiser, University of Malaya Endowment Fund.[130]
  • Chairman, Committee of Approval regarding evictions from premises belonging to the Singapore Improvement Trust.[131]
  • Member, Board of Management of St. Andrew's Mission Hospital.[132]
  • Founding member, Singapore's Safety First Committee.[133]
  • Member, Elections Committee and Management Committee of the Garden Club.[134]

Political career

Lim's interest in the welfare of the people led him to look more closely at the subject of the new independence. He joined the Progressive Party and was made candidate for Paya Lebar. Lim had wanted Tanglin, where he lived, but party leaders thought that was too easy. Most of the labourers and working-class lived there. So Lim did not mind and agreed to this.[135]

Lim stood for elections for the City in 1949 under the Progressive Party, Paya Lebar in 1955 under the Progressive Party and Aljunied in 1962 under the Singapore Alliance.

In December 1958, Lim took his seat on the benches of the Singapore People's Alliance in the Legislative Assembly.[136] Taking up his new seat he showed that his position, however, had not changed, when he made a call, in the Legislative Assembly, for the Government to help lower income groups in need of housing, proposing that Government start a 'revolving fund' of $1,000,000 to buy land and sell cheaply as building sites, the proceeds of which could be recycled indefinitely.[137]

He was unable, under law, to contest in the 30 May 1959 election resulting from the objection to his nomination by an assistant returning officer.[138]

Independence movement

In 1955 a commission to inquire into the Malayanisation of the public services was set up under the Inquiry Commissions Ordinance, 1941.[139] Lim appeared before the commission and told them of how he retired from service in disappointment. While he had applied to join the Colonial Legal Service in 1936, it was only four years later (1940) that he was told he had been appointed. He informed The Commission that he was acting Registrar of the Supreme Court, Singapore, in 1936, when he applied to join the Colonial Legal Service, and was only told he had been appointed to that service four years later, in 1940. At that time the post given to him was one specially created for him – Registrar, Civil District Court, which was lower than the post he had when he first joined the service four years earlier. Then the war occurred, and after liberation he was informed that he would be appointed district judge, Ipoh, but a month later he was told that he was to proceed to Seremban as registrar of the high court there. This, he told the commission, was "too much," and he retired from the service in 1946.[140] He was also a member of the Singapore delegation in the Rahman–Marshall talks in 1955.[141]

In April 1956 Lim, representing the Liberal Socialist party accompanied Chief Minister David Marshall to London for the first Malayan Independence or Merdeka Constitutional Talks at Lancaster House. Included in the delegation were Minister for Labour Lim Yew-Hock, Minister for Local Government Abdul Hamid bin Haji Jumat, Minister for Health A. J. Braga, Minister for Commerce and Industry J. M. Jumabhoy, Wong Foo-Nam and Seah Peng-Chuan (other members of the coalition government), WilliamTan, Lim Choon Mong and Lim Cher Keng (Liberal Socialists), Lee Kuan Yew and Lim Chin Siong (People's Action Party).[142][143][144]

Lim was also one of a select few included in Singapore's Merdeka Mission to London in 1957. There were five delegates – three from the Coalition Government and one each from the Liberal Socialist Party and the People's Action Party. The delegation of five was made up of the Chief Minister, Lim Yew Hock, the Minister for Education, Chew Swee Kee, the Assistant Minister for Education, Sidek bin Haji Abdul Hamid and the PAP leader, Lee Kuan Yew and himself.[145][146]

Death

Lim Koon Teck died on 29 October 1984 at the age of 80 years, leaving behind his wife Betty (née Seow Guat Beng), two daughters (Mrs. William Turnbull née Lim Cheng-Kim, Penny Lim Cheng-Sim), and three grandchildren. On 31 October 1984 his body was moved from his residence at 5 Balmoral Road to Mount Vernon Crematoria.[147]

Sources

  1. Supreme Court, Singapore, on the eve of Their Lordships on furlough Reference BAM 2/5 created by Paul & Co Covering Dates 28 Mar. 1928[148]
  2. Blood on the Golden Sands by Lim Kean Siew (Pelanduk)
  3. Forgotten Armies – The Fall of British Asia 1941–1945 by Christopher Bayly and Tim Harper (Allen Lane 2004)
  4. Photograph collection of the British Association of Malaysia and Singapore, Supreme Court, Singapore, on the eve of Their Lordships on furlough, Reference BAM 2/5 by Paul and Co 28 Mar. 1928—A group portrait showing the members and staff of the Supreme Court. The figures in the group are: W. Piyanage, Secretary to Puisne Judge; Chin Yong Lock, Chinese interpreter; G.V. ROWE, Indian interpreter; Yeo Tiang Swee, Senior Chinese interpreter; Henry Auguster Forrer (1886–1969), Malayan Civil Service 1909–, Registrar; Sir George Campbell Deane (1873–1948), Puisne Judge, Straits Settlements 1924–1929; Sir James William Murison (1872–1945), Chief Justice, Straits Settlements, 1925–1933; Bertram Reginald Whitehouse (1891–), Malayan Civil Service 1915–1935, Deputy Registrar; Lim Lim, Deputy Registrar; C.W. Chelappa, Secretary to Chief Justice; L. Naturajan, Indian interpreter.
  5. Thanks to Lim Lim — letter to ed., Utusan Melayu, 9 December 1955
  6. Only Five Will Go to London, Straits Times, 20th Feb 1957

Notes

  1. The Straits Times, 2 April 1949, Page 8
  2. Lim, B. (1994) A Rose on My Pillow: Recollections of a Nonya. Singapore: Armour Publishing Pte. Ltd. Page 24.
  3. Lim Koon Teck, oral history interview, Oral History Centre, National Archives of Singapore, reel 1.
  4. Lim, B. (1994) A Rose on My Pillow: Recollections of a Nonya. Singapore: Armour Publishing Pte. Ltd. Page 15.
  5. Lim Koon Teck, oral history interview, Oral History Centre, National Archives of Singapore, reel 1.
  6. Lim Koon Teck, oral history interview, Oral History Centre, National Archives of Singapore, reel 1.
  7. Kovilpillai, D. (1962) A short History of St. Andrew's School 1862–1962. Singapore. G.H. Kiat.
  8. Lim Koon Teck, oral history interview, Oral History Centre, National Archives of Singapore, reel 1.
  9. The Straits Times, 27 July 1927, Page 8
  10. The Straits Times, 21 January 1927, Page 10
  11. The Straits Times, 23 July 1925, Page 8
  12. The Straits Times, 14 August 1924, Page 8
  13. The Singapore Free Press and Mercantile Advertiser (1884–1942), 16 June 1924, Page 6
  14. The Straits Times, 28 April 1922, Page 15
  15. The Straits Times, 20 April 1920, Page 10
  16. Lim, B. (1994) A Rose on My Pillow: Recollections of a Nonya. Singapore: Armour Publishing Pte. Ltd. Page 15.
  17. Lim, B. (1994) A Rose on My Pillow: Recollections of a Nonya. Singapore: Armour Publishing Pte. Ltd. Page 23.
  18. The Straits Times, 7 January 1928, Page 8
  19. Tan, Y. L. (2008) Marshall of Singapore: A Biography. Singapore: ISEAS Publishing. Page 94
  20. The Straits Times, 12 October 1929, Page 17
  21. The Straits Times, 30 June 1928, Page 8
  22. The Straits Times, 12 August 1935, Page 10
  23. The Straits Times, 27 July 1934, Page 18
  24. The Singapore Free Press and Mercantile Advertiser (1884–1942), 15 December 1933, Page 8
  25. The Straits Times, 31 January 1936, Page 12
  26. The Straits Times, 15 February 1936, Page 12
  27. The Straits Times, 29 November 1935, Page 14
  28. The Singapore Free Press and Mercantile Advertiser (1884–1942), 18 February 1936, Page 6
  29. The Straits Times, 3 February 1936, Page 2
  30. The Singapore Free Press and Mercantile Advertiser (1884–1942), 1 February 1936, Page 6
  31. The Straits Times, 17 August 1936, Page 17
  32. The Singapore Free Press and Mercantile Advertiser (1884–1942), 5 January 1937, Page 3
  33. The Singapore Free Press and Mercantile Advertiser (1884–1942), 5 January 1937, Page 7
  34. The Straits Times, 7 June 1937, Page 2
  35. The Singapore Free Press and Mercantile Advertiser (1884–1942), 27 September 1938, Page 5
  36. The Singapore Free Press and Mercantile Advertiser (1884–1942), 9 January 1939, Page 3
  37. The Singapore Free Press and Mercantile Advertiser (1884–1942), 20 May 1940, Page 2
  38. Lim Koon Teck, oral history interview, Oral History Centre, National Archives of Singapore, reel 2
  39. The Straits Times, 28 July 1940, Page 9
  40. The Straits Times, 4 October 1940, Page 12
  41. The Straits Times, 26 September 1941, Page 10
  42. Lim Koon Teck, oral history interview, Oral History Centre, National Archives of Singapore, reel 4
  43. Lim Koon Teck, oral history interview, Oral History Centre, National Archives of Singapore, reel 5
  44. The Straits Times, 19 April 1947, Page 1
  45. The Straits Times, 23 May 1947, Page 3
  46. The Straits Times, 18 August 1948, Page 4
  47. The Straits Times, 3 February 1949, Page 1
  48. The Straits Times, 15 June 1947, Page 1
  49. The Straits Times, 24 January 1956, Page 7
  50. The Straits Times, 18 December 1947, Page 5
  51. The Singapore Free Press, 16 August 1947, Page 8
  52. Lim Koon Teck, oral history interview, Oral History Centre, National Archives of Singapore, reel 4
  53. The Straits Times, 24 January 1956, Page 7
  54. Lim Koon Teck, oral history interview, Oral History Centre, National Archives of Singapore, reel 3
  55. The Straits Times, 26 October 1929, Page 12
  56. The Singapore Free Press and Mercantile Advertiser (1884–1942), 10 November 1932, Page 3
  57. The Straits Times, 17 December 1947, Page 6
  58. Cooper, B. (2001) Decade of change: Malaya and the Straits Settlements, 1936–1945. Braham Brash. Page 213.
  59. Lim Koon Teck, oral history interview, Oral History Centre, National Archives of Singapore, reel 2
  60. Lim Koon Teck, oral history interview, Oral History Centre, National Archives of Singapore, reel 2
  61. The Straits Times, 17 December 1947, Page 6
  62. The Straits Times, 19 March 1950, Page 1
  63. The Straits Times, 18 December 1954, Page 4
  64. The Straits Times, 24 December 1961, Page 4
  65. Lim Koon Teck, oral history interview, Oral History Centre, National Archives of Singapore, reel 2
  66. Lim Koon Teck, oral history interview, Oral History Centre, National Archives of Singapore, reel 3
  67. Lim Koon Teck, oral history interview, Oral History Centre, National Archives of Singapore, reel 3
  68. The Straits Times, 9 November 1946, Page 3
  69. Lim Koon Teck, oral history interview, Oral History Centre, National Archives of Singapore, reel 5
  70. The Straits Times, 27 November 1954, Page 4
  71. The Straits Times, 6 September 1952, Page 9
  72. The Straits Times, 28 February 1953, Page 9
  73. The Straits Times, 11 August 1952, Page 6
  74. The Straits Times, 30 March 1955, Page 2
  75. The Straits Times, 21 March 1955, Page 2
  76. The Straits Times, 13 February 1955, Page 9
  77. The Straits Times, 28 November 1954, Page 10
  78. The Straits Times, 16 November 1952, Page 9
  79. The Straits Times, 12 November 1952, Page 8
  80. The Straits Times, 19 July 1952, Page 5
  81. The Straits Times, 24 March 1952, Page 5
  82. The Straits Times, 27 February 1952, Page 7
  83. Lim Koon Teck, oral history interview, Oral History Centre, National Archives of Singapore, reel 4
  84. Singapore Daily News, 22 November 1932, Page 4
  85. The Straits Times, 22 November 1932, Page 12
  86. The Straits Times, 29 July 1929, Page 12
  87. The Singapore Free Press and Mercantile Advertiser (1884–1942), 4 March 1924, Page 7
  88. The Straits Times, 15 December 1926, Page 12
  89. The Singapore Free Press and Mercantile Advertiser (1884–1942), 15 December 1926, Page 20
  90. The Straits Times, 19 August 1927, Page 10
  91. The Straits Times, 4 July 1931, Page 18
  92. The Singapore Free Press and Mercantile Advertiser (1884–1942), 19 June 1935, Page 10
  93. The Singapore Free Press and Mercantile Advertiser (1884–1942), 12 November 1935, Page 2
  94. The Straits Times, 10 February 1936, Page 5
  95. Singapore Daily News, 22 November 1932, Page 4
  96. Lim Koon Teck, oral history interview, Oral History Centre, National Archives of Singapore, reel 5
  97. Lim Koon Teck, oral history interview, Oral History Centre, National Archives of Singapore, reel 5
  98. Lim Koon Teck, oral history interview, Oral History Centre, National Archives of Singapore, reel 5
  99. The Straits Times, 23 March 1949, Page 8
  100. The Singapore Free Press, 1 February 1949, Page 5
  101. Lim Koon Teck, oral history interview, Oral History Centre, National Archives of Singapore, reel 5
  102. Lim Koon Teck, oral history interview, Oral History Centre, National Archives of Singapore, reel 5
  103. The Straits Times, 11 September 1971, Page 14
  104. The Straits Times, 1 July 1976, Page 23
  105. The Straits Times, 11 July 1978, Page 15
  106. The Straits Times, 2 July 1979, Page 27
  107. The Straits Times, 7 July 1980, Page 9
  108. The Straits Times, 6 July 1981, Page 1
  109. The Straits Times, 5 July 1982, Page 17
  110. Singapore Monitor, 30 May 1985, Page 10
  111. Lim Koon Teck, oral history interview, Oral History Centre, National Archives of Singapore, reel 5
  112. Lim Koon Teck, oral history interview, Oral History Centre, National Archives of Singapore, reel 5
  113. Lim Koon Teck, oral history interview, Oral History Centre, National Archives of Singapore, reel 5
  114. The Straits Times, 15 August 1948, Page 7
  115. Berita Harian, 28 June 1975, Page 8
  116. Berita Harian, 26 May 1980, Page 9
  117. The Straits Times, 1 June 1981, Page 35
  118. The Straits Times, 30 May 1983, Page 25
  119. Berita Harian, 28 May 1984, Page 9
  120. The Straits Times, 28 May 1984, Page 25
  121. The Straits Times, 16 May 1951, Page 7
  122. The Straits Times, 27 February 1952, Page 7
  123. The Straits Times, 16 November 1952, Page 9
  124. The Straits Times, 27 November 1956, Page 1
  125. The Straits Times, 31 March 1967, Page 19
  126. The Straits Times, 7 May 1964, Page 15
  127. The Straits Times, 4 July 1966, Page 17
  128. The Straits Times, 4 December 1964, Page 20
  129. The Straits Times, 9 December 1951, Page 11
  130. The Straits Times, 13 March 1951, Page 4
  131. The Straits Times, 21 July 1949, Page 7
  132. The Straits Times, 30 April 1949, Page 5
  133. The Straits Times, 13 June 1948, Page 7
  134. Singapore Daily News, 22 November 1932, Page 4
  135. Lim Koon Teck, oral history interview, Oral History Centre, National Archives of Singapore, reel 6
  136. The Straits Times, 4 December 1958, Page 11
  137. The Straits Times, 19 December 1958, Page 2
  138. The Straits Times, 13 May 1959, Page 12
  139. The Straits Times, 1 July 1955, Page 8
  140. The Straits Times, 24 January 1956, Page 7
  141. The Straits Times, 31 August 1955, Page 7
  142. The Straits Times, 17 March 1956, Page 1
  143. The Singapore Free Press, 9 April 1956, Page 1
  144. Political Milestones on the official website of the National Archives of Singapore.
  145. The Straits Times, 6 March 1957, Page 1
  146. The Straits Times, 8 March 1957, Page 1
  147. The Straits Times, 30 October 1984, Page 38
  148. 280 x 227 mm (mounted on card). Letterpress caption and identification. A group portrait showing the members and staff of the Supreme Court. The figures in the group are: W. Piyanage, Secretary to Puisne Judge; Chin Yong Lock, Chinese interpreter; G .V. Rowe, Indian interpreter; Yeo Tiang Swee, Senior Chinese interpreter; Henry Auguster Forrer (1886–1969), Malayan Civil Service 1909–, Registrar; Sir George Campbell Deane (1873–1948), Puisne Judge, Straits Settlements 1924–1929; Sir James William Murison (1872–1945), Chief Justice, Straits Settlements, 1925–1933; Bertram Reginald Whitehouse (1891–), Malayan Civil Service 1915–1935, Deputy Registrar; Lim Koon Teck, Deputy Registrar; C.W. Chelappa, Secretary to Chief Justice; L. Naturajan, Indian interpreter.
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