Sabah Early History
The island of Borneo, the third largest in the world
after Greenland and Papa New Guinea, has been discovered by Chinese Explorers even before the
first Century AD but no attempts have been made to conquer it. There
was, however, a powerful Brunei Sultanate which ruled over most of Borneo.
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In 1521, Magellan's fleet visited Brunei
thus establishing the first recorded contact between Westerners and the people of Borneo.
Between
1521 and 1764, changes in the Sultanate of Brunei eventually let to the
handover of North Borneo (first English name for Sabah) to the
British East India Company in 1764.
In 1881, the Dent brothers of London signed all
rights to a company which was granted a royal charter. Kudat became
the first capital of British North Borneo. The British North Borneo Chartered
Company was officially formed in 1882 and Sandakan became the first capital
of British North Borneo.
Jesselton (now Sabah's capital Kota Kinabalu)
was founded in conjunction with the constreuction of the Trans Borneo railroad,
and developed into a flourishing trading post until the Japanese
occupied the whole of Borneo during the Second World War. Jesselton
and Sandakan were, like many towns, destroyed in Allied air raids
targeted at the Japanese. After the Second World War the British
Chartered Company was not able to rebuild the war devastated country
and ceded it to the British Crown, and Sabah became a colony.
In 1963, North Borneo became independent and reverted
to its pre-colonial name, Sabah, on becoming the 13th state of the Federation
of Malaysia. In 1967, Jesselton, originally named after a director of
the North Borneo Company, was renamed Kota Kinabalu.
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Personalities in Sabah's
Early History
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The beginning of Sabah's existence as an administrative
entity was certainly dominated by personalities who were at once daring
and adventurous as well as gamblers at heart. Men like Gustavus Baron
Overbeck and his partner Alfred Dent, who put up £10,000 to finance his purchase
of the whole of North Borneo; William Clarke Come, a swash-buckling adventurer
who rose from being manager of a small Singapore firm called the Labuan
Trading Company to the post of Chairman of the British North Borneo Chartered
Company; and William Pryer, the first Resident of Sandakan. Like many
other early explorers they have the most interesting and thrilling biographies
of challenges, adventures, misfortunes but also incredible luck and
opportunities.
Pic:
Alfred Dent who provided Baron de Overbeck with
£10,000 to purchase whole of North Borneo.
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North Borneo's first native
hero, Mat Salleh, (not to be confused with the Peninsular Malaysian
term for Caucasians), had his first fort at Ranau but was later captured
in Tambunan by the North Borneo Constabulary on February 1st, 1900. A stone memorial is erected
in Tambunan Town to commemorate the capture
of Mat Salleh. Those who wish to visit his memorial can stop
by Tambunan town, on the way from Kota Kinabalu City to Keningau,
Batu Punggul, and Tenom Agricultural Garden.
Pic: An artist impression
of Mat Salleh, one of the earliest heroes of Sabah. Mat Salleh, who came
from Sandakan, was captured and killed in Tambunan in 1900.
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Townships: Growth Centres of Sabah
The growth centres of any country are its townships
and cities. In British North Borneo, "settlements" was the preferred terminology
and it was in such places that the new owners of the land installed
themselves.
The first established settlements in British North Borneo were on Balambangan
Island, and Kudat
was the first capital. However, Kudat and Balambangan did not turn out
to be ideal locations and under William B. Pryer, the first Resident, Sandakan became
the seat of the BNBCC.
Baron de Overbeck himself was proclaimed Raja of Sandakan, and the
town flourished until the
Japanese occupation at the onset of WWII. After the Second World War
North Borneo was ceded to the British Crown and the Colonial
Government took over the administration and made Jesselton
the capital. Labuan, of course, was already well-established, having been
part of the Straits Settlement of Singapore under the British Colonial
Office since 1846.
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Chronologically, Sandakan
should come first but since Kota Kinabalu (Jesselton) is the State
Capital and the prime growth centre in this day and age, our picture
will begin with Jesselton. The town of Jesselton, named after the
Vice Chairman of the BNBCC, Sir Charles Jessel, was
first established as a
trading post at Gaya Island, in a bay directly opposite the
present marine jetty.
The settlement was called Api-Api, due, some people say,*
to the fact that the settlement was ransacked and burned down by pirates
led by Mat Salleh. After the ransacking by
Mat Salleh the British administration was able to lease land
opposite Gaya Island, where the present Royal Customs and
Excise has its headquarters. This part also became the terminal for
the railway which was started in Weston in 1896.
Pic: Sir Charles Jessel, Vice Chairman
of the BNBCC after whom Jesselton (Kota Kinabalu) was named.
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Most of Jesselton and present
Kota Kinabalu is built on land reclaimed
from the shallow sea. The first reclamation
was at the northern part of Jesselton where the present Hong
Kong
and Shanghai Banking Corporation building is. This was carried out around 1900. In
the early 1950's Kampong Air was also reclaimed together with the areas
opposite the present GPO. Other areas such as Segama and Sinsuran were
reclaimed after Malaysia (1969).
*
There are numerous versions to this story.
One goes that it was because of the abundance of
fireflies, which the natives here call "api-api", and another
again because the township was prone to periodic fires due to the many
celebrations in which fireworks were used, and which ignited the
thatched roofs of the buildings...
Early Communications in Sabah
Communications are the sine-qua-non of development
in any country, and more so in Sabah where rich fertile lands abound but
are inaccessible save through hostile jungles and rugged mountain ranges.
One of the first priorities of the British North Borneo Chartered Company
had been to develop the vast natural resource potentials of its territory
and turn them into profits for its shareholders. In the early days the
only means of communications were by sea, river and by trekking on foot
through time-worn native tracks.
It was obvious that if the potentials of the territory were to be tapped,
the BNBCC had to build roads and railways. Thus, in the townships, roads
were built from the wharves to points where produce were collected. In
1896, William Clarke Cowie managed to persuade the Board of Directors
of the BNBCC in London to build a railway line from a point in Kimanis
Bay to the township of Beaufort. A Mr West, a Scottish engineer, was engaged
for the project and work began the same year from Bukau not far from what
is now called Weston. The Weston terminal itself was closed at the end of
1963.
When the waters off Weston were found not to be deep enough for a sea wharf, the line from Beaufort was extended to Papar in the belief
that the Papar Bay might be suitable for a deep sea harbour. Here again,
it was found that it was not suitable and thus the railway was extended
to Gantisan, which was the northern boundary of Jesselton (now Kota Kinabalu).
Pic: North Borneo Railway Headquarters
The opening of the railway to Beaufort, which was
later extended to Melalap through Tenom, led to the opening of the interior
areas which became extremely attractive for the planting of rubber.
As early as 1900, a railway line was contemplated to run from Beaufort
over Tenom to Tawau. Another ambitious project which was undertaken
by the BNBCC was the over-land telegraph line which started from Menumbok
to Sandakan. The telegraph line was started a few years earlier than
the railway and was completed in 1896.
After World War II, the British colonial administration embarked on
the reconstruction
of all roads. By 1949, the Governor was able to report that there were
130 miles of metalled roads with asphalt surface, 23 miles of "other metalled
roads", 225 miles of earth roads and 578 miles of "bridle paths" (6ft to 8ft wide,
where ponies would carry rubber sheets and other produce).
In the late 1950's, a significant effort was made to connect Kota Kinabalu
with Papar by road and this was completed in 1964. After independence
within Malaysia, road communications became a top priority so that by
the 1970's, Kota Kinabalu was linked by road to Kudat in the north,
to Keningau via Tambunan in the interior, and to Ranau and Sandakan on
the East Coast. Sandakan was linked with Lahad Datu, Sempoma and Tawau.
Airports and wharves were also upgraded ensuring better
communications with the outside world and especially with Peninsular Malaysia.
In the field of telecommunications, Sabah is now linked with the rest
of Malaysia through satellites which enable Sabah to have instant direct-dialing
telephone and telex connections with Peninsular Malaysia, as well as simultaneous or direct telecast of television programmes. These developments
were achieved through the attainment of independence
within Malaysia, otherwise they might not have been so fast in coming
to the people of Sabah.
Security
One of the earliest problems of the owners of North
Borneo had been to maintain peace amongst the various tribes and security
for the company officers. The British North Borneo Chartered Company (BNBCC)
officials soon found that owning 30,000 square miles of territory was
only one aspect of the story. Keeping it and deriving beneficial income
was another.
Thus
when W. B. Pryer became the Resident of Sandakan, one of his first tasks was
to establish law and order. In order to do this, he had to have a police
force. But since the local natives, although cowed by the guns of the
British Navy, considered the British as transgressors in their land,
hostility towards the authority of the BNBCC was natural.
Hence Pryer had to import his police from India or Singapore. His first
contingent of police was, therefore, made up of Indian Sikhs whose stature
alone must have been quite frightening to some of the natives. The Indian
police were probably from the Sepoy Company in India and were generally
called "Sipai" by the locals. Even today the older folks would frighten
their children or grandchildren by saying "be careful don't wander about
or the sipai will catch you".
In time, however, expedience and economics necessitated the recruitment
of local natives into the constabulary. The Murut, Dayak and Kadazan/Dusun
communities became good sources for recruits and all proved excellent
policemen. Even today, the Murut and Kadazan/Dusun policemen form the
bulk of the Sabah Constabulary.
The Post War Liberation
The Liberation of North Borneo, Brunei & Sarawak
began during the early months of 1944 during the second World War when
the Ninth Division Australian Imperial Forces (A.I.F.) mounted a determined
attacked on Japanese positions in this areas. The campaign continued
for more than a year - and might have continued indefinitely, even though
the AIF were gaining footholds everywhere - had not his Imperial Majesty
the Emperor of Japan announced his nation's unconditional surrender after
the first atomic bombs fell on Nagasaki and Hiroshima.
Memorials of the Japanese surrender and War Memorials
are on Labuan Island, where one finds the
WWII Memorial and the
Surrender Point. On
the 10th of September, 1945, Lieutenant General Masao Baba, Commander of
the Japanese Army (in North Borneo, Brunei & Sarawak and Natoena Islands)
was escorted by Australian Soldiers to the Surrender Point in Labuan,
and signed
the Instrument of Surrender. The actual surrender date was September
9, 1945.
Immediately after the liberation of North Borneo
by the 9th Division of the Australian Imperial Forces, the British Military
Administration took charge of administering the state.
The British North Borneo Chartered Company, faced with the gigantic task
of reconstruction decided to relinquish its ownership of North Borneo
to the British Colonial office for a certain financial consideration.
Thus, in June 1946, the BNBCC transferred its sovereign rights and assets
in North Borneo to the British Crown and North Borneo thereby changed
its status from that of a British Protectorate to a Crown Colony. The
proclamation in the Council of the North Borneo Session Order was made
10 July 1945. (Sarawak too became a Crown Colony at the same time when
the last of the Raja Brookes decided not to return to Sarawak).
The job of reconstruction in North Borneo was, therefore, undertaken by
the British Colonial office. Because of the extent of the Japanese
occupation and subsequent devastation in the war the reconstruction was at first painfully.
War reparations
were made and the state became steady and by the early 1950's much had been done
to reestablish law and order, and commerce.
The first Colonial Governor of North Borneo was
Sir Edward Twining who relinquished office as Governor and Commander in
Chief on the 5th May, 1949. He was succeeded by Sir Ralph Hone who set in motion
the machinery for the reconstruction of the Colony. Temporary offices
made of timber, attap roofs and nipa palm walls were built in various
places and Jesselton was made the new Capital of North Borneo.
War reparation offices were set up along the Tanjong
Aru beach. Some of "the pre-war buildings" which were not damaged by the
bombings were re-built and re-used. These included the General Post Office
(which is now Sabah Tourism's Office), the Lands & Survey Department and
the Treasury. In the early 1950's the new Secretariat was constructed
at the junction of the Penampang and Tanjong Aru Road. This place was
known as "Puku Mangga" as there was a large mango tree growing by the
side of the hill. Unfortunately, the tree was cut down to accommodate the new Secretariat.
The police headquarters at "Batu Tiga", opposite the State Mosque
were
moved to Kepayan, while the Jesselton Police Station was moved to
its present site. The old building became later the District Office,
located next to the Resident's office - the site of the present State
Library.
Sir Ralph Hone was succeeded by Sir Roland Tumbull as Governor and
the latter continued the work of reconstruction and reviving the economy.
Rubber plantations along the railway lines, along Tuaran Road and elsewhere
enjoyed an unprecedented boom in the early 1950's and helped much in boosting
the economy. War reparations from the proceeds of Japanese properties
in North Borneo were used by the Colonial Government to rebuilt the townships
that were devastated. Sir Roland Tumbull was succeeded by Sir William
Goode as Governor. The latter saw the fast rise of nationalism and ended
his Governorship by granting self-government to Sabah on 31 August 1963.
Pic:
Sir William Goode, the last Governor, biding farewell
to Datuk Harris bin Mohd. Salleh on his return to Great Britain at the
Kota Kinabalu wharf.
The Malaysian Proposal
In
1961, the then Prime Minister of the Federation of Malaya, YTM Tunku Abdul
Rahman Putra Al-haf, mooted the question of a confederation of the three
Borneo states (Brunei, Sabah and Sarawak), together with Singapore and the Federation of Malaya
to form Malaysia.
The proposal initially received only lukewarm reception from the leaders
of the three Borneo territories but after considerable talks, they became
enthusiastic because the proposal meant faster independence for them.
Pic:
Tun Fuad Stephens, the first Chief Minister of Sabah,
reading the proclamation of Independence of Sabah through Malaysia.
With him are Tun Mustapha, Yang di-Pertua Negeri (Head of State) of Sabah,
and Tun Abdul Razak, Deputy Prime Minister of Malaysia, representing the
Federal Government of Malaysia.
However, much work had yet to be done before Malaysia
became reality. First there was the Cobbold Commission set up by the British
Government to determine the wishes of the people of the territories. Next
came the United Nations Team set up by the Secretary-General U. Thant at
the request of Indonesia and the Philippines. Both the Cobbold Commission
and the United Nations Assessment Team found the people of Sabah overwhelmingly
in favour of Malaysia.
The birth of Malaysia was actually delayed for 16 days since the U. Thant
Assessment Team had to submit its report to the United Nations General
Assembly.
The Proclamation of the Malaysia Act was, therefore, made on 16 September
1963. However, on 31 August 1963, Sabah was granted self-government status
which was only 16 days away from full independence within Malaysia.
Source: Sabah State Government
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