Williamson Fiona
School of Social Sciences, Singapore Management University, Singapore, Singapore.
Water Hist. 2020;12(3):251-263. doi: 10.1007/s12685-020-00260-6. Epub 2020 Oct 29.
In 1877, the major towns of the Straits Settlements-Singapore, George Town, Penang Island and Malacca-suffered a drought of exceptional magnitude. The drought's natural instigator was the El Niño phase of the El Niño Southern Oscillation, a climatic phenomenon then not understood by contemporary observers. The 1877 event has been explored in some depth for countries including India, China and Australia. Its impact on Southeast Asia however is less well-known and the story of how the event unfolded in Singapore and Malaysia has not been told. This paper explores how the contemporary British government responded to the drought, arguing that its impact on hydraulic management was at best minimal yet, it did have impact on other areas, such as forest reservation with the hope of preserving future rainfall. It also highlights how, in contrast to studies on urban water plans in other British Asian colonies, the colonial authorities in the Straits Settlements had a far less coherent and meaningful relationship with water in their town planning schemes. As this paper is part of a special issue, Water History in the time of COVID-19, it has undergone modified peer review.
1877年,海峡殖民地的主要城镇——新加坡、乔治市、槟城岛和马六甲——遭遇了极为严重的旱灾。这场旱灾的自然诱因是厄尔尼诺-南方涛动的厄尔尼诺阶段,这是一种当时当代观测者尚不了解的气候现象。对于印度、中国和澳大利亚等国家,1877年的这一事件已得到一定深度的探究。然而,它对东南亚的影响却鲜为人知,而且该事件在新加坡和马来西亚的发展情况也未曾被讲述过。本文探讨了当时的英国政府如何应对这场旱灾,认为其对水利管理的影响至多微乎其微,但它确实对其他领域产生了影响,比如为了保留未来降雨而进行森林保护。它还强调,与对其他英属亚洲殖民地城市供水计划的研究相比,海峡殖民地的殖民当局在其城市规划方案中与水的关系远没有那么连贯和有意义。由于本文是《COVID - 19时期的水历史》特刊的一部分,它经过了修改后的同行评审。