Hostname: page-component-76fb5796d-22dnz Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-26T05:59:05.825Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

‘Hantu’ and Highway: Transport in Sabah 1881–1963

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 November 2008

Amarjit Kaur
Affiliation:
University of New England, Armidale

Extract

Sabah (previously known as British North Borneo) occupies the whole of the northern portion of the island of Borneo, covering an area of 76, 115 square kilometres. Its immediate neighbours are Brunei, Sarawak and Kalimantan (Indonesian Borneo). From 1882 to 1942, Sabah was administered by the British North Borneo (Chartered) Company. The territory possessed three main attractions: its timber, its reputed minerals and its land. Timber has now grown to be amajor export commodity, second only to petroleum. With the exception of deposits of coal and some gold, economic resources of other sought-after minerals were not proven during the period. The land proved to be the most valuable asset. Many crops were experimented with: tobacco, sugar cane, coffee, coconuts and rubber and they laid the basis for the economic development of the territory. The expansion of these crops was largely assisted by the introduction of a modern transport system which supplemented the original means of communication, the rivers. The railway in particular provided the impetus for the rubber boom on the west coast. In turn, this resulted in the emergence of an export-oriented economy, specializing in rubber, timber, copra and tobacco. From 1942, Sabah was occupied by the Japanese until its liberation in 1945. After a brief period under military administration, it became a British Colony in 1946. Under colonial rule from 1946 to 1963 the previous pattern of economic exploitation continued.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1994

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

1 Treacher, W. H., ‘British Borneo: Sketches of Brunei, Sarawak, Labuan and North Borneo’, Journal of the Straits Branch, Royal Asiatic Society, XXI (06 1890): 85.Google Scholar

2 John, Spenser St., Life in the Forests of the Far East, vol. 1 (London: Smith, Elder, 1862), p. 381.Google Scholar

3 See Tregonning, K. G., ‘American Activity in North Borneo, 1865–81’, The Pacific History Review, 23, 4 (11 1954): 357–72.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

4 The deeds of cession of all territories which eventually constituted the territory of the Chartered Company are to be found in CO. 874/17–23, 36–40, 43–55.Google Scholar

5 For a detailed account of the Company's establishment, see Tregonning, K. G., A History of Modern Sabah (North Borneo 1881–1962) (Singapore: University of Malaya Press, 1965), pp. 1345.Google ScholarSee also Black, Ian, A Gambling Style of Government (Kuala Lumpur: Oxford University Press, 1983), ch. 2.Google Scholar

6 There were altogether ten Provinces, namely Alcock, Clarke, Cunliffe, Dent, Dewhurst, Elphinestone, Keppel, Martin, Mayne and Myburgh.

7 In 1929, Kudat was merged with Sandakan Residency.

8 See Rutter, Owen, British North Borneo. An account of its History, Resources and Native Tribes (London: Constable and Co, 1922), pp. 149–63;Google Scholarsee also Bruce, Charles, Twenty years in Borneo (London: Cassell and Co, 1924), pp. 4659.Google Scholar

9 These customs houses, known as bintang marrow, usually consisted of a length of bamboo or rattan slung across the river for the raising of which a duty was charged. By this system, the chieftains were able to control river systems without establishing political control over the indigenous communities upland. See Singh, Ranjit, ‘The Structure of the Indigenous Economy in Sabah in the 1860s and 1870s’ in Bakar, Muhammad Abu, Kaur, Amarjit and Ghazili, Abdullah Zakaria (eds), HIST0RIA: Essays in Commemoration of the 25th Anniversary of the Department of History, University of Malaya (Kuala Lumpur: Malaysian Historical Society, 1984), pp. 382402.Google Scholar

10 For a fascinating account of boats and river travel, see Rutter, , British North Borneo, pp. 316–17, 348–50.Google Scholar

11 Handbook of the State of North Borneo 1929, pp. 88–9;Google ScholarTregonning, K. G., Home Port Singapore: A History of the Straits Steamship Company Limited 1890–1965 (Singapore: Oxford University Press, 1967), pp. 99121.Google Scholar

12 Gudgeon, L. W. W., British North Borneo (London: Adam and Charles Black, 1913). pp. 36–7.Google Scholar

13 ‘Report by A. Cook on the timber resources of British North Borneo’, encl. in Handbook of the State of North Borneo 1890, pp. 72–5.Google Scholar

14 North Borneo Central Archives, file #1424. Crocker, W. R., ‘Report on British North Borneo’, 1 November 1887 (Sandakan, North Borneo) [addressed to Sir Rutherford Alcock, Chairman of the Court of Directors, British North Borneo Company], p. 3.Google Scholar

15 See, for example, British North Borneo Company Agreement with Baron von Stein, 31 December 1886 (CO. 874/62A); Treacher, ‘British Borneo: Sketches’, p. 82.Google Scholar

16 For an account of tobacco cultivation in North Borneo, see John, David H. and Jackson, James C., ‘The Tobacco Industry of North Borneo: A Distinctive Form of Plantation Agriculture’, Journal of Southeast Asian Studies, IV, 1 (03 1973): 88106.CrossRefGoogle ScholarSee also British North Borneo Herald, June 1929 (‘The Borneo Planter of Yore’); Gudgeon, British North Borneo, pp. 46–58;Google ScholarTregonning, , A History of Modem Sabah, pp. 85–8;Google ScholarState of North Borneo Annual Report 1928, p. 7.Google Scholar

17 The political economy of timber in Sarawak is well documented in INSAN and Authors, Logging Against the Natives of Sarawak (Petaling Jaya: INSAN, 1989)Google Scholar and World Rainforest Movement and Sahabat Alam Malaysia, The Battle for Sarawak's Forests (Penang: World Rainforest Movement and Sahabat Alam Malaysia, 1990).Google Scholar

18 ‘Agreement as to the formation of a railway in Borneo between the British North Borneo Company and Sir Andrew Clarke and William Clarke Cowie’, 12 June 1891, encl. in CO. 874/59A #162273.Google Scholar

19 Views of North Borneo with a Brief History of the Colony (London: British North Borneo Company, 1899), pp. 3742;Google Scholar see also British North Borneo Herald, 16 Jan. 1896.

20 West, A. J., Letter Books from the Secretary, British North Borneo Company to A. J. West, vols 1 and 2 (vol. 1 –19011907; vol. 2 –19071910), encl. in CO. 874/124; CO. 874/125.Google Scholar

21 North Borneo Central Archives File #702. Correspondence between Moore, W. G. and party to Messrs. Pauling and Co. Ltd, London, 24 07 1906; 12 Dec. 1906; 17 Dec. 1906; 5 Feb. 1907; and 20 April 1907.Google Scholar

22 The governor resigned while another was dismissed. His dismissal order was later rescinded and he was allowed to ‘retire’.

23 Letter, Morrison, A. S., Director, Manchester North Borneo Rubber Ltd to Secretary, British North Borneo Company, 25 Feb. 1907, encl. in CO. 874/124. See also corr. 7 Aug. 1908, encl. in CO. 874/125;Google Scholarand West's, A. J. Letter Book, vol. II. After Cowie's death in 1910, West was suspended from his duties and left Borneo.Google Scholar

24 The royalty was on a sliding scale rising from 0.5 per cent of the value of the rubber when the price was under 30 cents (8s.4d) per lb. A rebate of royalty was made when the price was under 20 cents (5s.6d) per lb., provided such rebate was claimed within three months of export. Handbook of the State of North Borneo 1934, p. 69.Google Scholar

25 North Borneo Administration Report 1929, p. 6; 1934, p. 6.Google Scholar

26 Rutter, , British North Borneo, p. 20.Google ScholarSee also Rutter, O., The Travels of Tiadatha (London: T. Fisher Unwin, 1922), pp. 55–7.Google Scholar

27 See British North Borneo Railway Annual Reports 1923–36. The tongkang service started when the railway raised goods rates by 50 per cent in 1920. ‘Report on Tongkang versus Railway’ encl. in CO. 874/156, #162668.Google Scholar

28 CO. 874/259, 11 Nov. 1896, p. 514; 19 Nov. 1896, pp. 463 and 468.Google Scholar

29 Black, , A Gambling Style of Government, pp. 135–6.Google Scholar

30 British North Borneo Herald, 1 April 1901.Google Scholar

31 British North Borneo Herald, 16 Jan. 1896.Google Scholar

32 British North Borneo Herald, 16 Aug. 1896.Google Scholar

33 Britain, Great, Inter-Service Topographical Department, Report on British North Borneo-Railways, 10 1944 (Arkib Negeri Sabah), p. 1.Google Scholar

34 Lowe, Robert, ‘Tiadatha's Railway’ typescript n.d. [Oxford Development Records Project, Rhodes House Library, Mss Ind. Ocn. S 278], p. 39.Google Scholar

35 Colony of North Borneo, Report of the Transport Commission, 1949 (Arkib Negeri Sabah).Google Scholar

36 Gatford, H., ‘Rehabilitation of the North Borneo Railway’, Proceedings of the Colonial Engineering Conference (Institution of Civil Engineers) (London: William Clowes and Sons, 1952), pp. 121–59; Lowe, ‘Tiadatha's Railway’.Google Scholar

37 Sargent, J. R., Report on Transport Requirements in the Light of Economic Development in North Borneo (Council Paper No. 17 of 1960).Google Scholar

38 Colony of North Borneo Annual Report 1962, pp. 170–1.Google Scholar

39 Bruce, , Twenty Years in Borneo, pp. 137–54.Google Scholar

40 British North Borneo Herald, 16 Jan. 1896;Google ScholarReport by Sir West Ridgeway, Chairman of the Board of Directors, British North Borneo Company, Reports of Half-Yearly Meetings, 12 July 1911; 15 July 1913 (Arkib Negeri Sabah).Google Scholar

41 ‘Monthly Reports Rundum District, January and February 1910’, British North Borneo Herald, 16 June 1910.Google Scholar

42 Black, , A Gambling Style of Government, p. 226.Google Scholar

43 North Borneo Central Archives, File #463, Memo dated 19 Oct. 1935.Google Scholar

44 North Borneo Central Archives, File #834 ‘Bridle Paths in the Interior’; Handbook of the State of North Borneo 1929, pp. 87–8.Google Scholar Apart from these two sections, two paths led off in a westerly direction to Bundu Tuhan on the slopes of Kinabalu. Bundu Tuhan in turn was connected with the coast by a path proceeding via Tenumpuk to Usukan, a small port north of Jesselton. Jesselton was linked with Tuaran and the Marudu Bay district.

45 North Borneo Central Archives, File #112, Memo on ‘Maintenance of Bridle Paths’, 15 May 1928.Google Scholar

46 Handbook of the State of North Borneo 1890, p. 117Google Scholar

47 Annual Report of the Interior Residency for 1931 (encl. in North Borneo Administration Report 1931), p. 4.Google Scholar

48 North Borneo Central Archives, File #1110 ‘Road and Bridle Path’. Humpreys, J. L., ‘Memorandum on a Ten-year Scheme for Road and Path Construction in North Borneo’, 7 April 1927.Google Scholar

49 See McFadzean's Report on North Borneo CO. 531/37/1; see also Baker, Michael, Sabah: The First Ten Years as a Colony 1946–1956 (Singapore: Malaysian Printers, 1965), PP. 112–14.Google Scholar

50 Colony of North Borneo Annual Reports 1949–57.Google Scholar

51 Colony of North Borneo Annual Reports 1953, p. 124; a nd 1956, p. 124.Google Scholar

52 Tregonning, , North Borneo, p. 104.Google Scholar

53 Annual Reports, North Borneo Railway 1918–1929. Compare with the freight carried by boats to estates in Sandakan in the 1880s viz ‘livestock, doors and windows, cases of Pilsener beer, bags of rice and salt fish, and ataps for house thatching’. Ada Pryer, A Decade in Borneo (London: Hutchinson & Co, 1894), p. 3.Google Scholar

54 Colony of North Borneo Annual Reports 1950 and 1951.Google Scholar

55 British North Borneo Herald, 16 Jan 1896.Google Scholar

56 British North Borneo Herald, 1 June 1901.Google Scholar

57 British North Borneo Herald, 1 March 1910.Google Scholar

58 See Bruce, , Twenty Years in Borneo, pp. 137–54; North Borneo Central Archives file #844, minute on Pack Pony Transport, 2 July 1939.Google Scholar

59 See Leong, Cecilia, Sabah: The First 100 Years (Kuala Lumpur: Percetakan Nan Yang Muda, 1982), chas 5 and 6; Black, A Gambling Style of Government, chas 4 and 6.Google Scholar