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The actual source of the name comes from the old survey maps which label the land as "Mukim of Ang Mo Kio" (''Mukim'' meaning "area" or "district" in [[Malay language|Malay]]). The word "Ang Mo" 红毛 may in fact not refer to Westerners. Rather, it is derived from two separate combined phrases in Hokkien. ''Ang Mo Dan'' means "[[rambutan]]" 红毛丹, a local fruit, red and covered in hair, found plentifully around the areas of old [[kampong]]s. Likely the second suffix "kio" 桥 ("bridge" or "bridges" in Hokkien) was added to the prefix "Ang Mo" 红毛 as an additional description to indicate a more precise location that residents would recognize i.e.红毛桥. There were many concrete bridges built by the old [[kampong]] dwellers. It first appears on the early maps drawn by surveyors who took those two phrases and combined them to form "Mukim of Ang Mo Kio" ("District of Ang Mo Kio"). The actual location of Ang Mo Kio New Town has been also known by the former name ''Kou-teu kio'', Hokkien for "Ninth Bridge". |
The actual source of the name comes from the old survey maps which label the land as "Mukim of Ang Mo Kio" (''Mukim'' meaning "area" or "district" in [[Malay language|Malay]]). The word "Ang Mo" 红毛 may in fact not refer to Westerners. Rather, it is derived from two separate combined phrases in Hokkien. ''Ang Mo Dan'' means "[[rambutan]]" 红毛丹, a local fruit, red and covered in hair, found plentifully around the areas of old [[kampong]]s. Likely the second suffix "kio" 桥 ("bridge" or "bridges" in Hokkien) was added to the prefix "Ang Mo" 红毛 as an additional description to indicate a more precise location that residents would recognize i.e.红毛桥. There were many concrete bridges built by the old [[kampong]] dwellers. It first appears on the early maps drawn by surveyors who took those two phrases and combined them to form "Mukim of Ang Mo Kio" ("District of Ang Mo Kio"). The actual location of Ang Mo Kio New Town has been also known by the former name ''Kou-teu kio'', Hokkien for "Ninth Bridge". |
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4.1 Legend for Ang Mo Kio |
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There is a history page to the name Ang Mo Kio. Ang Mo Kio means “Red Hair Bridge” in the local dialect. It actually refers to a disused bridge that links the western part of the current Ang Mo Kio estate to the Thomson Estate. |
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The Red Hair referred by the locals was a British Lady called Lady Jennifer Windsor. Lady Windsor was the wife of Lord Windsor, a wealthy merchant who had a huge estate in the Upper Thomson Area in the 1920s till after World War II. |
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It was a tragic incident that linked Lady Windsor to a unnamed crossing that bridged a stream running off the Pierce Reservoir. The incident happened in 1923 when Lady Windsor lost 3 of her children; Harry, Paul and Angela. The 3 children were supposed to have visited a family friend staying in the Upper Thomson area, and were lost in the woods. It was later found that the 2 boys were playing by the wooden crossing when a sudden gush swept them away. Their bodies were found about 2 miles from the bridge. However, the body of Angela was never found. |
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Since that eventful day, locals started hearing cries of a little girl and that prompted Lady Windsor to stay by the bridge for the rest of her life. She told her close friends that she had heard her daughter voices by the bridge and she wanted to accompany her soul. Lady Windsor would spend the whole day by the bridge, reading or knitting. People soon gotten used to her perpetual presence by the bridge that they soon refered the bridge as the “Red Hair Bridge”; which in its right sense should have been called “Lady Windsor Bridge”. |
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Lady Windsor passed away in 1963 and it was only thereafter that locals no longer hear the voices of the little girl. Today, one could still see the disused bridge near the intersection of Ang Mo Kio Avenue 1 and Upper Thomson Road. |
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==Culture and changes== |
==Culture and changes== |
Revision as of 23:45, 21 November 2008
1°22′12.6″N 103°50′44.23″E / 1.370167°N 103.8456194°E Template:SG neighbourhood Ang Mo Kio is a heartland new town located in north central Singapore, and is generally within the North-East Region. It has a town centre and six neighbourhoods. Although containing many of the common features of the island nation's neighbourhoods, e.g. hawker centres, wet markets and HDB housing blocks, residents see the town as retaining a distinctive identity. Singapore's Prime Minister, Lee Hsien Loong is the Member of Parliament for this constituency. As an urban planning division, the Ang Mo Kio Planning Area lies within this region.
Origin of the name
The locality's name is believed by some to derive from the Hokkien phrase Ang Mo Kio (红毛桥), meaning "Westerner Bridge". The term ang mo (literally "red hair") is a somewhat derogatory Hokkien reference to the people with fair hair who settled from the West and, because such a name might be considered unflattering, it is now written as 宏茂桥 which is pronounced in an almost identical way but means "Bridge of Expansiveness and Prosperity". Some local people have incorrectly assumed that the new version of the name refers to the bridges at the seventh milestone of Thomson Road (found at the junction of Ang Mo Kio Avenue 1 and Thomson Road). These two old bridges were known as Or-kio ("black bridges") in the local spoken dialects. Research suggests that neither of these bridges were officially named, but they spanned the canal and the old Kallang River forming a link to the Pierce Reservoir.
The actual source of the name comes from the old survey maps which label the land as "Mukim of Ang Mo Kio" (Mukim meaning "area" or "district" in Malay). The word "Ang Mo" 红毛 may in fact not refer to Westerners. Rather, it is derived from two separate combined phrases in Hokkien. Ang Mo Dan means "rambutan" 红毛丹, a local fruit, red and covered in hair, found plentifully around the areas of old kampongs. Likely the second suffix "kio" 桥 ("bridge" or "bridges" in Hokkien) was added to the prefix "Ang Mo" 红毛 as an additional description to indicate a more precise location that residents would recognize i.e.红毛桥. There were many concrete bridges built by the old kampong dwellers. It first appears on the early maps drawn by surveyors who took those two phrases and combined them to form "Mukim of Ang Mo Kio" ("District of Ang Mo Kio"). The actual location of Ang Mo Kio New Town has been also known by the former name Kou-teu kio, Hokkien for "Ninth Bridge".
4.1 Legend for Ang Mo Kio
There is a history page to the name Ang Mo Kio. Ang Mo Kio means “Red Hair Bridge” in the local dialect. It actually refers to a disused bridge that links the western part of the current Ang Mo Kio estate to the Thomson Estate.
The Red Hair referred by the locals was a British Lady called Lady Jennifer Windsor. Lady Windsor was the wife of Lord Windsor, a wealthy merchant who had a huge estate in the Upper Thomson Area in the 1920s till after World War II.
It was a tragic incident that linked Lady Windsor to a unnamed crossing that bridged a stream running off the Pierce Reservoir. The incident happened in 1923 when Lady Windsor lost 3 of her children; Harry, Paul and Angela. The 3 children were supposed to have visited a family friend staying in the Upper Thomson area, and were lost in the woods. It was later found that the 2 boys were playing by the wooden crossing when a sudden gush swept them away. Their bodies were found about 2 miles from the bridge. However, the body of Angela was never found.
Since that eventful day, locals started hearing cries of a little girl and that prompted Lady Windsor to stay by the bridge for the rest of her life. She told her close friends that she had heard her daughter voices by the bridge and she wanted to accompany her soul. Lady Windsor would spend the whole day by the bridge, reading or knitting. People soon gotten used to her perpetual presence by the bridge that they soon refered the bridge as the “Red Hair Bridge”; which in its right sense should have been called “Lady Windsor Bridge”.
Lady Windsor passed away in 1963 and it was only thereafter that locals no longer hear the voices of the little girl. Today, one could still see the disused bridge near the intersection of Ang Mo Kio Avenue 1 and Upper Thomson Road.
Culture and changes
In the new town, the old friendly kampong spirit of sharing and caring seems to survive as a strong cultural trait. The older generation of kampong people who were once fruit and vegetable growers, small-scale merchants and hard working laborers, have produced two generations of children. The majority continue to live with their children in the renewed environment — the family ties are strong with multi-generational units residing in three- to five-room HDB apartments. The lifestyle of the area has been transformed from the simple one of the kampong to urbanised and modernised living including the obvious modern amenities of piped running water, electricity, flush toilets, and daily garbage removal plus all the less obvious safeguards which were never possible in the era of the small village, such as water management systems to drain the monsoon rains into the reservoirs. Some old kampong folk consider one of the most significant changes of recent times to be that "Even the postman can deliver his mail without problems!"
Thus, Ang Mo Kio remains one of the older and more parochial and insular areas of Singapore and is less demographically cosmopolitan than some of the newer estates.
Many of the adult children have moved on to the new housing estates in Sengkang, Punggol, Woodlands New Town and other parts of the island but the kinship spirit is kept alive by constant return visits to their older forebears, especially during the weekends and public holidays, particularly at Chinese New Year, when the reunion dinners are held.
Avenues
Ang Mo Kio Avenue 10 encompasses the Ang Mo Kio Neighbourhood Park, Chong Boon Secondary School, Pathlight School, Chong Boon Market and Food Court, Ang Mo Kio Industrial Park 1 and Teck Ghee Community Centre. The numbering system of the Ang Mo Kio Avenues is that the even number avenues (such as Ang Mo Kio Avenue 2) are oriented in the north-south orientation and the odd number avenues in the east-west orientation.
Recent developments in Ang Mo Kio
AMK Hub
AMK Hub has been built as part of the plan to redevelop and to create vibrancy in the town centre of Ang Mo Kio. Both the NTUC and bus interchange have moved from the corner of Ang Mo Kio Avenue 8 and Ang Mo Kio Central 3 to the AMK Hub.