The History of Yap Ah Loy, Kapitan Cina of Kuala Lumpur and Klang (1867- 1885) A Production by Kongsi NetWorks in the year 2000 Content Page Introduction 3 Our Mission 4 How was Yap Ah Loy as a person? 5 The History of Yap Ah Loy 8 • Before Malaya (1837-1854) 8 • Humble Beginnings (1854-1860) 9 • Hiu Siew and Yap Ah Sze set up shop in Kuala Lumpur 12 • Yap Ah Loy inherits the Kapitanship 13 • The Selangor Civil War 16 § The Death of Sultan Muhammad 16 § Raja Mahdi regained Klang 18 § Raja Mahdi is ousted from Klang 18 § The Death of Yap Ah Sze 19 § The Defection of Syed Mashhor 22 § The First Attack on Kuala Lumpur: The Battle of Ampang 22 § The Second attempt to capture Kuala Lumpur: The Battle of 25 Rawang § The Betrayal of Raja Asal and the Fall of Kuala Lumpur 30 § The Recapture of Kuala Lumpur and the End of the Selangor 34 Civil War • Rebuilding Kuala Lumpur 37 • The Adminstration of Yap Ah Loy 39 • The Death of Yap Ah Loy 42 Life in early Kuala Lumpur 45 The History of Yap Ah Loy 1 Produced by Kongsi NetWorks yapahloyv1.04 • What does Kapitan Cina mean? 45 • Weapons and Armours used 46 • The Camps 46 • How the Chinese mined tin 46 • The Sin Sze Si Ya Temple of Kuala Lumpur 47 • The Mystery of Kuala Lumpur’s name 50 • Why are Junks called Junks? 51 The Dictionary 53 References 54 The Project Team 55 The History of Yap Ah Loy 2 Produced by Kongsi NetWorks yapahloyv1.04 Introduction This site is about the story of Kapitan Cina (Chinese Captain) Yap Ah Loy, the man who governed the city of Kuala Lumpur during her founding years and laid the foundations of her development to become the capital of Malaysia and an international city. He was one of thousands of Chinese who had left China for foreign shores in search of better lives. Through hard work, entrepreneurship and perseverance, he became a rich and powerful person in Malaya. He also contributed to Malaya, and Yap Ah Loy in Qing Dynasty Costume specifically to Kuala Lumpur by building many public amenities, like schools, hospitals, temples, home for the aged etc. We have put together many interesting articles and pictures in this site about the life and times of Yap Ah Loy and life in Kuala Lumpur in the late 19th century. Please feel free to browse through what we have compiled for you. You will probably find that Malaya then was just like the Wild West in America, with its share of tales of adventure, romance (maybe) and enterprise! The History of Yap Ah Loy 3 Produced by Kongsi NetWorks yapahloyv1.04 Our Mission Our objectives in publicizing Yap Ah Loy's contributions to the development of Kuala Lumpur, is to highlight to the world and Malaysians in particular, the achievements of our ancestors, including Yap Ah Loy, in building a prosperous and civil nation. They worked under the sun, in a hot, humid and new environment to have a better living. Their working conditions can hardly be imagined by our generation. Yap Ah Loy's contributions were extraordinary in that not only did he built Kuala Lumpur, he was also a good example in economic cooperation between the Malays, Indians and Chinese. He encouraged the Malay population to migrate to Kuala Lumpur and convert the undeveloped land around Kuala Lumpur into rice fields and other farms, so as to provide the Kuala Lumpur population with a stable source of food. After gaining his wealth, Yap Ah Loy and many other Chinese tycoons, did not forget the others. They built many schools, hospitals, temples etc as a service to society. Despite Yap Ah Loy's contributions, there is no mention of his role nor those of the early Chinese immigrants in the development of Kuala Lumpur and Malaya in modern Malaysian history school books. Hence, our intention is to highlight their achievements and concrete contributions to the people of Malaya. The History of Yap Ah Loy 4 Produced by Kongsi NetWorks yapahloyv1.04 How was Yap Ah Loy as a person? Yap Ah Loy's family name is Yap. His father's name was Yap Luan Hoi, and his mother's name was Fan Shi. Yap Ah Loy's official name given at birth was Yap Tet Loy. His other names Yap Mao Lan and Yap Ah Loy were informal names used by his family and peers. According to records, he used the name Yap Tet Loy in his correspondence. Yap Ah Loy was physically described as of medium height but was exceptionally strong. He had a scar between his eyebrows like the Chinese character "man" which was the result of a childhood incident. He was the third and most prominent Kapitan Cina of Kuala Lumpur. Under his administration, Kuala Lumpur grew from a collection of attap houses to become a major town in Malaya. After his death, the power of the next two Kapitan Cinas was further cut Wife of Yap Ah Loy, Kok Kang Kweon back by the British to the extent that the Kapitan no longer had overall authority in Kuala Lumpur, but was merely a figurehead of the local Chinese population. Yap Ah Loy was known for his indefatigable energy, his generous hospitality and his adventurous spirit. He seemed to be genuinely liked by people who knew him. Swettenham, the Resident of Selangor, who on a visit to Kuala Lumpur in the last months of Yap Ah Loy's administration of Kuala Lumpur reported to Singapore as follows: The History of Yap Ah Loy 5 Produced by Kongsi NetWorks yapahloyv1.04 "The Capitan China, Ah Loi, is still the leading spirit in Selangor, his energy and enterprise are extraordinary. During the disturbances before the inauguration of the Residential System, this town was three times burnt down by the Malays and rebuilt by the Capitan China, who in spite of disaster held the place at the earnest request of Tunku Dia Udin. The Capitan China has connected the chief mines with Kuala Lumpur by long roads, his perseverance alone, I believe, has kept the Chinese in the country, and until quite recently, his exertions have kept the peace in Kuala Lumpur and the vicinity without, the Superintendent of Police informs me, one single serious crime being committed. He has provided the sick with an Asylum, administered justice to the satisfaction of his countrymen, opened a brickfield where he is doing excellent work and planted a tapioca estate larger than any in the Colony (i.e. Straits Settlement), the flour being obtained by machinery put up at Kuala Lumpur and now under the supervision of an English engineer. I have mentioned these matters to show that there is prosperity and progress in Kuala Lumpur, to show to whose efforts this is mainly due, and to record the past history of the place......" He was a leader of the local Hai San gang, which had members in major Chinese settlements in Malaya. This part of his history has remained controversial in that he was a member of a secret society, however his contributions to the building of Sir Frank Swettenham Kuala Lumpur remained undisputed despite his shady background. At Yap Ah Loy's death, the then acting Resident, Rodger, reported to Singapore that: The History of Yap Ah Loy 6 Produced by Kongsi NetWorks yapahloyv1.04 "by his death the Government has lost one of its most able and faithful officers; personally I have lost a friend for whom I had the most sincere liking and esteem." The History of Yap Ah Loy 7 Produced by Kongsi NetWorks yapahloyv1.04 The History of Yap Ah Loy The history of Yap Ah Loy is intrically related to the history of Kuala Lumpur. On one hand, Yap Ah Loy was an inexhaustible personality who was committed to the development of a thriving mining establishment and commercial centre in Kuala Lumpur, on the other hand, the rich tin-fields of Kuala Lumpur provided a stage for Yap Ah loy to make history as the most influencial man in Kuala Lumpur, Klang and the state of Selangor. Before Malaya (1837-1854) Yap Ah Loy was born in Tam Shui village in the Kwai Yap district of the Fui Chui prefecture in the Southern Chinese province of Guangdong, on the eighth day of the second moon of the seventeenth year of the Emperor Tao Kong. that is on 14th March 1837. He was therefore by descent, a Hakka of the Fui Chui clan. At this time, the Qing Dynasty was already in its decline. Yap Ah Loy was 3 years old when the Opium War broke out between China and Great Britain at the battlefield of Dongyuan Wumen, not far from his village. When he was 15 years old, worsening poverty and limited fertile land fueled the Taiping uprising in the Guangdong and Guangxi provinces. The put down of the uprising by the Qing army was particularly bloody, and few families were left unscathed. In the midst of this tumultuous time, thousands of Chinese left their home to escape in search of better lives in foreign lands. In 1854, Yap Ah Loy left for Malacca in Malaya from Macao with 80 bronze coins. His journey was described as follows: "At Macao, he embarked in a junk, and voyaged out over the deep, wide ocean. The junk sailed southwards to Malaya. He was full of hope, though his property consisted of no more than eighty dollars in Chinese currency and a few cheap pieces of luggage. The junk sailed for more than a month, and passed through many dangers, before it reached Malacca. When at last he landed he found himself in a place very different from China. The scenery, with the tall coconut The History of Yap Ah Loy 8 Produced by Kongsi NetWorks yapahloyv1.04 and betel palms and the small attap houses, was new and attractive to him. The unhappy time he had experienced during the long voyage was totally forgotten. He was as peaceful and at ease as the blue sky over the Southern Ocean." Humble Beginnings (1854-1860) When Yap Ah Loy landed in Malacca, he was received by a distant relative, Yap Ket Si. It was usual for the Chinese to help their newly-arrived relatives or clansmen settle down in a foreign land, they would accommodate them until they had found a job. If their passage money was unpaid, the passengers were not allowed onshore, and the relatives would have to pay for the passage money on their kinsmen's behalf. With eighty dollars, Yap Ah Loy probably had enough to pay for his passage money. Yap Ket Si found Yap Ah Loy a job at a tin mine in Durian Tunggal, Malacca. Trade however was bad in Durian Tunggal, and after 4 months, Yap Ah Loy went to Kesang to work in a shop owned by another distant relative, Yap Ng. Yap Ah Loy remained in Kesang for a year. Then, either business was not good or Yap Ah Loy was not a good shop assistant, Yap Ng gave Yap Ah Loy his own savings of about one hundred dollars, and instructed him to return to China. Yap Ah Loy dared not disobey the commands and sailed for Singapore to catch a ship back to China. On his way to Singapore, Yap Ah Loy lost his money in gambling. Unable to return to China and too ashamed to seek further help from his relatives, he walked with Yap Fook, a cousin of Yap Ng's, to Lukut in the state of Selangor in search of a living. At that time, Lukut was the busiest town in Selangor. In the 1840s, rich tin fields were found in Lukut. Raja Jumaat, a Riau royalty and son-in-law to Sultan Muhammad, allowed the mining of the area and with the arrival of Chinese workers, tin mines were opened and Lukut flourished. In 1860, Captain Macpherson, Resident Councillor of Malacca described Lukut as follows: The History of Yap Ah Loy 9 Produced by Kongsi NetWorks yapahloyv1.04
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