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Singapore
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Raffles Hotel
"Raffles Hotel, Singapore" ©2001 photo
Elroy
Christenson
The Raffles Hotel is one of the most
well known colonial buildings in Singapore. Built in 1887, it was the
center of British colonial rule throughout Southeast
Asia. Sir Stamford Raffles (1781-1826) had been the governor of
Singapore
and Indonesia as well as a major explorer of Asia. He was the first to
designate
Singapore as a free-port. The hotel brought together traders and power
brokers
from Hong Kong, Jakarta and Calcultta. It made its reputation by
catering
to the needs of the British who passed through the Straits Colony. This
included
having a Tiffin Room and a Long Bar where Guinness beer was always
available
10,000 miles from home. Many famous visitors stayed here including
Somerset
Maughm, Noel Coward, Rudyard Kipling, Herman Hesse, Orson Wells, and
John
Lennon.
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updated by Elroy Christenson 2/5/02