Kuala Lumpur (federal territory)
Found in 110 Collections and/or Records:
New houses and school in Petaling Jaya, 1952 - 1962
Print and negative.
New houses at Petaling Jaya, Malaya’s first new town, 1952 - 1962
Print and negative.
North Corner of Government Offices, Kuala Lumpur, from a Malay Cemetery [circa 1900], 1900
153 x 112 mm. A view looking westwards across the Gombah River towards the Government Offices, only a small part of which are visible. In the foreground are tombstones in the Malay Cemetery situated just north of the confluence of the Gombah and Klang River.
North end of Government Offices, Kuala Lumpur [circa 1910], 1910
Panoramic view of Kuala Lumpur, 1883 [?], 1883
163 x 110 mm. A view looking northwest over Kuala Lumpur from the Residency Hill. The Federal Government Offices can be seen in the distance. The buildings (erected 1893-1896) appear to be completed, although the clock for the central tower is not yet in position. This was imported from England and placed in the tower in 1897.
Parliament House, Kuala Lumpur, July 1964, 1964-07
206 x 152 mm. A view looking across landscaped parkland and an approach road towards the modern Parliament buildings.
[Participants at Federal Conference, Kuala Lumpur, July 1903], 1903-07
[Participants at Federal Conference, Kuala Lumpur, July 1903], 1903-07
366 x 283 mm.
[Participants at Federal Conference, Kuala Lumpur, July 1903], 1903-07
[Perspective drawing of the proposed Stadium Negasa, Kuala Lumpur 1960], 1960
Photographs of Malaya, 1936 - 1940
There are four main sets of photographs: jungle-dwelling Sakai men, a beach at Port Dickson, the Buckleys' bungalow at Swettenham Road, Kuala Lumpur, where they lived 1937-1940, and the Cameron Hills. These are followed by a number of individual photographs dating from the Buckleys' time in Malaya, with one taken in Australia. All of the photographs are in black-and-white.
Police Review, Kuala Lumpur, circa 1924, 1924
'Recollections of thirty-five years as a missionary teacher in Malaya', 1962
Peach’s account of his career as a teacher and missionary. Subjects include descriptions of his living and working conditions, the contribution of his wife Norah Nelson, standards of education, the contribution of Christian schools to Malay life, the growth of the school system and its Asian leadership, inter-faith cooperation, evacuation from Malaya during the Second World War, public health, political changes and the many friendships he formed with British colleagues (24 sheets).
Residency, Kuala Lumpur, 1883 [?], 1883
Selangor Club vs. S.C.C. Trophy Match, December 1940, 1940-12
191 x 144 mm. Showing the two rugby teams posed on the steps of the Selangor Club.
Sir John Anderson and suite at Istana of Sultan of Selangor circa 1905, 1905
Spectators at football match, Kuala Lumpur, circa 1949, 1949
130 x 78 mm. Showing a group of seated spectators at a football match. Identified on the reverse of print are: Dato' HAMZAH; Mrs H.P. BRYSON; H.P. BRYSON; Dr C.P. RAWSON; Chief Social Welfare Officer.
Spectators at football (? or rugby) match, Kuala Lumpur [1948-1949], 1948 - 1949
Sultan of Selangor at parade in Kuala Lumpur [early 1950s], 1950 - 1959
203 x 154 mm. Showing Sir Hisamuddin Alam Shah ibni AlMarhum Sultan Alaibin SULEIMAN SHAH (d 1960), Sultan of Selangor 1938-1960, standing on a platform with the British Resident Richard John Fronde [i.e. Froude] CURTIS. Sultan Hisamuddin was elected Yang di-Pertuan Agong in 1960, but died before taking up his post.
The book of William & John by their parents, 2011
Copy of a photograph album compiled by John de Lucy’s parents, Peter and Dorothy, documenting his childhood, family life and holidays on the Amherst Rubber Estate near Kuala Lumpur. It concludes with a visit of the family to Britain.
The Mosque, Kuala Lumpur, 1960 - 1969
189 x 141 mm. General view of the exterior of the Mosque, with palms in the foreground.
The railway station at Kuala Lumpur, 1960 - 1969
189 x 141 mm. General view of the exterior of Kuala Lumpur Railway Station, built in an exuberant 'Saracenic' style.
The Residency [Carcosa, Kuala Lumpur, circa 1900], 1900
355 x 269 mm. A view of Carcosa taken from a similar angle to the preceding print, but from a closer viewpoint. The first mention of the Residency in the Selangor Annual Reports is in 1897 (in C.9108 of 1898) and the following years entry (in C.9524 of 1899, p. 36) appears to indicate the completion of the building. This photograph was almost certainly taken on the same occasion as the preceding print.
The Residency, Kuala Lumpur 1882-1883, 1882 - 1883
251 x 188 mm (mounted on card). A view looking up the Residency Hill towards the square, two-storey Residency buildings at the summit. The Residency, was originally the Klang Residency and was dismantled and rebuilt at Kuala Lumpur in 1881-1882.
Trade School, Kuala Lumpur, 1940 - 1959
165 x 114 mm. The caption on the reverse reads 'The engineering students are given as wide as possible range of instruction to train for various types of work they are likely to get in later life. These students are working in the school's forging section'. It continues, at length, giving a brief history of the Trade Schools in Malaya.