By Angela Leenhouts, executive summary by darmansjah
Present-day Jakarta may not be a poster child for public
transportation, but there was a time when the city boasted one of the region’s
most advanced streetcar networks. Taken in the last decade before Indonesia
declared its independence from the Netherlands, the picture above shows an
electrical tramline running through , the onetime political
center of the Dutch East Indies. While the trams are long gone, abandoned in
the 1950s in favor of the buses that now clog the city’s streets, Fatahillah
still looks much as it did then, borderFatahillah Squareed on the south by the 1710-built
colonial town hall, which currently serves as the Jakarta History Museum. The
city around it, though, today bears little resemblance to the Batavia of the
first half of the 12th century, as the scenes depicted in Greeting
from Jakarta: Postcards of a Capital 1900-1950 (Equinox) attest. Amassed by
author Scott Merrillees, the photos and postcards that fill this new coffee
table book are the result of 20 years of collecting and countless hours of
location research to accurately caption over 300 images. The result is a visual
journey through a bygone urban landscape that is sure to fascinate Jakarta’s
modern residents and visitors.
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