If you should ever stroll along the stretch of Jalan Istana
in Sandakan, the much-talked about Agnes Keith House is hard to miss. With its
sprawling green lawns and colonial-style wooden walls, the residence has since
been restored by the Sabah Museum, in collaboration with the Federal Department
of Museums and Antiquities.
This British colonial government quarters, called Newlands,
was once occupied by famous American writer, Agnes Newton Keith, who penned
Land Below The Wind in 1939. Two books followed her first success, namely Three
Came Home (1946) and White Man Returns (1951). With the exception of the second
book, Land Below the Wind and White Man Returns were written in the house on
the hill where she had the best views of Sandakan Bay at the front and the Sulu
Sea at the back.
Newlands was rebuilt some time in 1946/47 and was the first
government permanent timber dwelling to be built after the Second World War. It
was built upon the ruined foundations of the original house that was destroyed
during the war.
The house became home to Agnes and her family, Henry (also
referred to as Harry) George Keith, who was the Conservator of Forests and
their son, George. When the Keiths left Sabah in 1952, the house was occupied
by subsequent Conservators of Forests, forestry officers, volunteers and other
staff. Though the Keiths never retuned to Sabah, the house was always referred
to as Agnes Keith's House by visitors who never stopped coming to see it.
Today the house has been restored and turned into a heritage
house, providing interesting insights to life during British North Borneo. It
is furnished with a reproduction of colonial furniture and antiques. A gallery
on the first floor tells the story of this remarkable woman, her books and her
family. A Keith time-line starts in 1873 and ends in 2004 tracing the past to
the present Keiths.
No comments:
Post a Comment