622
SHANGHAI
total outlay of six million Taels, which was approved by all concerned but could not be started owing to lack of funds. A practical scheme for the carrying out of Mr. von Heiden- stam's project was ultimately evolved by the Shanghai Chamber of Commerce. This was based on the levying of 3 per cent. Conservancy tax on all Customs duties and 1 per mille of value on duty-free imported or exported goods, the administration to be carried on by a Board consisting of the Shanghai Commissioner for Foreign Affairs, the Commissioner of Customs and the Harbour Master. After lengthy negotiations during 1911 and 1912, this scheme, with some minor amendments, was approved by the Government in April, 1912. The scheme was put into operation on May 15th, 1912, according to Mr. von Heidenstam's project. A new parallel jetty on the eastern side of the former Outer Bar, training-works in the Upper River, and the dredging of some 7,000,000 cubic yards, mostly at convexes and in the Astræa Channel, were executed. The former Outer and Inner Bars, where only 16 and 14 feet of water were available in 1907, were thus eliminated, and the shallowest reach in the whole river became over 24 feet deep over a width of 600 feet in the narrowest places. In 1915 and 1916 the narrow reach at the Chinese City at Nantao was widened by dredging, and a new bund was created for the Chinese City. Towards the end of 1916 the Board acquired the first installation of its own dredging plant. At the end of 1921, Mr. von Heidenstam's project, started in 1912, had been practically completed, at a cost of about five million Taels, as against the estimate of six millions.
The Harbour in point of tonnage now ranks 6th or 7th among the principal ports of the world. During 1926 over 33,000,000 tons entered and cleared. Shanghai serves a hinterland of some 750,000 square miles and is likely to remain the principal entrepôt for the trade of North and Central China. The mooring accommodation in the Harbour for steamers having become inadequate owing to the enormous shipping developments of recent years the Customs called a conference, representing Chinese and foreign ship- ping interests, in December 1925, and a comprehensive re-berthing plan was drawn up, which was endorsed by the Consular Body and the Chambers of Commerce concerned. The Commissioner of Customs, Mr. Maze, in the course of his Trade Reports for the years 1925 and 1926 deals exhaustively with this important question and describes in detail the nature of the scheme which provides some 33 new head-and-stern moorings for vessels of all sizes-including the largest ocean steamers. The new moorings are administered by the Maritime Customs.
The present position of Shanghai as a world port is due almost entirely to the activities of the Whangpoo Conservancy Board. În 1905, as stated, the Outer Bar at the mouth of the River had a depth of 15 feet at low water; while three miles up stream the River divided into two channels-one of eight feet depth, and the other of eleven feet depth (the Inner Bar). A through deep water channel of at least 30-32 now exists! This remarkable progress may be attributed to the able scheme devised by the Dutch Engineer Mr. J. de Rijke. The Board adopted, and has since consistently adhered to, his recommendations, and results have conclusively proved the soundness and correct- ness of his views.
HISTORY
The origin of the name "Shanghai," which literally means "Upper Sea," has been much debated, but probably like Kaoch'ang, "High Reeds," and Kiangwan, "River Bend," names still existing in the neighbourhood, was merely the vernacular title given to the place when still an island at the mouth of the Yangtsze. It does not appear in history till the time of the Mongol Empire. We find at various periods, from after Han downwards, that K'wenshan, Changshu, Kiating, etc., were constituted into separate hsiens, and that in the year 1292 Shanghai was likewise erected into a separate district and placed under Sungkiang-fu, which itself had only fifteen years previously been divided from Kiahsing-fu, now in the province of Chekiang. Prior to that it had been made a Customs' station on account of its favourable position for trade, but its growth had been slow, and for centuries the chief trade of the lower district had been con- centrated at the mouth of the Liu-ho, now an insignificant creek which, passing T'ai- tsang, joins the Yangtsze some twenty-five miles above Woosung.
With the silting up of the Liu-ho and its eventual extinction as a navigable channel, largely brought about apparently by the opening of the Hwangpu before alluded to, Shanghai became the principal shipping port of this region; and such it had been for some centuries when it was visited in 1832 by Mr. H. H. Lindsay, head of the late firm of Lindsay & Co., accompanied by the Rev. Chas. Gutzlaff, in the Lord Amherst, with a view to opening up trade, and from that time begins its modern