Club Street.
At the top of this road, Club Street, one will come across a grand Victorian manor entitled with vast understatement, the Chinese Weekly Entertainment Club , which Club Str eet takes its name from. This Club was founded in 1891 by a Peranakan millionaire, as a gentleman's club for the rich among the Chinese community. A few of its renowned members went on to launch some of Singapore's leading Banking Corporation.
At Mohamad Ali Lane, one can still find one of the last traditional idol carvers still at work. At the end of this lane, one will see Jamae Mosque, which is on of the oldest mosques in Singapore. Built around 1827 by the Chulias or the Muslims from South India 's Coromandel Coast, the mosque was declared a national monument in 1974.