Tha Chalom

Coordinates: 13°32′11″N 100°16′11″E / 13.5364099703°N 100.269795648°E / 13.5364099703; 100.269795648
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Tha Chalom Railway Halt

Tha Chalom (Thai: ท่าฉลอม, pronounced [tʰâː t͡ɕʰā.lɔ̌ːm]) is a historic tambon (sub-district) of Mueang Samut Sakhon District, Samut Sakhon Province, central Thailand. Its name is also a name of surrounding area.

History[edit]

Tha Chalom has a history that goes back to the middle Ayutthaya period during the reign of King Maha Chakkraphat when he established Ban Tha Chin (บ้านท่าจีน) as a town in those days. Tha Chalom and Mahachai at that time were communities of the Chinese people, there are many Chinese piers along both banks of Tha Chin River. Hence, the river named Tha Chin, which means "Chinese pier".[1][2] [3]

Tha Chalom is regarded as the first sukhaphiban (sanitary district) in Thailand. It was founded by King Chulalongkorn (Rama V) in 1905 after he saw the filth of Nakhon Khuan Khan (now Phra Pradaeng District, Samut Prakan Province) and compare that "dirty as Mahachai market". So Ministry of Interior by Prince Damrong Rajanubhab cleaned up the town and built new roads for the King. One of them when complete the King presided over the official road opening ceremony on March 18, 1905 and named it "Thawai Road" (offer road).[2] [4]

The name "Tha Chalom" means "pier of Chalom" (Chalom is a type of Thai vendor boat similar to junk).[1]

Tha Chalom in the reign of King Chulalongkorn was the capital of the province and more prosperous than Mahachai side.[5]

Geography[edit]

Tha Chalom is the central west area of Mueang Samut Sakhon District. Its terrain is the pig stomach-shaped of land formed by a sharp meander in Tha Chin River. Across the river is Samut Sakhon core or familiarly known as Mahachai.

Tha Chalom is bounded by other areas (from north clockwise): Mahachai and Bang Ya Praek in its district, Tha Chin in its district, Bay of Bangkok (upper Gulf of Thailand), Krokkrak in its district, respectively.[6]

The main watercourse of Samut Sakhon, Tha Chin River that originated in Chainat Province flows into the Gulf of Thailand here.[1][5]

Administration[edit]

Tha Chalom is a part of administrative area of Thesaban Nakhon Samut Sakhon (Samut Sakhon Municipality).

Tha Chin River Ferry

Transportation[edit]

Presently, Tha Chalom residents still preserve their traditional way of life, old buildings with chic graffiti can still be seen on the streets. Pedicabs serve the area.[7][5]

Tha Chalom is also home to Ban Laem Railway Station, origin of Maeklong Railway (second section) with the starting point at Wongwian Yai in Bangkok and terminated at Samut Songkhram Province.

Traveling between Tha Chalom and Mahachai must rely mainly on the Tha Chin River Ferry.[7] [3]

Economy[edit]

Most locals work in fisheries. Miniature fishing boat models and dried seafood are local products.[6]

Places[edit]

  • Tha Chalom Ferry Pier
  • Ban Laem Railway Station
  • Tha Chalom Railway Halt
  • Wat Laem Suwannaram
  • Wat Sutthiwat Wararam (Wat Chong Lom)
  • Guanyin Shrine
  • St Anne Church

Popular culture[edit]

Tha Chalom is the setting of a Thai luk krung song, titled 'Tha Chalom'. It was sung by Charin Nuntanakorn in the year 1961.[4]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c Wongthes, Sujit (2018-02-12). "จีน-ไทย รู้จักกันนับพันปีมาแล้วผ่านแม่น้ำท่าจีน (ไม่ใช่แค่ร้อยๆ ปี)" [Chinese - Thai known thousands of years ago through Tha Chin River (not just a hundred years)]. Matichon (in Thai).
  2. ^ a b "ประวัติท่าฉลอม-ความสำคัญทางประวัติศาสตร์" [History of Tha Chalom-historical significance]. Sites.google.com (in Thai).
  3. ^ a b Svasti, Pichaya (2017-09-28). "Rollin' down the rivers". Bangkokpost.
  4. ^ a b "ท่าฉลอม" [Tha Chalom]. Samutsakhon.go.th (in Thai).
  5. ^ a b c "ท่าฉลอม เมืองสุขาภิบาลแห่งแรกของสยาม" [Tha Chalom the first sanitary district in Siam]. TPBS (in Thai). 2020-10-23.
  6. ^ a b "ข้อมูลตำบลท่าฉลอม อำเภอเมือง สมุทรสาคร" [Information of Tambon Tha Chalom, Mueang Samut Sakhon District]. ThaiTambon.com (in Thai).
  7. ^ a b "Tha Chalom, Samut Sakhon". Bangkokkid.travellerspoint.com. 2018-04-07.

13°32′11″N 100°16′11″E / 13.5364099703°N 100.269795648°E / 13.5364099703; 100.269795648