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A Copper Still and the Making of Rum in the Eighteenth-Century Atlantic World
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 14 May 2021
Abstract
This article focuses on a copper still transported from London to the Mesopotamia estate in Jamaica and used to convert waste sugar products into rum, one of the many New World intoxicants which transformed British consumption patterns in the early modern period. Much has been written about the consumer revolution which allowed these commodities to be absorbed into everyday lives but less interest has been shown in the producer revolution needed to get the goods to market. The labour, skills, and materials embodied in the production and use of the copper still highlight how slave production of rum was integrated into a steadily advancing industrial capitalism linking dispersed sites and workers on both sides of the Atlantic. Rum production was a collaborative effort in which Caribbean plantations were inextricably chained to the local, regional, and international economies, and it involved adaptations in skills, tools, and techniques which were incorporated into Britain's long, slow industrial revolution.
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- The Historical Journal , Volume 65 , Special Issue 1: Intoxicants and Early Modern European Globalization , February 2022 , pp. 149 - 166
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- Copyright © The Author(s), 2021. Published by Cambridge University Press
References
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16 J. Wedderburn, account current with estate for 1778, Clarendon deposit, b. 37. Peter Marsden provided a good description of a similar still house in the 1780s as quoted in Barry Higman, Jamaica surveyed: plantation maps and plans of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries (Kingston, Jamaica, 1988), p. 156.
17 Ambrose Cooper, The complete distiller (London, 1760).
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19 Samuel Martin, Essay upon plantership (London, 1765), p. 53; Clarendon deposit, b. 37/2.
20 Beinecke Library, Thistlewood papers (hereafter Thistlewood papers), box 3, folder 14.
21 Campbell, London tradesman, p. 267.
22 Thistlewood papers, box 11, folder 81.
23 Clarendon deposit, b. 37. Both were employed in the distillery throughout the annual cycle of six or seven months of rum production and then redeployed on miscellaneous tasks elsewhere in the estate. Dunn, Two plantations, p. 329.
24 Clarendon deposit, b. 37/2.
25 In the 1770s, Mesopotamia employed two book-keepers, with the senior, who was also inspector of the still house, paid £45 per annum and the other £30. Clarendon deposit, b. 37.
26 Martin, Essay upon plantership, p. 53.
27 In 1754, Thistlewood tried adding pimento broth to the wash. Diary, 4 Apr. 1754, Thistlewood papers, box 1, folder 3, p. 87.
28 Mr Richard Beckford's instructions, Thistlewood papers, box 11, folder 81, p. 26.
29 Diary, 14 Jan. 1754, Thistlewood papers, box 3, folder 4.
30 Philip Wright, ed., Lady Nugent's journal of her residence in Jamaica from 1801 to 1805 (Kingston, Jamaica, 1966), p. 62.
31 According to Dunn's research on Mesopotamia, distilling differed from other crafts in being heavily performed by Africans – eight of the thirteen distillers he identified on Mesopotamia between 1762 and 1804 were Africans, compared with only eleven out of seventy-one craftsmen. Dunn, Two plantations, pp. 178, 328–9.
32 William Belgrove, A treatise upon husbandry, by William Belgrove, a regular and long experienced planter of the island of Barbados (Boston, MA, 1755).
33 Mesopotamia estate copper and pewter account, 1751–75, and Mesopotamia crop and balance account showing the annual net profit of the estate, 1771–75, Clarendon deposit, b. 37.
34 George Furzeon with seven enslaved labourers; John Grant with twenty enslaved labourers; and Thomas Williams, a mulatto. Survey of St James, 1773, British Library, Add. MS 12,435. In 1775, Forbes supplied Florentius Vassal, Barham's neighbour in Jamaica, with four sheets of copper, 14 hundredweight of nails, spelter solder, six small coppersmith's hammers and six large of same, and one pair of bellows, suggesting that Vassal had plans to set up a coppersmith works, but no further details are known. Order for Florentius Vassal, 10 Oct. 1775, Forbes papers, A727.1443.
35 Accounts current, Mesopotamia, Clarendon deposit, b. 37.
36 Between 1751 and 1775, Mesopotamia sold used copper to the value of £600, of which copper to the value of £142 was sold in the island. Mesopotamia estate copper and pewter account, 1751–75, Clarendon deposit, b. 37.
37 According to Long, there were 690 sugar plantations in Jamaica in the early 1770s and, as the large island produced half of Britain's sugar imports, it is here assumed that there were as many in the rest of the British Caribbean. Long, History of Jamaica, I, p. 494.
38 Numbers of distilleries in North America are given in McCusker, ‘Business of distilling’, p. 217.
39 Forbes papers, A727.1507.
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43 Hamilton, English brass and copper industries, p. 323; D. B. Barton, A history of copper mining in Cornwall and Devon (Truro, 1961), pp. 28, 33–4.
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49 Inventory, 10 Apr. 1775, Forbes papers, A 727.1475.
50 Accounts of wages, June–Dec. 1773, Forbes papers, A727.1438.
51 Order book of William Forbes, Feb. 1773–June 1775, Forbes papers, A 727.1442; Order book of William Forbes, 11 Aug. 1775–6 Mar. 1778, Forbes papers, A727.1443.
52 Barham to Forbes, 9 Sept. 1775, Forbes papers, A 727.1471. The monster was expected to weigh between 28 and 34 hundredweight (1.4–1.7 tons): Forbes to Barham, 15 Sept. 1775, Forbes papers, A727.25.
53 On the advantages of large stills, see Edwards, Bryan, The history, civil and commercial, of the British West Indies (5 vols., 5th edn, London, 1815), II, pp. 276–7Google Scholar. See also Ligon, History, pp. 85–7; William Belgrove, Treatise upon husbandry.
54 Planters repeatedly emphasized the importance of thin copper. In 1774, Florentius Vassal ordered a 400-gallon copper which was to be as ‘thin as possible and well and smoothly polished’: Orders received by George and William Forbes, 5 Jan.–27 Dec. 1774, Forbes papers, A727.1455. Barham reported that the London coppersmiths were falling short of former standards when vessels were ‘not more than two thirds of the thickness of the present sort and consequently of better metal workmanship’. Barham to Forbes, 9 Sept. 1775, Forbes papers, A727.1471.
55 Forbes to Barham, 11 and 15 Sept. 1775, Forbes papers, A727.25.
56 James Somerville to Neil Malcolm, 16 Dec. 1775, Forbes papers, A727.26; ‘An essay on the management of rum distilling’, Thistlewood papers, box 12, folder 88, p. 33.
57 Forbes to Barham, 15 Sept. 1775, Forbes papers, A727.25.
58 According to Campbell, London tradesman, pp. 180–1, ‘smiths of all kinds would be better workmen if they understood drawing so much as to plan their works. The use of it is easily observed from this circumstance; speak but of any piece of work that is to be done in a particular manner to the meanest journeyman of any trade he immediately pulls out a bit of chalk and scrawls out what he fancies to be your meaning. This shows that all of them would find use for it if they were taught the principles of this art.’
59 The company was set up by the Coster family in the early eighteenth century and managed from 1739 by John Percival, who gave his name to it. On his death in 1764, the senior partner assumed management and it became John Freeman and Company. On his travels in 1755, Angerstein visited Percival's copper forge at Publowe and noted that ‘copper plates for large distillation vessels are forged here and sold for 15d per pound and some for 18d’: Torsten and Peter Berg, eds., R. R. Angerstein's illustrated travel diary (London, 2001), pp. 136–7.
60 George Dodds, British manufactures (London, 1845), p. 125; Campbell, London tradesman, p. 264; Forbes papers, A727.30, 1438, 1501, 1511, 1531, 1588.
61 Cooper, Complete distiller.
62 Forbes to Thomas Allen, 3 June 1776, Forbes papers, A727.31.
63 Forbes, 26 Apr. 1776, Forbes papers, A727.31.
64 Accounts of wages, June–Dec. 1773, Forbes papers, A727.1438. Forbes directed his brother on how to divide the work in Jan. 1776. J. Stanley was working on Mr Cruickshank's 5-foot still; P. Hanley was employed on the body of another 5-foot still, and Peter Dean on the head. John Gilbert was working on two sets of apparatus for rendering salt water fresh; John Jones was to collect bar copper from George Pengree at Snow Hill, from which he was to make nails. William Forbes to Robert Forbes, 5 Jan. 1776, Forbes papers, A727.30. According to Campbell, London tradesman, p. 180, ‘A journeyman earns … in most … branches of the smith trade, in proportion to his reputation in the trade, the prices being from fourteen shillings to a guinea a week.’
65 Indenture, 16 May 1771, Guildhall Library, MS 12/080, fo. 64.
66 Barham to Forbes, 9 July and 6 Aug. 1776, Forbes papers, A727.43.1, 2.
67 Accounts of wages, June–Dec. 1773, Forbes papers, A727.1438.
68 Forbes to Barham, 27 Oct., 7 Nov., and 17 Nov. 1775, Forbes papers, A727.25.
69 On problems caused by poor packing, see Peter Nouaille to Forbes, 12 Apr. 1776, Forbes papers, A727.33; on river transfers, see William Forbes to Robert Forbes, 5 Jan. 1776, Forbes papers, A727.30.
70 Barham to Forbes, 15 Nov. 1775, Forbes papers, A727.26; Dunn, Two plantations, p. 8.
71 Messrs Johnson and Purs to Mr Brymer, 25 Oct. 1779, Quebec, Forbes papers, A727.76.
72 After becoming a major naval contractor during the imperial war of 1775–83, Forbes was able to purchase Callendar House in Stirlingshire in 1783 at a cost of £100,000, and went on to join the landed gentry. John Abercrombie to William Forbes, 23 Aug. 1783, Forbes papers, A727.118.36; Eric Williams, Capitalism and slavery (New York, NY, 1944).
73 Mintz, Sweetness and power, p. 40; Broadberry, S., Campbell, B. M. S., Klein, A., Overton, M., and van Leeuwen, B., British economic growth, 1270–1870 (Cambridge, 2015)Google Scholar.
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