Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-r5fsc Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-22T10:28:53.313Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Antecedents of the Burma Road: British Plans for a Burma-China Railway in the Nineteenth Century

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  24 August 2009

Get access

Extract

Among the most obvious and durable monuments to the colonial age in Asia are the great engineering projects which have permanently transformed the physical and economic geography of the continent. Many of these have an interesting history of their own, both in the political and commercial history of the country building them and on the level of international politics. This is true not only for such successfully completed projects as the Suez Canal or the Trans-Siberian Railway, but also for great schemes which were never realized. In Southeast Asia the long-discussed Kra Canal is the most famous instance of the latter, but it is not unique. Throughout most of the second half of the Nineteenth Century the British Government and especially the British business community dallied with the idea of a rail link between the Bay of Bengal and the interior provinces of China. Those familiar with the building of the Burma Road will understand the enormous engineering problems involved in such a plan. But for most of the Nineteenth Century geographic knowledge of Southeast Asia was extremely vague and the lure of a several thousand mile shortcut to the perennially fascinating markets of China exerted a strong pull on the imagination of a commercial nation. Ultimately, international political complications and sound economic logic killed ven the idea of such a railway. But the light it throws on government — business relations within the British Empire and on imperial rivalries in Southeast Asia makes the story of the first Burma Road, the one that was never built, well worth the telling.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The National University of Singapore 1962

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

1. Dalrymple, Alexander, Oriental Repertory, London, 17911793.Google Scholar

2. Hall, D. G. E., Early English Intercourse with Burma, London, Longmans, Green and Co., 1928, Appendix II, pp. 247249.Google Scholar Hall finds no contemporary references to such a factory, the existence of which he considers highly improbable in the face of Portuguese control of the mouth of the Irrawaddy at that time.

3. Ibid., pp. 120–121.

4. The best of these may be found in: Symes, Michael, An Account of an Embassy to the Kingdom of Ava, London, 1800Google Scholar; Cox, Hiram, Journal of a Residence in the Burman Empire, London, 1821Google Scholar; Francklin, Major William, Tracts, Political, Geographical and Commercial, on the Dominion of Ava, London, 1811.Google Scholar

5. Grawfurd, John, Journal of an Embassy … to the Court of Ava in the Year 1827, London, 1829, p. 193.Google Scholar

6. Great Britain, House of Commons, Sessional Papers, 18681869Google Scholar (hereafter referred to as S.P.), “Papers Relating to the Route of Captain W. C. McLeod…” Vol. 46, p. 623.Google Scholar

7. S.P., 1864, “Burma Commercial Treaty of 1862…,” Vol. 42, p. 390.Google Scholar

8. Sprye's early correspondence with the Foreign Office appeared in a lengthy pamphlet of his, The British and China Railway, London, 1858.Google Scholar

9. Ibid., p. 23.

10. Ibid., p. 24.

11. See especially The Times, London, 10 6, 1860.Google Scholar

12. S.P., 1864, “Memorials, etc., on the Subject of Opening Up a Direct Commercewith the West of China from the Port of Rangoon,” pp. 395396.Google Scholar

13. All these memorials may be found in S.P., 1864, Vol. 63, pp. 393–415 and S.P., 1867–68, vol. 51, pp. 687–744.

14. The Times, London, 10 6, 1860.Google Scholar

15. S.P., 1864, “Memorials, etc., on the Subject of Opening up a Direct Commerce with the West of China from the Port of Rangoon,” Vol. 63, p. 400.Google Scholar

16. The classic exposition of this conflict is Pelcovits, Nathan, Old China Hands and the Foreign Office, New York, 1946.Google Scholar

17. S.P., 1867–68, “Despatch … Relative to the Proposed Construction of a Commercial Way from Rangoon to Kianghung…,” Vol. 51, p. 764.Google Scholar

18. S.P., 1867, “Rangoon and Western China,” Vol. 50, pp. 760768.Google Scholar

19. S.P., 1867–68, “Copies of the Survey Report…and of all Correspondence on the Subject…,” Vol. 41, p. 733.Google Scholar

20. There are three standard accounts by various members of the expedition. The official report is in S.P., 1871, “Report by Major Sladen on the Bhamo Route,” Vol. 51, pp. 433596.Google Scholar Other accounts are Bowers, Alexander, Bhamo Expedition: A Report on the Practicability of Re-Opening the Trade Route Between Burma and Western China, Rangoon, 1869Google Scholar; and Anderson, John, Mandalay to Momein, London, 1876.Google Scholar

21. S.P., 1877, “Despatches and Letters Relating to the Trade Between East India and Western China,” Vol. 63, p. 752.Google Scholar

22. The correspondence of this rather interesting illustration of the de facto policy-making authority of the Calcutta government may be found in S.P., 1876, “Papers Connected with the Development of Trade Between British Burma and Western China…,” Vol. 56, pp. 657690passim.Google Scholar

23. Ibid., pp. 687–688.

24. Besides the numerous official reports in the Parliamentary Papers for the Years 1876 and 1877, there is an informative personal account by the leader of the expedition. Browne, Colonel Horace, “The Yunnan Expedition of 1875 and the Chefoo Convention,” Asiatic Quarterly Review, Vols. 2124, 19061908.Google Scholar See also Anderson, 's Mandalay to Momein.Google Scholar

25. The best general discussion of the Margary Affair is Wang, Shen-tsu, The Margary Affair, London, 1940.Google Scholar

26. Text in Mayers, William F., Treaties' Between the Empire of China and Foreign Powers, 5th ed., Shanghai, 1906, pp. 4448.Google Scholar

27. S.P., 1877, “Report by Mr. Davenport on the trading capabilities of the Country Transversed by the Yunnan Mission,” Vol. 84, pp. 205241Google Scholar; and S.P., 1878, “Report by Mr. Baber on the Route Between Tali-fu and Momein,” Vol. 75, pp. 713756.Google Scholar

28. For the bad effect this episode produced on opinion in England see The Economist, 10 16, 1875, p. 1221.Google Scholar

29. There is a detailed account of this journey in Colquhoun, 's book, Across Chryse, London, 1883, 2 Vols.Google Scholar

30. Some examples are The Times, 03 11, 1885Google Scholar; Manchester Guardian, 12 13, 1882Google Scholar and April 22, 1885; Glasgow Herald, 05 16, 1883Google Scholar; Quarterly Review, Vol. 156 (1883), pp. 492530Google Scholar; “Our New Eastern Province,” Blackwood's Vol. 139, 03, 1886, pp. 559686.Google Scholar

31. This is obvious from the official British papers on the subject. S.P., 1886, “Further Correspondence Relating to Burmah,” Vol. 50, pp. 559686.Google Scholar

32. S.P., 1886, “Correspondence Relating to Burma Since the Accession of King Thebaw,” Vol. 50, pp. 505507.Google Scholar

33. Quoted in Hallett, Holt S., A Thousand Miles on an Elephant, London, 1889, p. 422.Google Scholar

34. Hosie, Alexander, Three Years in Western China, London, 1887.Google Scholar

35. The Economist, 05 5, 1888, p. 563.Google Scholar

36. Little, A. J., Through the Yangtze Gorges, London, 1887.Google Scholar

37. There is a stimulating discussion of the Franco-Russian collaboration against Great Britain in the Far East during this period in Langer, William F., The Franco-Russian Alliance, cambridge, 1929, pp. 332349.Google Scholar See also Walsh, Warren B., European Rivalries in Southwestern China, 1885–1894, unpublished Dottoral dissertation, Harvard, 1935.Google Scholar

38. Resolutions from various Chambers of Commerce are in S.P., 1894, “Correspondence Respecting Affairs in Siam,” Vol. 96, pp. 589, 606610, and 621622.Google Scholar

39. There are two useful unpublished doctoral dissertations dealing with this subject. Walsh, , “European Rivalries in Southwestern China,”Google Scholar and LaFuze, Leigh ton, “Great Britain, France, and the Siam Question: 1885–1904,” University of Illinois, 1935.Google Scholar

40. S.P., 1894, “Convention Between Great Britain and China…” Vol. 96, pp. 8999.Google Scholar

41. S.P., 1898, “Agreement Between Great Britain and China Modifying the Convention of 1st March, 1894, Relative to Burmah and Tibet,” Vol. 105, pp. 129138.Google Scholar

42. The best account of these surveys is by the chief engineer, Davies, Major H. R., Yunnan the Link Between India and the Yangtze, Cambridge, 1909.Google Scholar

43. Associated Chambers of Commerce, Annual Reports, 1899, pp. 6–8, and China Association, Annual Reports, 18981899, p. 27.Google Scholar

44. Associated Chambers of Commerce, Annual Reports, 1899, pp. 78Google Scholar, and 1900, p. 7. Hansard, 4th series, Vol. 60, p. 623, June 30, 1898.

45. S.P., 1900, “Correspondence Respecting the Affairs of China,” Vol. 105, p. 336.Google Scholar

46. Earl of Ronaldshay, The Life of Lord Curzon, London, 1928, p. 202Google Scholar

47. China, Maritime Customs, Decennial Reports, 1892–1901 and 19021911.Google Scholar

48. Ibid.

49. Fraser, J. F., “British Trade with Western China,” Contemporary Review, Vol. 73 (02 1898), pp. 235240Google Scholar; Nisbet, John, “Railways in Burma and their Proposed Extension Across Yunnan,” Journal of the Society of the Arts, Vol. 47 (01 27, 1899)Google Scholar; The Times, 12 8, 1898Google Scholar; Manchester Guardian, Sept. 15 and 10 6, 1899.Google Scholar

50. S.P., 1901, Lords, , “Consular Reports,” Vol. 38, p. 9.Google Scholar

51. Ainscough, Thomas, Notes From a Frontier, Shanghai, 1915, p. 83.Google Scholar

52. S.P., Lords, 1906, “Consular Reports,” Vol. 56, pp. 408409Google Scholar; China, Maritime Customs, Decennial Reports, 19021911, p. 309.Google Scholar

53. Hansard, 4th Series, Vol. 21, p. 840, February 13, 1911.

54. Following conclusion of the Sino-Burmese boundary treaty in October, 1960 proposals for opening overland communications were once again in the news. The Nation, Rangoon, October 20, 1960, p 1.