Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 February 2017
A variety of plants were distributed across Jamaica from the island's botanical gardens during the second half of the nineteenth century. This work became increasingly important over the period dating from 1846 to the end of the century when succeeding superintendents (subsequently directors) eagerly promoted the scheme. Yet, each head differed in their reasons to send out this ‘useful’ flora. In this article I consider the three men in charge of the public gardens from 1846 to 1886 and the context in which they decided that local plant distribution was important to pursue. Diversification of economic crops occurred, despite the plantocracy arguing that sugar and a few other plantation plants were the be all and end all of the Jamaican agricultural economy. By contextualising this activity we can tentatively start to unpick the role of minor officials in colonial life and the development of an aim to enrol the island's petty agriculturalist in particular economies calibrated around ideas of free trade, class and ‘race’.
1. National Library of Jamaica, MS12 (hereafter MS12), 6th October 1849; Annual Report (AR) of the Botanical Department of Jamaica 1870 (hereafter AR 1870); AR 1871. For annual reports, sift through: Royal Botanic Gardens Kew Archive (hereafter RBGK) MR 662, annual reports 1868–12; MR 671 Jamaica: annual reports (1891–9); Natural History Museum Archives (hereafter NHM) S2375, ‘Annual Report Botanical Gardens 1880–1907’.
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14. Bryan, The Jamaican People, p. 9; C. Post, ‘Plantation slavery and economic development in the Antebellum Southern United States’, Journal of Agrarian Change, 3:3 (2003), 289–332.
15. Sir Anthony Musgrave, ‘Jamaica: Now and Fifteen Years Since’, paper read before the Royal Colonial Institute, 20th April 1880; National Library of Jamaica, Jamaica Pamphlets, No. 9. p. 25, quoted in Bryan, The Jamaican People, p. 6.
16. Holt for one, suggests this support for a diverse agricultural economy only occurred following the Royal Commission of 1897. Storey recognises the role of the Botanical Department in Jamaica whilst focusing on broader issues of West Indian sugar production, nonetheless he does not fully engage with the earlier work of the botanical gardens. Furthermore, he does not appear to recognise diverse cultivation practices prior to 1897 and the entanglements and tensions between ‘imperial agriculture’ and the Botanical Department. Holt, The Problem of Freedom, p. 322; Storey, ‘Plants, Power and Development’, in Jasanoff, ed., States of Knowledge, pp. 109–30; Barker, D. and Spence, B., ‘Afro-Caribbean agriculture: a Jamaican maroon community in transition’, Geographical Journal, 154:2 (1988), 198–208 CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
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18. This phrase is the title of Morris's obituary in The Times: ‘Sir Daniel Morris: Botany in the Service of Empire’, The Times, 10th February 1933, p. 14.
19. Aside from some plants that arrived on the Providence and were distributed from Bath and East's Gardens and some in the early years of the nineteenth century when botanical garden chairman Henry Shirley supported the endeavour, see Powell, D., ‘The voyage of the plant nursery, H. M. S. Providence, 1791–1793’, Economic Botany, 31 (1977), 387–431 CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
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22. Holt, The Problem of Freedom, p. 318.
23. MS12, 6th January 1861; MS12, 24th November 1854.
24. MS12, 9th August 1859. See Alan Lester's work on how a single colonial figure can be read quite differently in various settings: A. Lester, ‘Personifying colonial governance: George Arthur and the transition from humanitarian to development discourse’, Annals of the Association of American Geographers, 102:6 (2011), 1468–88.
25. MS12, 5th August 1847.
26. AR 1856.
27. Ibid.
28. MS12, 25th July 1856. Wilson was certainly aware that to Jamaica's west lay the Yucatán peninsula famous above all for its fibre production and it is likely that he knew North Americans were also becoming involved in the trade. See: MS12, 25th May 1855; MS12, 22nd June 1855; MS12, 7th August 1855; MS12, 10th March 1856. ‘After 1840’, Lucile Brockway explains, ‘there were two sources of sisal, one wild in Florida and the Keys and one in the protected industry in Mexico.’ Brockway, Science and Colonial Expansion, p. 175.
29. MS12, 9th February 1860.
30. AR 1856.
31. Ibid.
32. See especially, MS12, 24th November 1854.
33. T. Carlyle, The Nigger Question (1849) in Drayton, Nature's Government, p. v.
34. See, for example, MS12, 24th November 1854; MS12, 9th August 1859.
35. Marshall, ‘Part I – Aspects of the development of the peasantry’, 30–46.
36. Beckford, G. L., ‘Caribbean peasantry in the confines of the plantation mode of production’, International Social Science Journal, 37:3 (1985), 401–14Google Scholar.
37. Bryan, The Jamaican People, pp. 9, 17, 131–6, 156.
38. AR 1856. Wilson realised that the sugar industry could not regain its former wealth, especially after the 1846 Sugar Act. His friends were planters, however, and consequently he was careful about expressing his views on diversification whilst searching for new economically viable crops for the colony.
39. MS12, 10th April 1855 – note that this was one year after the Act came fully into effect.
40. MS12, 7th October 1865.
41. See, for example, MS12, 7th May 1850; MS12, 24th June 1853.
42. See RBGK DC, Wilson to William Hooker, 21st April 1860, fols 389–90.
43. AR 1856.
44. Hall, Civilising Subjects, p. 440.
45. MS12, 7th June 1867.
46. Holt, The Problem of Freedom, p. 307.
47. Richardson, B. C., Igniting the Caribbean's Past: Fire in British West Indian History (Chapel Hill, NC, 2004), p. 40 Google Scholar.
48. Holt, The Problem of Freedom, pp. 336–7; see also, Watts, The West Indies, p. 510.
49. See W. T. Thiselton-Dyer, The Botanical Enterprise of the Empire, Foreign and Commonwealth Office Collection (1880), pp. 29–30.
50. Higman, A Concise History of the Caribbbean, p. 216.
51. Ibid.
52. RBGK DC, Thomson to J. Hooker, 20th May 1865, fol. 979. Cinchona trees were used to produce quinine ameliorate the effects of malaria, a large garden and plantation was set up on Jamaica to grow the trees and encourage others to try and create plantations of the plant on the island.
53. Thomson did not take over Bath Garden, but worked exclusively at Cinchona and Castleton Gardens.
54. As Morris wrote in 1883: ‘Seed packets and, in some cases, small fruit packets, have been forwarded, free by post, to numerous correspondents in the interior villages and settlements beyond the reach of sea and railway facilities; and for this valuable privilege the Department, no less than the public at large, is indebted to the Postmaster for Jamaica for the efficient aid offered in this respect.’ AR 1883, p. 2.
55. AR 1870.
56. Ibid.
57. Ibid.
58. Drayton, Nature's Government, pp. 243–5.
59. AR 1871.
60. Ibid.
61. AR 1875.
62. AR 1877.
63. RBGK Report, Jamaica R Comm. Bot Gard. & Dept, etc., 1861–1915, Sir Anthony Musgrave to Sir Hicks Beach (the Colonial Secretary), 20th July 1878, fol. 39, pp. 100–4.
64. McCracken, Gardens of Empire, p. 53.
65. RBGK DC, Morris to Hooker, 10th December 1879, pp. 706–8; AR 1879; AR 1880, pp. 11–13; Drayton, Nature's Government, pp. 246–7; McCracken, Gardens of Empire, pp. 64–8.
66. Drayton, Nature's Government, p. 240.
67. ‘Sir Daniel Morris: Botany in the Service of Empire’, The Times, 10th February 1933, p. 14.
68. Hall, Civilising Subjects, p. 368.
69. Ibid., pp. 369–70; Hall, C., ‘Going a-Trolloping: Imperial Man Travels the Empire’, in Midgley, C., ed., Gender and Imperialism (Manchester, 1998)Google Scholar, pp. 180–99; Morris unashamedly described ‘races’ that he came across and categorised groups of people for the purpose of providing ‘useful’ information for officials. See, for example, Morris, D., The Colony of British Honduras, its Resources and Prospects: With Particular Reference to its Indigenous Plants and Economic Productions (E. Stanford, 1883), pp. 117–19Google Scholar: http://mertzdigital.nybg.org/cdm/compoundobject/collection/p9016coll23/id/30362/rec/73 [last accessed 31st October 2016].
70. Holt, The Problem of Freedom, pp. 326–7.
71. Ibid., pp. 323.
72. The changes in Mill's feelings towards British colonies are traced in Bell, D., ‘John Stuart Mill on colonies’, Political Theory, 38:1 (2010), 34–64 CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
73. Steele, E. D., Irish Land and British Politics: Tenant-Right and Nationality, 1865–1870 (Cambridge, 1974), pp. 70–2Google Scholar, see more generally ch. 2 of the same book.
74. See George Boyce, D., ‘Gladstone and Ireland’, in Jagger, P. J., ed., Gladstone (London; New York, 1998), pp. 105–22Google Scholar.
75. Holt, The Problem of Freedom, ch. 9.
76. Ibid., p. 322.
77. Storey, ‘Plants, Power and Development’, in Jasanoff, ed., States of Knowledge, pp. 109–30; Drayton, Nature's Government.
78. Storey, ‘Plants, Power and Development’, in Jasanoff, ed., States of Knowledge, p. 128.
79. The Norman Commission captured a sense of white Jamaican culture in the second half of the nineteenth century, when they tellingly explained that ‘there was a tendency on the part of some witnesses to dwell a good deal on the depressed state of the Jamaica peasantry’. H. W. Norman, E. Grey and D. Barbour, Report of the West India Royal Commission, printed for Her Majesty's Stationery Office (1897), p. 61 (hereafter Norman, West India Royal Commission).
80. The report was 79 pages long and Morris's subsidiary work was 73 in length, Norman, West India Royal Commission.
81. Morris, D., Planting Enterprise in the West Indies: A Paper Read Before the Royal Colonial Institute 12th June 1883 (London, 1883)Google Scholar.
82. Drayton, Nature's Government, p. 260.
83. See AR 1879.
84. D. Morris, Cacao: How to Grow and How to Cure it, Foreign and Commonwealth Office Collection (1882), Appendix II, p. 44.
85. KA MR662, D. Morris, ‘Department of Public Gardens and Plantations, Jamaica’ (1880).
86. AR 1882, p. 2.
87. Bryan, The Jamaican People, p. 7.
88. D. Morris, Vegetable Resources of the West Indies: An Address Delivered before the London Chamber of Commerce, 27th March, 1888, Foreign and Commonwealth Office Collection (1888), p. 19 (hereafter Vegetable Resources).
89. Morris, Cacao: How to Grow and How to Cure it, p. iv.
90. Baptist missionaries also formed a cohort who in some ways also went against prevailing attitudes. This is a major thrust of Hall's Civilising Subjects, but see in particular p. 202 on post-emancipation attempts by the missionaries to ‘mobilise the new freeholders politically’. See also, Bryan, The Jamaican People, p. 6.
91. Morris, Cacao: How to Grow and How to Cure it, p. iv, emphasis in original.
92. Holt, The Problem of Freedom, p. 318.
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94. Dussart and Lester, Colonization and the Origins of Humanitarian Governance, p. 4.
95. Hall, ‘The Slave-Owner and the Settler’, in Carey and Lydon, eds, Indigenous Networks, pp. 35–6; Bryan, The Jamaican People, p. 145.
96. Marshall, ‘Part I – Aspects of the development of the peasantry’, 31.
97. ‘I am glad to be able to say’, Thomson remarked, ‘with regard to the present year, that the labor supply has abounded to such an extent that many hundreds of labourers who had come for work had to be turned away, although they had in numerous cases come from ten to twenty miles.’ AR 1875.
98. AR 1870.
99. AR 1875.
100. See Z. Laidlaw and A. Lester, Indigenous Communities and Settler Colonialism.
101. MS12, 7th June 1867.
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104. Morris, Vegetable Resources, p. 17.
105. Morris demonstrated particular resistance to ‘provision grounds’ because he believed that there was too much unnecessary destruction caused by fire in the clearing of land for these small vegetable plots. See Richardson, Igniting the Caribbean's Past, pp. 76–7.
106. Morris, Vegetable Resources, p. 15.
107. Ibid.; on Joseph Hooker's comments on ‘provision grounds’, see Morris, Planting Enterprise in the West Indies, p. 42.
108. T. Weis, ‘Restructuring and redundancy’, 463.
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