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1. Plantations in the Caribbean countries that received indentured Indian immigrants
2. New Perspectives on Indentured Labour
List of Plantations by country that received indentured East
Indians
(Jahaji's) between 1838-1917
The list is incomplete for each country. Other islands/countries that received Jahaji's were: Nevis, St.Kitts, St.Croix, Suriname, French Guyana.
GRENADA
1 Belmont
2 Bocage
3 Beausejour
4 Calivigny
5 Carriere
6 Chambord
7 Clarks Court
8 Conference
9 Crochu
10 Diamond
11 Duquesne
12 Gouyave
13 Grand Bacolet
14 Grenville
15 Hope
16 La Fortune
17 Madeys
18 Marli
19 Morne Fendue
20 Mount Alexander
21 Mount Reuil
22 Mount Rose
23 Mount William
24 Paradise
25 Piedmont
26 Plain
27 River Sallee
28 Samaritan
29 Simon
30 Snell Hall
31 Telescope
32 Thuilliries
33 Upper Latante
34 Vale
35 Woodford
GUYANA
1 Albion
2 Adelphi
3 Amity Hall
4 Anna Regina
5 Bagotville
6 Bath
7 Belle Vue
8 Blairmont
9 Cane Grove
10 Cornelia Ida
11 Cotton Tree
12 Cove and John
13 De Kinderen
14 Devonshire Castle
15 Diamond
16 Enmore
17 Everton
18 Farm
19 Friends
20 Friendship
21 Golden Fleece
22 Good Intent
23 Great Diamond
24 Hampton Court
25 Herstelling
26 Highbury
27 Hope
28 Houston
29 Johanna Cecilia
30 La Bonne Intention
31 La Bonne Mere
32 Leonora
33 Lochaber
34 L'Union
35 Lusignan
36 Mara
37 Ma Retrait
38 Marionville
39 Melville
40 Mon Repos
41 Montrose
42 Nismes
43 Non-Pareil
44 Ogle
45 Peter's Hall
46 Philadelphia
47 Port Mourant
48 Providence
49 Rose Hall
50 Ruimveldt
51 Schoon Ord
52 Sisters Village
53 Skeldon
54 Springlands
55 Stanleytown
56 Success
57 Taymouth Manor
58 Tuschen
59 Uitvlugt
60 Vergenogen
61 Versailles
62 Vreed-en-Hoop
63 Vreed-en-Stein
64 Vriesland
65 Vryheid's Lust
66 Wales
67 Waterloo
68 Whim
69 Windsor Forest
70 Zeelugt
JAMAICA
1 Agualta Vale
2 Albion
3 Amity Hall
4 Belleisle
5 Belmont
6 Belvedere
7 Black Heath
8 Blue Castle
9 Bog
10 Bollards Valley
11 Brimmer Hall
12 Burlington
13 Bushy Park
14 Cape Clear
15 Catherine Hall
16 Charlottenburg
17 Chesterfield
18 Chovey
19 Cinamon Hall
20 Clermont
21 Clonmel
22 Coleraine
23 Dankes
24 Denbigh
25 Duckenfield
26 Esher
27 Fellowship
28 Fontabelle
29 Fort George
30 Fort Stewart
31 Fontier
32 Friendship
33 Frome
34 George's Plain
35 Gibraltar
36 Garredu
37 Good Hope
38 Golden Grove
39 Golden Vale
40 Grays Inn
41 Green Castle
42 Halcot Farm
43 Halse Hall
44 Harkers Hall
45 Hillside
46 Holland
47 Hopewell
48 Hordley
49 Ipswich
50 Iter Boreale
51 Koningsburg
52 Lady Hole
53 Latium
54 Llanrumney
55 Low Layton
56 Lower Fort Stewart
57 Lyssons
58 Mamee Gully
59 Masemure
60 Mid Layton
61 Mocho
62 Montrose
63 Monymusk
64 Morelands
65 Myersfield
66 New Retrieve
67 Newry
68 Noningsburg
69 Nonsuch
70 Nutfield
71 Oberlin
72 Old Retrieve
73 Orange Hill
74 Osborne
75 Paradise
76 Phillipsfield
77 Platfield
78 Pool Island
79 Potosi
80 Providence
81 Quebec
82 Red Hassell
83 Retreat
84 Riversdale
85 Rose Hall
86 Rosend
87 Santoy
88 Seven Rivers
89 Shrewbury
90 Spring Gardens
91 Tom's Hope
92 Trinity
93 Unity Valley
94 Upper Fort Stewart
95 Wakefield
96 Water Valley
97 Wentworth
98 Whitney
99 Williamsfield
100 Windsor Castle
101 Worthy Park
GUADELOUPE
1 Beauport
2 Bois Debout
3 Grosse-Montagne Darbousier
4 La Joséphine
MARTINIQUE
1 Bellevue
2 Bijou
3 Cheneaux
4 Demare
5 Dupotiche
6 Fonds Préville
7 Grand'Rivière
8 Les Potiches
9 Macouba
10 Perpigna
ST. LUCIA
1 Anse-la-Raye
2 Balenbouche
3 Bellaires
4 Black Bay
5 Bois d'Orange
6 Crown Lands
7 Cul-de-Sac
8 Dennery
9 Entrepot
10 Esperance
11 Hope
12 La Caye
13 Mabouya
14 Marguis
15 Mount D'or
16 Pelute
17 Perle
18 Peru
19 Pointe Sable
20 Ressources
21 Retraite
22 Richfonde
23 Roseau
24 Soucis
25 Sourfriere
26 Troumasse
27 Vieux Fort
28 Beauchamps
ST. VINCENT
1 Adelphi
2 Argyle
3 Arnos Vale
4 Belair (Belleair)
5 Bellevue
6 Calder
7 Cane Grove
8 Cane Hall
9 Carapan
10 Colonarie
11 Glen
12 Grand Sable
13 Langley Park
14 Lot 14
15 Montrose
16 Mt. Agontie
17 Mt. Greenan
18 Mt. Pleasant
19 Mt Bentink
20 Mt. Wynne
21 Orange Hill
22 Pembroke
23 Peters Hope
24 Questelles
25 Rabacca
26 Richmond
27 Rivulet
28 Rose Bank
29 Rutland Vale
30 Sans Souci
31 Tourama
32 Union
33 Wallilabou
34 Yambou Vale
TRINIDAD
1 Adela
2 Arandale
3 Aranguez
4 Aripero
5 Bagatelle
6 Barataria
7 Beaulieu
8 Beausejour
9 Bel Air
10 Belle View
11 Ben Laomond
12 Bien Venue
13 Birken Hil
14 Bon Accord
15 Bon Air
16 Bonasse
17 Bonne Aventure
18 Brechin Castle
19 Bronte
20 Broomage
21 Brothers
22 Buen Intento
23 Buenos Ayres
24 Camden
25 Canaan
26 Cane Farm
27 Carmelita
28 Caracas
29 Carolina
30 Caroni
31 Cascade
32 Champ Elysees
33 Cedar Grove
34 Cedar Hill
35 Columbia
36 Concord
37 Concordia
38 Constance
39 Corinth
40 Coryal
41 Craignish
42 Cupar Grange
43 Curepe
44 Diamond
45 Dinsley
46 Dumfries
47 Edinburgh
48 El Dorado
49 El Reposo
50 El Rosario
51 El Socorro
52 Endeavor
53 Enterprise
54 Esmeralda
55 Esperance
56 Esperanza
57 Exchange
58 Fairfield
59 Felicity
60 Florissante
61 Forres Park
62 Frederick
63 Friendship
64 Fullerton
65 Garden
66 Garth
67 Glenroy
68 Golconda
69 Golden Grove
70 Green Hill
71 Guaracara
72 Harmony Hill
73 Harris Plain
74 Henry
75 Hermitage
76 Hindustan
77 Hope
78 Industry
79 Inverness
80 Jordan Hill
81 La Fortune
82 La Gloria
83 La Horquetta
84 La Pastora
85 La Resource
86 La Retraite
87 La Romaine
88 Las Almas
89 Laurel Hill
90 La Vega
91 Laventille
92 Les Efforts
93 Los Angeles
94 Lothians
95 Macoya
96 Malgretoute
97 Marabella
98 Maracaas Bay
99 Mararaval
100 Mausica
101 McBean
102 McLeon Plain
103 Milton
104 Moka
105 Mon Desir
106 Mon Jaloux
107 Mon Plaisir
108 Mon Repos
109 Montrose
110 Mt. Pleasant
111 Mt. Stewart
112 Nelson
113 Ne Plus Ultra
114 New Grant
115 New Hope
116 Non Pariel
117 Orange Grove
118 Oropouche
119 Otaheite
120 Plamiste
121 Palmyra
122 Papourie
123 Paradise
124 Patna
125 Perseverance
126 Petersfield
127 Petite Morne
128 Phillipine
129 Phoenix Park
130 Picton
131 Plain Palaise
132 Plaissance
133 Poole Syndicate
134 Providence
135 Reform
136 Retrench
137 Rio Clara
138 River
139 Rivulet
140 Rostant
141 San Antonia
142 San Felipe
143 San Gill
144 San Francisco
145 San Jose
146 Santa Clara
147 Seville
148 Siparia
149 Spring
150 St. Anns
151 St. Augustine
152 St. Charles
153 St. Claire
154 St. Helena
155 St. Johns
156 St. Madeleine
157 St. Marie
158 Stretham Lodge
159 Suzannah
160 Terre Promise
161 Toruba
162 Tortuga
163 Trafalgar
164 Trois Amis
165 Union
166 Union Hall
167 Valsayn
168 Verdant Vale
169 Victoria
170 Villa Franca
171 Vistabella
172 Washington
173 Waterloo
174 Wellington
175 Williamsville
176 Woodbrook
177 Woodford Dale
178 Woodford Lodge
179 Woodlands
(Data from Richard Cheddie)
New perspectives on indentured labour
‘Protector of Immigrants’ developed
in Trinidad
Published:
Sunday, March 4, 2012
Peter Hanoomansingh
Indentured-labourers-from-Mauritius.
Peter Hanoomansingh is a journalist
employed with Guardian Media Ltd. At a conference at the University of
Mauritius on December 5-7 2011, Hanoomansingh delivered an academic paper which
compared the system of indentureship imposed in Trinidad to that used in
Mauritius at a in that Indian Ocean country. Following is an excerpt of
the paper.
In 1867, highly repressive labour
legislation was installed in Mauritius aimed specifically at the free Indian
population in the colony. Described as “a landmark in labour repression under
British colonialism”, the legislation was intended to deal with what was termed
the vagrancy problem in the sugar-dominated colony but gave license to the
colonial state to invade and arrest ‘time-expired’ Indians in their homes or on
the streets and impound them at vagrant depots which dotted the island. The
contrast with what was taking place at virtually the same juncture in Trinidad
is instructive: there, the colonial government installed and prosecuted a range
of moral order offences but there were no new legislative or policing
initiatives for regulating the movement of free labourers. The most noteworthy
instance of colonial repression in Trinidad during this period was in the
singular event of the so-called Hosay massacre where police were deployed to
forcefully stop mass processions from entering the towns. This was an instance
in the exercise of exemplary force, unlike the continuous policing required in
a regime of containment as seen in Mauritius. In Trinidad ‘free populations’
became a subject of moralising discourses which sought to identify the inner
disposition of subject populations. In this paper I will examine the
contrasting discursive, institutional and spatial contexts which informed the
different approaches to the “free Indians” in both colonies. Mauritius became
the first of the British colonies to identify India as a source of labour as
slavery came to an end in the early nineteenth century. Its role as pioneer in
the new traffic out of the subcontinent set it apart from the other colonies
that were soon to follow. For one thing, the proposal to import free labour
into the colony came from private hands and remained so for a few years before
the traffic was temporarily halted pending its closer regulation. Workers both
slave and free had been transported to Mauritius from India since the
eighteenth century and so it was perhaps one of the first options that G.C.
Arbuthnot considered in 1834 when he contracted 75 Dhangar men to work in
Mauritius for a period of five years on a sugar plantation. Other planters
quickly took the cue and in very short order, vessels were sailing to Port
Louis loaded with goods and labourers on deck. By the time the traffic was
temporarily suspended some 22,791 men had already been privately contracted to
the sugar plantations of Mauritius.
The sudden intensity of the “coolie
traffic” to Mauritius despite its temporary halting in the years 1838-1842
began an equally dramatic withdrawal and displacement of the ex-apprentices
from the plantations. This in itself held tragic consequences with a striking
decline in numbers from over 60,000 at emancipation to an estimated 48,330 by
1853. Mauritius “overcompensated in labour importation” which resulted in the
complete displacement of ex-apprentices from the estates so that as early as
1846 Indian immigrants comprised 85 per cent of all agricultural labourers and
96 per cent of workers in the island’s sugar industry. What thereafter was
absent in discourses on governance was any reference to the ex-apprentices or
creole population many of whom had begun since the early 1840s to migrate to
marginal districts. There rapidly emerges a radical spatial separation in
settlement patterns as Indian immigrants come to monopolize work on the
plantations. As these ex-apprentices became marginalised both socially and
spatially one finds little concern that regulation of one group may impact on
colonial relations with other groups. So that regulation and governance of
labour and crime become directed implicitly and explicitly at Indians and not
at a more general colonial subject. Planters continued to exert their influence
on the recruitment of labourers through the use of returnees and this created
the situation for aggressive competition for the services of Indian indentured
workers. An unexpected outcome of this was that by the 1850s a majority of
workers refused to sign contracts lasting more than one year. In the years
1860-64 less than 45 per cent of contractual workers re-engaged with the same
employer. The situation continued to be unstable into the late 1870s as short
term contracts accounted for more than 85 per cent of written agreements. This
volatility in the terms of labour was one factor that brought to the forefront
the question of the mobility of the Indians on the island and legislators
introduced law to focus entirely on the movement of this population away from
the plantations. This was manifest in the continued complaints from officials
and planters about vagrancy, desertion and illegal absence of Indians beginning
the late 1840s. It was also implicit in discourses on crime on the island and
in this we can see clearly how the displacement of concern from apprentice to
Indian took place in colonial discourse.
Thus the Report of the Procureur
General in 1851 noted that larceny was the most prevalent form of crime in the
colony, contributing to 4036 out of 6098 offences between the years 1841 and
1850. But the Procureur General would go on to point out that “the crimes and
other offences are relatively more frequent among the Indian laborers than the
other labouring classes”. So the policing and control over crime in Mauritius
became a question of how to manage a population that in short order had become
the largest group in the colony. But the fact of sheer numbers does not by
itself explain the pattern of crime in those years. The crimes committed were
those of a mobile and unsettled population that was largely outside the realm
of urban centres. In the 1850s for example a concern was registered with the
use of stramonium a plant, the derivatives of which could be used to
“stupefy its victims”. Stramonium appeared to symbolize the hidden, lurking
dangers produced in the minds of colonials by the presence of an unsettled and spatially
diffuse immigrant population. The problem of stramonium was interpreted as
derived from a deeper problem of vagrancy. Along with desertion, vagrancy
became identified as both the symptom and cause of undesirable behaviour
amongst the island’s Indian population. In turn, vagrancy was a feature of
innate tendencies of Indian labourers such as their “idle and unsettled habits”
and their “erratic character”. Vagrancy increased markedly in mid-century and
this coincided with the increase in numbers of time-expired Indians who had
begun to settle and establish themselves beyond the confines of the
plantations. Villages which made a visible appearance by the 1860s were also
considered harbingers of vagrants and other criminal elements by planters who
sought measures to force these independent elements back to field labour. This
prompted Mauritian administrators to consider significant institutional changes
in order to manage and control what was effectively the growing numbers of Old
Immigrants Indians on the island. In mid-century the police force was
reorganised to include a corps of Indian constables who it was believed, would
understand the “peculiarities of the Indian mind” and thus be in a better
position to detect vagrants and deserters. Police stations were also erected in
the country districts, closer in proximity to where purported vagrants
wandered. In 1864, prison sentences for deserters were lengthened while vagrant
depots were established for the detention and separation of persons not claimed
by a planter.
The most repressive action taken by
Mauritian legislators was the notorious Ordinance 31 of 1867 the workings of
which came under scrutiny in 1872. Ordinance 31 extended and deepened the
repressive practices of the 1850s by installing a new pass system which
required time-expired immigrants to obtain “tickets of discharge” as proof of
having completed the five year industrial residence. These tickets would not be
issued unless immigrants were deemed to have a recognized place of residence as
well as bona fide occupations. The Ordinance also empowered police with the
right to detain any Indian found outside his or her district of residence as
well as the power of entry into their huts and camps.
Ordinance 31 of 1867 was an attempt
to place ‘old immigrants’ under the same regime of surveillance and discipline
as their indentured counterparts on the plantations. During the expansion of
the sugar industry in the 1850s there were more than 19,000 Indian males who
had made their living as artisans or traders while some 73,000 were still
indentured on the estates. However, as another crisis hit the sugar industry
planters sought to reverse the pattern of the 1850s when the continuous
recruitment of ‘new immigrant’ bands was employed to check the demands for
higher wages from ‘old immigrants’. North-Coombs argues that these ‘old
immigrants’ were allowed to exist as a reserve army during the period of
expansion. Once crisis hit the industry however, the bonded labour on the
estates came to be viewed as liability and the only option perceived by
planters was to force the reserve army as it were back to the plantations. By
the 1880s the complaints about vagrancy diminish then being displaced by
concerns over “idleness”. This was a charge which Allen concludes suggested a
more settled agricultural workforce. As we will see with Trinidad, “idleness”
was a more persistent complaint particularly over the behaviour of free
Indians.
Atlantic space
There had been little notice in
England of the newly emerging traffic in Indian indentured labour to Mauritius
apart from officials at the Colonial Office. Cumpston observes that the
proximity of Mauritius to India was one reason behind the lack of real opposition
in England to the traffic. The early traffic of contracted Indian labour was
therefore subject to minimal imperial intervention. It was however another
matter when Indians were to be transported to the West Indies. Then the middle
passage continued to haunt the discourse on labour of the “coloured races” on
sugar plantations. I’ve termed it an “Atlantic space” to signal a shift in the
terms of discourse on labour and migration of coloured races. For, when it came
to consideration on the transport of Indian workers to the West Indies, a
number of other issues came to the fore which were all premised on the distance
and separation that workers would have to endure. The separation suggested a
degree of permanence that hinted at a condition of enslavement and the proposed
duration of contracts further added to this fear among humanitarians and
abolitionists some who then held key positions at the Colonial Office. The
proposal for indentured workers from India then entered an Atlantic discourse
in which the vindication of emancipation hovered over the terms and conditions
by which a new system of immigrant labour would be inserted in the West Indies.
In real terms it meant that the migration of Indian workers across the Atlantic
became subject to imperial policy almost from the outset. The reports of the
fate of “Gladstone’s coolies” in British Guiana impelled the Colonial Office to
play an active role in the traffic.
However, what is also to be noted is
that unlike the Mauritian experience where India rapidly became the only source
of immigrant workers, there was an equally significant flow of labour from
neighbouring islands into Trinidad. The experience with each group informed how
the Colonial Office regulated and treated with new entrants. It was in assuming
its paternal role as protector of ex-slaves migrating from other West Indian
islands that the Colonial Office introduced the Order in Council of 1838 which
required that contracts be concluded in the receiving colony and additionally,
that these contracts were to be limited to a single year’s duration. This
legislation had the effect of strongly discouraging planters from importing
labour privately since workers would have been under no obligation to work for
these employers once they had landed in the colony. Ultimately what this spelt
for West Indian colonies was that any immigration from distant lands would have
to be financed from public funds but that meant that planters themselves would
have less direct involvement in the recruitment of labour in Trinidad than they
did in Mauritius. In Trinidad government had discretionary power to allot or
withhold labour to any estate based on criteria premised on colonial policy.
This of course placed considerable power in the hands of colonial authorities in
particular, the Surgeon General and Protector of Immigrants. These two
officials were accorded roles as legislators since they were both members of
the Executive Council. The authority granted medicine in Trinidad is unrivalled
in any of the colonies I have studied; neither was the Protector of Immigrants
so patently paternalistic as it was in Trinidad.
The role of Protector of Immigrants
arguably was developed first in Trinidad. It was in that “isle of experimente”
that was first proposed the Protector of Slaves in 1812. In contrast, the
attempts to impose similar official positions in Mauritius were met with near
violent resistance by colonial elites and planters in that island. Trinidad
however could be regarded as unique in terms of how paternalism was constituted
through discourse and administrative structure. The Protector was an appointed
ex officio in the Legislative Council and was required to submit an annual
report on the condition of the immigrants to the Secretary of State for the
Colonies. He also advised on the annual requirements of indentured labourers
for the colony and had the power to deny allotments to estates contravening
certain regulations. He had the right of entry to all plantations which
employed indentured workers and thereby make inspections of estate hospitals,
the homes and surroundings of immigrants. Medical supervision also developed
into a critical function in the system of indentureship providing a mechanism
for the imperial intervention between employer and labourer. Ordinance 13 of
1870 restricted the allotment of indentured immigrants only to those estates
which had provisions for hospital accommodation. Government Medical Officers
were required to pay regular visits to the estate hospitals. Governor Gordon
who presided in both colonies in sequential terms noted that whilst it was
unlawful in Trinidad to indenture an immigrant to an estate without a proper
hospital, in Mauritius there was no such provision. The institutional position
accorded paternalist figures in Trinidad widened the terms of discourse on
immigrant workers. Paternal discourses were routinized means of legitimizing
indentureship: in so doing what was needed to be shown was not only the success
of the new system of labour for the plantations but some demonstration that
Indians had themselves been improved in their moral disposition , cultural
habits and state of mind.
http://guardian.co.tt/lifestyle/2012-03-03/new-perspectives-indentured-labour
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