"In the mid-seventeenth century the Caribbean is where. Nobody settled in the West Indies in order to read the bible unmolested. This was not Massachusetts. No, you braved the fevers and the swamps for one reason alone. To make yourself very rich, very fast."
"Serious profits were already being raked in catering to Europe's little addictions: chocolate, coffee, and in England, of course, especially tea. But, as money sped-up, nothing compared as the stuff that made them more palatable-- sugar. Once seen as a luxurious drug it was now seen as a necessity--The Cash Crop of the Empire."
Barbados provided the perfect habitat to grow the sugarcane, tropical heat and saturating rain. So, the British settled in the West Indies transforming virgin forests into a patchwork quilt of Sugar Plantations.
But, Queen Sugar was a bitch.
Demanding absolute service, before she would spill her bounty. She took 14 months to get ripe (all 8 feet of her), but when she was ready, she was ready. Cut the cane at once. Get it to the crushers before it spoiled. Boil the juice, before it degraded. All very messy, and all very dangerous. By the side of the crushing mills hung a sharpened machete ready to sever the limbs of anyone that got caught in the rollers. What She needed was a combination of strength and lightning speed.
What She needed were human beasts of burden -- strong, quick, durable and uncomplaining. One commodity would be reaped by another... by slaves."--by Simon Schama
A History of Britain, episode 11: The Wrong Empire, chapter 2
Can you tell me where you got the photograph of the sugar cane field with mules pulling wagons? Thank you!
ReplyDeleteThe image of the mules (I thought they were donkeys, but I stand corrected), is from Wikimedia/Wikipedia here's the link(http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/7/7d/Sugar_cane_exhibit_at_Louisiana_State_Exhibit_Museum_IMG_3352.JPG). The crane in the background seemed a little too modern, for Simon Schama's discussion about 18th Century British slavery in the West Indies, but the use of pack animals seemed historically accurate for sugar cane harvesting. Besides, it was a such a gorgeous painting of sugar cane workers that I couldn't resist posting it albeit completely out of historical context.
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