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The Imperialism of Free Trade: Lancashire, India, and the Cotton Supply Question, 1861-1865*

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  16 January 2014

Extract

It is now more than a decade since John Gallagher and Ronald Robinson first challenged the conventional interpretations of nineteenth-century imperial history and employed the term “The Imperialism of Free Trade” to describe the “ever-extending and intensifying development of overseas regions” — a term which characterizes British imperial policy in the middle decades of the last century. The general validity of this thesis has been illustrated by reference to British policies in India in this period. There was the extensive program of railway construction, financed by British capital at favorable rates of interest guaranteed by the Government of India. There was the manipulation of the Indian tariff in response to pressure from the Lancashire cotton manufacturers. There was the cotton improvement program, the object of which was to relieve Lancashire's dependence on the United States as the major source of its raw cotton. In this case, the desired object was not achieved, despite considerable effort and expenditure sustained over more than a decade. But the approach of civil war in America revived interest in India as an alternative source of supply, notwithstanding the many difficulties that stood in the way. Indian cotton was raised on small holdings as a secondary crop every third or fourth year; its quality was poor; climatic conditions were uncertain; demand was irregular; communications between the cotton-producing areas and the ports were bad; and trade was hampered by lack of a contract law and a bankruptcy act. The Lancashire cotton manufacturers demanded energetic action from the state in overcoming these difficulties.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © North American Conference of British Studies 1966

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Footnotes

*

I wish to express my thanks to the Canada Council for a grant which enabled me to carry out the research for this article in London and Manchester. P. H.

References

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8. I.O.Lib., Wood to Canning, 4 Mar. 1861, ibid., VI, 232.

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11. I.O.Lib., Secretary of State to Government of India, Despatch No. 20 (Revenue), 25 July 1861.

12. I.O.Lib., Wood to Sir George Clerk, 18 July 1861, Halifax Collection, India Office, Letter Books, VIII, 124. G. R. Haywood went to India in a dual capacity: as the agent of the Manchester Cotton Company, formed as a commercial venture in 1861 to purchase cotton in India and elsewhere; and as the secretary of the Cotton Supply Association, founded in 1857 to increase Lancashire's sources of raw cotton through various political, propaganda, and other activities. See Henderson, , Lancashire Cotton Famine, pp. 3638Google Scholar.

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18. I.O.Lib., Wood to Canning, 26 Nov. 1861, ibid., IX, 125.

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23. I.O.Lib., Wood to Sir William Denison (governor of Madras), 25 Oct. 1861, ibid., IX, 58.

24. Cotton Supply Reporter, 16 Dec. 1861.

25. Haywood was accompanied on his journey by Dr. G. F. Forbes, the superintendent of the government gin factory at Dharwar. His services were placed at Haywood's disposal by the Secretary of State.

26. I.O.Lib., Haywood to John Platt, 30 Nov. 1861, India Office, Revenue Dept., Home Correspondence, Letters Received, IV, No. 264.

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31. I.O.Lib., excerpt from a circular issued in Oct. 1861 by the Public Works Dept. of the Government of India and cited in “Public Works for the Purpose of Facilitating the Transit of Cotton to Ports of Shipment: A Memorandum by the Public Works Dept., Fort William, 5 June 1863,” encl. in Trevelyan to Wood, 7 June 1863, No. 1, Halifax Collection, India Office, Correspondence, India, 3B, No. 59. (Twelve lakhs, or Rs. 1,200,000, was worth about £120,000.)

32. I.O.Lib., Resolution of the Governor-General in Council, 9 Aug. 1861, encl. in Government of India to Secretary of State, Letter No. 13 (Revenue), 13 Aug. 1861.

33. I.O.Lib., Secretary of State to Government of India, Despatch No. 30 (Revenue), 3 Dec. 1861.

34. I.O.Lib., Madras Chamber of Commerce to Government of Madras, 31 July 1862, India, Rev. Procs., XLVII, 15 Sep. 1862, No. 2.

35. I.O.Lib., Order No. 1767 of the Government of Madras, 25 Sep. 1863, ibid., XLVIII, 21 Oct. 1863, No. 31.

36. I.O.Lib., Resolution of the Governor-General in Council, 22 July 1861, India Office, Collections to Revenue Despatches to India, IX, No. 25.

37. I.O.Lib., “Report on the Cotton Gin Factory in the Dharwar Collectorate for the Half Year ending 31 May 1862,” Selections from the Records of the Bombay Government, new series, LXVII, 23Google Scholar; I.O.Lib., Haywood to Platt, 30 Nov. 1861, India Office, Rev. Dept., Home Corresp., Letters Rec., IV, No. 264; Cassels, , Cotton, pp. 151–56Google Scholar.

38. I.O.Lib., Under-Secretary of State to Forbes, 18 Jan. 1861; to J. M. Dunlop (manufacturer of cotton gins, Manchester), 24 Dec. 1861; and to secretary, Cotton Supply Association, 9 Jan. and 22 Mar. 1862, India Office, Rev. Dept., Home Corresp., Letters Sent, I, Nos. 66, 113, 114, 118, and 134.

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40. I.O.Lib., Dunlop to Lord Elgin, 24 Mar. 1862, Elgin Papers (MSS. Eur. F. 83), Letters from Miscellaneous, fols. 53-55.

41. I.O.Lib., Elgin to Dunlop, 21 May 1862, ibid., Letters to Miscellaneous, pp. 12-28.

42. Manchester Central Ref. Lib., Proceedings of the Manchester Chamber of Commerce, 16 July 1862.

43. I.O.Lib., Elgin to Samuel Laing, 9 Sep. 1862, Elgin Papers, Letters to Miscellaneous, pp. 54-55.

44. I.O.Lib., Wood to Trevelyan, 22 Dec. 1862, Halifax Collection, India Office, Letter Books, XI, 352. In the previous year Wood had been asked to send a member of his Council to India to purchase cotton.

45. I.O.Lib., Wood to Frere, 29 Aug. 1862, ibid., XI, 104.

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47. I.O.Lib., Haywood to Platt, 30 Nov. 1861, India Office, Rev. Dept., Home Corresp., Letters Rec., IV, No. 264.

48. See Henderson, , Lancashire Cotton Famine, pp. 129–31Google Scholar, for statistics on the formation of limited liability companies between 1856 and 1865, their duration, and their mode of dropping out. See also my forthcoming article on the formation, activities, and dissolution of the Manchester Cotton Company to be published in Indian Economic and Social History Review.

49. Statistical Abstract for the United Kingdom in Each of the Last Fifteen Years from 1855 to 1869, in Parliamentary Papers (1870), LXVIII (Cmd. 145), 59.Google Scholar

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51. I.O.Lib., Frere to Wood, 6 June 1863, ibid., India Office, Correspondence, India, 5A, No. 83.

52. I.O.Lib., Wood to Elgin, 9 Oct. 1862, ibid., India Office, Letter Books, XI, 80.

53. I.O.Lib., Wood to Elgin, 10 Feb. 1863, ibid., XII, 72.

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55. Ibid. 172: 178 (3 July 1863).

56. Ibid. 172: 199-201 (3 July 1863).

57. Ibid. 172: 209-22 (3 July 1863).

58. I.O.Lib., Wood to Trevelyan, 10 July 1863, Halifax Collection, India Office, Letter Books, XIII, 152.

59. I.O.Lib., Secretary of State to Government of Bombay, Despatch No. 26 (Revenue), 17 July 1863.

60. I.O.Lib., Government of Bombay to Secretary of State, Letter No. 17 (Revenue), 27 Aug. 1863, submitting copy of Bombay Government Resolution appointing Forbes as Cotton Commissioner subject to the approval of the Secretary of State. Forbes was appointed on 1 Oct. 1863.

61. I.O.Lib., Government of India to Government of Bombay, No. 6033, 17 Oct. 1863, India, Rev. Procs., XLVIII, 17 Oct. 1863, No. 15.

62. I.O.Lib., “Minute for the Secretary of State in reference to the appointment of Commissioners in India for the cultivation of a better quality of cotton, as suggested in an interview held lately between the Secretary of State and Messrs. Cheetham and Ashworth,” dated 19 Aug. 1863, India Office, Rev. Dept., Home Corresp., Letters Rec., V, No. 443.

63. I.O.Lib., Under-Secretary of State to John Cheetham and Edmund Ash-worth, 30 Oct. 1863, ibid., Letters Sent, II, No. 223.

64. I.O.Lib., Haywood to Platt, 30 Nov. 1861, ibid., Letters Rec., IV, No. 264.

65. I.O.Lib., Cotton Supply Association to Secretary of State, 23 Apr. 1862, ibid., Letters Rec., IV, No. 304. The circulars were sent to India in Secretary of State to Government of India, Despatch No. 12 (Revenue), 9 June 1862.

66. For example, I.O.Lib., Secretary of State to Government of Bombay, Despatch No. 5 (Revenue), 17 Feb. 1863. Forwarded with this despatch was a second instalment of cotton seed from the Peruvian coast valley of Piura, a first instalment having been sent on 8 Nov. 1862. Also forwarded were twenty copies of notes on cotton cultivation from an English resident of Peru containing information on the cultivation of perennial cotton in the interior of Peru, and additional information from the British Vice-Consul at Paita. The government of Bombay replied on 23 July asking for more Peruvian seed and a third instalment was sent on 16 Sep. Many other examples of this kind are to be found in the Revenue Despatches to India, Madras, and Bombay in this period.

67. I.O.Lib., Report on the Administration of the Central Provinces for 1864-65, p. iiGoogle Scholar.

68. I.O.Lib., Forbes to Under-Secretary of State, 8 Nov. 1865, India Office, Rev. Dept., Home Corresp., Letters Rec., VII, No. 655A. Forbes asked for the appointment of a practical gardener on a five-year contract at £550 p.a. to continue the experiments. Wood, ever the politician, was ready to approve the appointment even though he stated that he had little confidence in the results. But he also thought the India Office should not lay itself open to “charges of neglecting anything reasonable to improve so important an article as cotton.” The Council of India vetoed the project, although later several gardeners were appointed for both Bombay and the Central Provinces.

69. I.O.Lib., India, Rev. Procs., XXV, 15 Feb. 1868, Nos. 29-30; and 21 Mar. 1868, Nos. 27-28.

70. I.O.Lib., Government of Bombay to Government of India, No. 2717, 14 Aug. 1863, ibid., XLVIII, 17 Oct. 1863, No. 15.

71. I.O.Lib., ibid., XLIX, 21 Jan. 1864, Nos. 28-30.

72. I.O.Lib., Forbes to Under-Secretary of State, 8 Nov. 1865, India Office, Rev. Dept., Home Corresp., Letters Rec., VII, No. 655 A.

73. I.O.Lib., Trevelyan to Wood, 2 May 1863 (encl.), Halifax Collection, India Office, Correspondence, India, 6D.

74. Act IX (1863): “An Act for the Prevention of the Adulteration of Cotton, and for the Better Suppression of Frauds in the Cotton Trade.”

75. I.O.Lib., Proceedings of the Bombay Legislative Council, 31 Jan. 1863, encl. in Frere to Wood, 12 Feb. 1863, Halifax Collection, India Office, Correspondence, India, 5A, No. 83.

76. I.O.Lib., India, Rev. Procs., XLIX, 17 Feb. 1864, No. 4.

77. I.O.Lib., Frere to Wood, 14 Apr. 1865, Halifax Collection, India Office, Correspondence, India, 5C, No. 83. See also E. W. Ravenscroft, Inspector-in-Chief, Cotton Dept., to Government of Bombay, No. 196, 1 June 1864, encl. in Frere to Wood, 7 June 1864, ibid., 5B, No. 83.

78. I.O.Lib., Memorial of the Cotton Supply Association, 28 Mar. 1865, India Office, Rev. Dept., Home Corresp., Letters Rec., VII, No. 588.

79. I.O.Lib., Assistant Under-Secretary of State to Cheetham, 11 Apr. 1865, ibid., Letters Sent, III, No. 315. Cf. Trevelyan's statement to the Supreme Legislative Council, p. 92 below.

80. India, Dept. of Commercial Intelligence and Statistics, Index Numbers of Indian Prices, 1861-1926 (Calcutta, 1928), p. 7Google Scholar, for prices of Broach cotton in Bombay; and Statistical Abstract for the United Kingdom from 1855 to 1869, in Parliamentary Papers, LXVIII, 4243Google Scholar, for prices of Indian cotton imported into Great Britain.

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84. Statistical Abstract for the United Kingdom from 1855 to 1869, in Parliamentary Papers, LXVIII, 59Google Scholar.

85. I.O.Lib., Memorial of the Cotton Supply Association, 12 Mar. 1869, India Office, Rev. Dept, Home Corresp., Letters Rec., X, No. 1191.

86. I.O.Lib., Note by H. T. Prinsep and Memorandum by the Duke of Argyll, ibid., Letters Sent, V, No. 612.

87. I.O.Lib., Under-Secretary of State to Cotton Supply Association, 30 Apr. 1869, ibid.

88. I.O.Lib., Trevelyan's statement in the Supreme Legislative Council, encl. in Trevelyan to Elgin, 30 Apr. 1863, Elgin Papers, Letters from Members of Council, fols. 321-22. Trevelyan was referring to the policy during the Irish famines of 1845-49, when he was Assistant-Secretary to the Treasury and Wood was Chancellor of the Exchequer (1846-52). See Woodham-Smith, C., The Great Hunger (London, 1862)Google Scholar.

89. Watts, J., The Facts of the Cotton Famine (London, 1866), p. 421Google Scholar.

90. The use of such techniques is stressed by MacDonagh, , “Anti-Imperialism of Free Trade,” Econ. Hist. Rev., second series, XIV, 492Google Scholar.

91. Gallagher and Robinson, “Imperialism of Free Trade,” ibid., second series, VI, 8-9. See also R. J. Moore, “Imperialism and ‘Free Trade’ Policy in India, 1853-54,” ibid., second series, XVII (1964), 135-45.

92. The fact that the “cotton famine,” at least in the early years of the war, was more imagined than real has been argued by Brady, Eugene A., “A Reconsideration of the Lancashire “Cotton Famine,’Agricultural History, XXXVII (1963). 156–62Google Scholar.