This article examines the role of the private merchant firm Jardine Matheson in procuring Chinese tea cultivators
for the East India Company’s experimental tea plantations in Assam in the 1830s. Where existing literature has
detailed the establishment of a Tea Committee by the East India Company to oversee these tea plantations, the
focus of this article is on the way that the illicit opium distribution network of Jardine Matheson was used to
extract labour, tea specimens and knowledge from China. The colonial state’s experimental tea plantations were
directly connected to the devastation of the opium trade. The multiple uses of Jardine Matheson’s drug distribution
networks and skilled employees becomes evident upon examination of their role in facilitating Chinese migration.
The recruitment of tea cultivators from China in the 1830s also impacted on colonial concepts of racial hierarchy
and the perceived contrast between savagery and civilization. Ultimately, Jardine Matheson’s extraction of skilled
labour from the China coast informs our understanding of the evolving private networks that became crucial to
British imperialism in Asia, and through which labour, capital, people, information and ideas could be exchanged.
History
Citation
Modern Asian Studies, 2017, 1-30.
Author affiliation
/Organisation/COLLEGE OF SOCIAL SCIENCES, ARTS AND HUMANITIES/School of History