All the following articles before 8th November 1827 come from the Bombay Courier and after that date from the Canton Register. The latter paper is published at 7 Imperial Hong in the Canton factories and delivered to subscribers. Single copies available from M/s Markwick and Lane at 3 Imperial Hong.
The paper is edited by the American trader A S Keating for about a year until the job is taken-up by a Londoner named John Slade.
Saturday 12th Jan 1793
Macartney accepted his appointment as Ambassador to Peking on conditions. Pitt was required to forego ministerial patronage and only appropriately qualified people will comprise the embassy. Macartney has himself discarded all interests of private friendship.
George Staunton has obtained two Chinese priests to serve as interpreters. They were taken from China to France by the Catholics and from there transferred to Ripa’s school in Italy where Staunton got them by permission of the Pope. They will stay in his house in Harley Street until departure.
Vol 11 No 2 – 9th January 1838
There were six main items in Macartney’s instructions:
An unfortified island near Chusan for storing unsold goods and residence of foreigners.
Ditto near Canton.
Open trade at Chusan, Ningpo and Tien Tsin.
A sales warehouse at Peking, like the Russians.
Abolition or reduction of transit duties between Macau and Canton and
An end to the Canton squeezes.
19th/20th January 1793
The Travancore has arrived from China. Brown has become chief supercargo (Taipan) of the Select Committee in place of Harrison who has returned to England. Parkins has succeeded Irwin. Cumming is on tour of Malacca and Bengal and will come here soon. Irvine and Jackson, two Company officials, have arrived in China on the Thetis with Crethorne, a free trader.
Sat 2nd Feb 1793
The Governor-General has been instructed by the Directors to commence a House of Trade at Canton for commission-earning business. This will permit the Indian Agency Houses and others to trade legally in China under the Company’s control.
The House of Trade will enjoy the prices that the Company is able to obtain. Its customers will be served first for remittance to India and London by Company Bills.
The House will be managed by the writers James Drummond and George Sparks. The commission payable by customers is 3% on goods and 2% on bullion and remittances. (see next week for more info)
Sat 2nd Feb 1793
The Company’s Directors have funded the fabrication of a solid gold casket to contain King George’s letter to the Emperor of China. It is 14” square with the Royal Arms enamelled in a frame of diamonds. All four sides are embossed. The letter is on vellum contained in a white silk bag and is partly in the King’s hand. The gold content, excluding the jewels and workmanship, is valued at 1,000 guineas.
Amongst the technological productions carried by the embassy are three chariots. One is for Macartney’s use. The other two are for the Emperor, one for summer and the other for winter.
Macartney’s carriage has gold chainwork over the body, panel glasses, and a silver fringe to the canopy. An open work gilt cornice surrounds the top. It looks like a state carriage. The harness is of black leather faced with scarlet and fitted with silver buckles.
The summer carriage for the Emperor has panel glasses and large windows in the back. The ground in the centre is green with a large network of gold aventurine, in the interstices of which are painted roses. The door panels have large paintings featuring Cybele in her car with attendants. The carriage is entirely gilt but slightly picked out in brown. The hammer cloth is light blue silk with wreaths and bouquets of jasmine and roses. The corners are tied up with large fan bows from which fall silk cords and tassels.
The winter carriage has a similar body in green and gold with aventurine network and roses in the interstices of the lower panel, but the back and upper panels are without glass and there, instead of flowers, are shells in green, gold and brown. A novelty in design is the springs and standards of each carriage which are made of a single piece of iron. The linings of each are in imperial yellow as is the harness etc. The three carriages are said to have cost £5,000.
Lord Macartney also takes the largest orrory ever made and an immense quantity of the richest plate.1
The Directors have chartered the Bellona to bring home teas.
Sat 2nd Feb 1793
Between Aug – Oct 1792, fourteen Company ships arrived at Canton (names and commanders listed)
Foreign shipping trading at Canton during 1792: American 6, Dutch 4, Spanish 3, French 3, Swedish 1, Danish 1 = 18.
Country shipping at Canton2 = 22 vessels of which 20 carried large shipments of cotton. Four country ships brought opium (King George 220 chests, Surat Castle 30, Nancy 40 and General Elliot 170). The Popham also brought 25 chests = 485 chests. Some tin was also shipped to China by the country trade.
Sat 9th Feb 1793
Concurrent with the establishment of the Company’s new House of Trade at Canton, the Directors have proscribed their employees in China from receiving private commissions to transact agency business there.
The Company undertakes that the correspondence and instructions of private merchants to the Canton House of Trade shall be confidential and will not be disclosed to the Directors in London or their Select Committee in China.
Vol 11 No 8 – 20th February 1838
Excerpts from The Pacification of the Seas by Yuen Yung Sun of Heung Shan:
Piracy around Canton became a problem in the Ka Hing (Mandarin - Kia King) Emperor’s reign. The development was caused by the three Yuen brothers of Cochin China – Kwong Ping, Kwong Yee and Kwong Kwok. In 1791 the Kien Lung (Mandarin – Chien Lung) Emperor had subdued Cochin China and the King of that country removed to Kwangsi where he was conciliated with a blue button. In 1801 his younger brother Fuk Hing raised troops in Thailand and marched them to Cochin China were he fought and killed Yuen Kwong Ping and assumed the throne. Kwong Ping’s son King Sing fled with his group.
One of his group knew the pirates Chin Tseih and Pih Tung Hae and introduced King Sing to them. King Sing conferred an honour on Chin Tseih who had 200 boats and many brave and experienced fighters and was thus able to induce Chin Tseih to help in recovering Cochin China. Chin took his force to the coast and fought a battle with Fuk Hing’s army. He won but was unable to penetrate inland or consolidate his victory. He controlled the coast and a few ports while the rest of the country remained beyond his government. Chin failed to establish laws for the areas he controlled which rapidly sank into anarchy. His men stole women and valuables and caused popular resentment.
The natives ultimately agreed to assist Fuk Hing in a two-pronged attack on Chin by sea and land. Fuk Hing launched his double attack and the natives in the lands that Chin occupied concurrently rebelled. Chin was defeated and he and most of his men were killed. Chin’s cousin Chin Yee escaped with a few men and abandoned themselves to piracy.
Fuk Hing’s naval commander, Wang Pao, was clearly a match for the pirates but after his death they were unopposed. The pirates then organised themselves in red, yellow, green, blue, black and white squadrons and grew rapidly in numbers and wealth. New recruits brought information on the trading patterns of the Chinese coastal provinces. These pirates united with another group under Chung Pao and several other groups were also inducted into the gang. Chung Pao achieved legitimacy by connecting with Chin Tseih’s widow and this gave his red-flag squadron precedence in the fleet. The pirates sold protection to the coasting trade and the coastal villages – they issued certificates to those who paid and plundered those who did not. To prevent duplication they divided the Two Kwangs into districts. They remained powerful for ten years at the beginning of this 19th century.
The pirates established three rules for the regulation of their society:
1/ Anyone going ashore for private plunder would be executed.
2/ all loot was to be returned to a central place before distribution; the plunderer received 20% and the balance went into the communal fund.
3/ when the group took women and girls they were not to be defiled on pain of death. Fornication with prisoners was allowed only by consent. The hostages’ details were recorded for subsequent ransom.
The pirates also agreed to routinely pay high prices for food and wine to reward the supplying villagers for their risk and to ensure a continuous supply.
The pirates were superstitious and particularly favoured the Sun Po Sam temple on the coast of Wai Chow in east Guangdong. When the fleet passed-by they always stopped to sacrifice there.
In 1808 Admiral Leung Lam Kwok in command of the government fleet based at the Tiger’s Mouth (at Chuen Pi – this is the fleet of the Two Kwang) was sent to suppress the pirates. He sent 25 ships against the pirate fleet. After a bloody hand-to-hand battle he was defeated. Fifteen of his ships were captured and the rest escaped. He himself was captured and killed. Chung Pao, the pirate chief, was angered - “we had already defeated the Admiral, of what use is his death? Now the government will pursue us for ever and we will have little opportunity of abandoning piracy and returning to fishing should we have wished to do so.” He killed the pirate who had killed the Admiral. During the battle, the owners of some ten large junks requested the Heung Shan heen, Pang Suen,3 to be allowed to reinforce the Admiral but the heen had an agreement with the pirates and disallowed their involvement.
Eventually the pirate chief of the eastern fleet, Ah Po Tsai, argued with Chung Pau of the central fleet who made an accommodation with the Canton Viceroy whereby he and his men were amnestied. Then Ah Po Tsai made the same arrangement. They were given jobs in the Chinese navy. The Viceroy of the Two Kwang then felt able to tackle the western fleet with the aid of the surrendered pirates. He first instructed the King of Annam, whence the pirates would withdraw if faced by superior force, to prepare a force to confront them. He then defeated the pirates in three battles. 3,460 pirates surrendered. Another 500 were captured in battle. 86 ships 291 cannon and 1,291 handguns were handed over. About 130 pirates who had not surrendered but been captured were executed. This all occurred in the first ten years of the Ka Hing Emperor’s reign.4
Vol 11 No 14 – 3rd April 1838
The Pacification of the Seas continued (there appears to be a missing article):
In September of the 13th year of the To Kwong Emperor (1833), Colonel Lin Fa led a squadron against the pirates. He found them too numerous and retreated. The pirates pursued him to Ah Nung Hoy and sank six Imperial junks. A junk Pang Fa was then returning from Cochin China and Tongking. The pirate chief Chung Pau knew she was too big to easily board and capture. He seized two ferry boats, filled them with pirates, then ‘chased’ them towards the Pang Fa which ‘rescued’ them. The Pang Fa was thus captured by deception and became Chang Pau’s flag ship.
The following year Admiral Mo Sum Cheung assembled 100 government war junks, divided this fleet into four squadrons and cruised the Ladrone Islands. The pirate fleet was by now huge and confronted the government force. The Admiral had taught his men to throw hand-grenades, a new tactic, which unsettled the pirates. He closed with the pirates and sprayed lime water on their boats, burning the faces and eyes of the pirates. 200 pirates were killed and many more captured.
At that time the red flag (Western) pirate fleet was off Hai Nan Island and Admiral Mo wished to attack it before it could make defensive preparations but he was too late and lost 14 junks in a protracted and fierce fight. Thereafter the pirates attacked many coastal villages, plundering their wealth and seizing their women and girls. They surprised one of Admiral Mo’s squadrons whilst it was sheltering during rain with sails down and sank all 25 government war junks.
Peking responded by promoting Pih Ling to the Viceroyalty of the Two Kwang. He had previously been Governor of Kwangtung. The Cantonese called him Pik Tsing Tien – Pih who is ‘just and pure as heaven’5 – and were reassured. Villagers crowded the doorway of his yamen to make their complaints against the pirates. Pih invited the public to make proposals for ending the piracy threat. One said ‘since the death of Wang Pao, the government forces have consistently been beaten and the soldiers have become more disheartened as the pirates have become more confident. We should cut off their supplies and stop their communications by denying all maritime shipping activity to our people. By embargoing all voyages, by transporting the salt cargoes on inland waterways, we can deny the pirates any advantage in their business and persuade them to return to fishing.
Viceroy Pih adopted this plan, the people co-operated and the pirates had so much difficulty getting adequate provisions that they had no option but to enter the river delta waterways. One fleet plundered Sun Wui while another under Chung Pao attacked Poon Yu and Shun Tak.
I (the author, Yuen Yung Sun) live at Shun Tak and know what happened. One hundred sail came up the river burning villages and Customs Houses. They split into four and pirate dragon boats were rowed all round the heens. The big pirate ships stopped at Ke King Sze and sent letters demanding $10,000. Some villagers were for compliance. They said our villages are near the water, the pirates are strong and fierce. We should pay first and later devise schemes for our protection. Others were against paying. They said these pirates are insatiable. If we pay once we have to continue paying whatever they ask. When we fail to pay they will attack and we will be too impoverished to resist. Instead of giving money to pirates we should give it to our young men to encourage them to resist. Such a large amount will ensure their valiance and a single victory will give the pirates pause. The discussion continued all day until a villager loudly said we can easily beat the pirates and we should not pay them. Finally it was agreed to oppose the pirates.
A fir tree fence was built around the village and people were paid to watch and protect. Nothing happened for several days and in the uncertainty the villagers patrolled to the sea to look for the pirates. They found the fleet anchored nearby and the pirates were already aware of their decision to resist and shelled them and their village but the fence held. The pirates sent a squad to break down the fence but were repelled. The pirate chief Ko Po Tai (or Tsai) then split his forces and sent half to secure the hills behind the village. The villagers panicked and the pirates attacked, beheading eight villagers and hanging their heads from the trees. They also captured many womenfolk. On the third day all the villagers fled and the pirates took over the village, taking away the household goods, clothes, food and animals.
They then entered the Pearl River and attacked the tribute ship from Thailand that was anchored there but unsuccessfully. A few days after they attacked a riverain village and killed over a thousand people.
The pirates used several deceptions to effect their ends – sometimes they disguised themselves as officials and their boats as government cruisers – and when a village failed to prepare itself against them, they attacked. They also disguised themselves as traders and fortune tellers when they came ashore to get information but these tricks were soon recognised and any stranger was immediately suspected and murdered. Even a troop of real government soldiers, sent to get rice, was attacked and destroyed on one occasion. A state of anarchy prevailed along the coast and waterways of Canton.
The Ta Chow villages prepared an ambush by hiding a cannon in trees beside the path to their beach. When the pirates returned in great numbers, they opened fire and killed many. Then they pursued and beheaded the others. They killed most and captured one junk and two dragon boats.
At about that time the female pirate Ching Yick (or Nga) Sau, in command of 500 ships, had devastated Tung Kwoon, Shun Tak, Sun Wui and Heung Shan. She ordered Chung Pau to take 300 ships and attack the area of Ta Chow. They devastated the suburbs but could not penetrate our palisade. A few other villages also avoided being plundered. Many were now opposing the pirates but they had guns on their ships and could fire on the landing place thus driving us back. After they landed we again tried to ambush them but they lay on the ground and our guns could not be depressed sufficiently to hit them. All our gun crews were caught and beheaded. Then 500 pirates approached our village which 3,000 villagers were defending. We saw their messenger going back to the beach for reinforcements and shot him with a fowling piece. The pirates then formed a long single line. Our Kau Ho ran out and taunted them and a European pirate emerged with a musket. The two met between the opposing forces. Kau stabbed the foreigner in the chest. The foreigner cut off Kau’s right arm with his sword and then fatally stabbed him. Everyone was enraged and a general battle ensued. The villagers were driven back until reinforcements from Chih Hwa village arrived and drove off the pirates. The pirates attacked everywhere and government forces invariably withdrew on their approach. Incrementally the pirate force was increased by defections amongst the defeated villagers. Other villagers abandoned the fight. Ho Shau Yuen tried to rally us and encourage a few men to advance on the pirates but few cannot overwhelm many and he died. The pirates then burned 400 houses and killed ten villagers. I went up into the hills and saw the vast pirate fleet covering the waters. I was overcome with grief. Since peace has been restored we built a temple to Ho Shau Yuen and even the Governor has been there to worship. It is one of our most popular temples.
Sat 2nd Mar 1793
The gentlemen operating the Company’s new House of Agency at Canton have been burdened with a supply of 400 bales of Indian cotton for which there is no immediate prospect of sale. Opium is selling at about $400 per chest.
Sat 9th Mar 1793
The Canton opium market continues at $450 per chest with Company’s chop. Cotton and furs have been oversupplied and this year’s tea is expensive.
Sat 9th Mar 1793
Richardson v the late New Bombay Insurance Co – an action to recover 60,000 rupees under a policy issued 1789 on the ship Dadaloy of which the Plaintiff was sole owner and supercargo. The ship was lost off San Chuen Island in a typhoon.6 The Defendants said the ship was unseaworthy; it had sprung a leak whilst loading at Bombay requiring much of the cargo to be discharged and reloaded; there was a deviation from the disclosed voyage (to Whampoa), and some other minor points. The defendants had no evidence supporting the points of their defence beyond the mere assertion of them. Judgment for the Plaintiff with double costs.
Sat 20th April 1793
£400,000 has been paid into the Company’s treasury at Canton for Bills on London. The Company’s China affairs are prospering.
Sat 11th May 1793
Calcutta – the Brig Grace (Coolidge) has arrived from Macau.
Sat 8th June 1793
The Concordia arrived yesterday morning. She met the Lion (64) in Sunda Straits and Capt Nimmo went on board. The India ship Hindustan and the tender Jackal were with him. Macartney and his party are all in good health, although Macartney had an attack of gout earlier. The Jackel had parted company earlier and the emissary had bought a French brig at Batavia not expecting to see the smaller ship again.
When Nimmo was at Bantam later on 21st March he saw the Lion sailing passed.
Sat 29th June 1793
The British embassy to China - The Lion has arrived at Batavia with the Hindustan. It has called at Madeira, Tenerife, St Jago, Rio de Janeiro, Tristan da Cunha and New Amsterdam, which last two islands are presently uninhabited. It arrived Java on 28th Feb and stopped in the Sunda Straits for wood and water. It is intended to sail to the Banka Straits and thence to Macau.
Macartney has received a letter from the Select Committee at Canton saying the Emperor is favourably disposed to the Embassy and Chinese ships await its arrival at both Macau and the Yellow River.
Sat 4th Jan 1794
Opium sales at Calcutta at the 1st auction (Dec 1793) average prices:
Bihar 564 rupees per chest; the new Bolipur 305 rupees per chest.7
Sat 18th Jan 1794
The Company’s fleet has arrived from China. In view of the danger to shipping they put into Madras on 22nd Dec 1793 seeking for a frigate to convoy them. They all took somewhat different routes from the customary one for safety.
The King George was totally destroyed by lightning and subsequent fire at Macau two days after her arrival there. She had much sandalwood in her cargo which has consequently risen in price. The crew was saved.
The China market was generally poor this year. Cotton was obtaining 9 Taels a bale and other goods in proportion.8 The Company’s Treasury was closed throughout the season and there is nowhere to deposit cash.
Sat 15th Feb 1794
China news – a French ship from the NW coast of America, flying Portuguese colours, entered Taipa roads while the Lion (Macartney’s ship) was there, and requested Portuguese protection which was granted.
The ship then entered the inner harbour and was immediately boarded by a party of Portuguese soldiers who took possession.
The French captain sent up a chop to the Hoppo at Canton announcing his arrival, requesting to go to Whampoa and offering to pay any fees. He reported the unfriendly action of the Portuguese governor.
The Hoppo approved the request to come up to Whampoa and it is expected the Portuguese will be obliged to release the ship.
Sat 1st Mar 1794
A fleet of five English Indiamen under Commodore Thompson has arrived at Manila via the Sunda Straits and sailed from thence to China on 5th December 1793. The Spanish Governor of Manila was hospitable and polite. He has only recently heard of the war between Spain and France from a ship dispatched to him specifically with that advice.
A ship of the Philippine Company, loaded with piecegoods and indigo, sailed with the Indiamen to China and will continue with them under convoy to Europe. The Spanish Governor has been attentive of the needs of commerce and is popular with the merchants. He has opened the port to the ships of all nations for an unlimited time. The port duties on most imports and exports are abolished.
Sat 22nd March 1794
The Daphne has arrived at Malacca from China and reports five Indiamen have reached Canton via Manila. The Royal Charlotte and the rest of the Madras fleet has also arrived safely but with storm damage. At that time Macartney was within a few days of arrival at Canton. HMS Lion was at the Bocca Tigris and would convoy the Indiamen back to England.
A complete schedule of Company ships’ voyages for 1793/94 season is shown.
Sat 22nd March 1794
Captain Scott of the Carnatic reports that Macartney has arrived at Canton. It is said he interviewed the Emperor at his summer palace 150 miles from Peking. The country on the way was said to be uncommonly beautiful and fertile and sustains a huge population. Macartney gave his presents and received back numerous presents of immense value. All the members of the embassy received presents from the Emperor, even the officers and men of the Lion and Hindustan, which crews total 600 men. Each received a gift each valued at some 30 guineas. His Lordship had repeated interviews with the high officials.
The national object of the embassy was regrettably not achieved but the Emperor did avow an intention of encouraging trade and agreed to remedy some grievances at Canton for which latter purpose a high official was sent to the Two Kwang as a replacement Viceroy to liaise with the Company’s Select Committee and remove the incumbrances that have been loaded on the trade.
Our request to send an ambassador was positively declined as was our second request to form a permanent settlement in China. Even our petition to improve our conditions of residence at Canton was rejected. At the time of Scott’s visit Macartney was proposing to board the Lion and return directly to England.
Sat 29th March 1794
Extract from a private letter from Canton of 14th October 1793:
The great advantages we expected to derive from Macartney’s embassy have been diminished by the arrival of Capt MacIntosh of the Hindustan with some of the embassy. The wary Chinese were not appeased by skilful diplomacy. There is no-one who could have done better but, despite his adroitness, Macartney could carry neither of his two main points. He abandoned any expectation of settling an Englishman in Peking by the second or third interview. Had he succeeded it was to be Sir George Staunton on £12,000 per annum (Macartney got £30,000 from the India Company for performing the embassy). His application for the temporary grant of an exclusive English trading settlement in China received a peremptory refusal.
It is a fundamental principle of Chinese politics that all innovation be eschewed. The ideas of reform and regeneration are only fashionable in Europe. Chinese culture, which is enshrined in Chinese law, is immutable.
Whilst we had no success in our main points, we hope to get sufficient commercial advantages for the Company to defray the trouble and expense of the embassy. A Viceroy Extraordinary is accompanying Macartney to Canton. His instructions and his character suggest he will attack the corruption that diminishes our profits of trade. Macartney and the new Viceroy will arrive about 20th Oct. The provincial officials and principal Hong merchants set out on 11th to meet the men. Tomorrow Browne, the Chief supercargo, and his suite will meet Macartney and we are all preparing for the reception. We expect Macartney to stay only 15 – 20 days.
The embassy was taken to Jehol, one of the Emperor’s residences in Tartary about 40-50 leagues from Peking. They were accommodated sumptuously in Imperial palaces along the way. At Jehol they were accommodated in a palace of such prodigious size that the entire retinue of 100+ Europeans plus 200+ Chinese officials were housed within one wing of the building. The Emperor’s own palace was nearby. I cannot say it is beautiful or splendid from the available descriptions but it was certainly immense. The wall around Jehol measures over 6 English miles.
Prior to the audience, several days were spent explaining the protocol. The kowtow was initially held to be indispensable. Macartney resolutely resisted this ceremony but privately determined to acquiesce rather than lose the chance of a meeting. Fortunately the Emperor himself dispensed with the ceremony and the meeting followed a form hardly different from that used in the capitals of Europe. Macartney and retinue were received in a spacious hall. The Emperor sat at one end on a throne. Macartney was placed on his left hand, which place the Chinese devote to the guest of honour. The high Chinese officials sat to the left of Macartney and beyond them was Sir George and his son. In the second row were the rest of Macartney’s suite except a few who were placed in front of the throne opposite the Emperor. On the Emperor’s right were many other officials. The entire assembly was permitted to sit. Macartney presented the box containing HM’s letter which was read and explained by the interpreter. The Emperor asked Macartney a few questions and the audience broke up.
Macartney had altogether six interviews with the Emperor. The presents returned to the Embassy by the Emperor are immense in quantity and value. They are all on the Hindustan. Two of them attracted my attention. One is a poem composed and written by the Emperor himself. It is contained in a blackwood box which the officials said had been a possession of the ruling house of China for two millennia. The other is a mass of agate of extraordinary size and beauty. We learned that it had been the practise of the Emperor to hold this agate in his hand and reflect upon it whenever he spoke with his officials, since in China it is the Emperor who does not look at his subjects (the reverse of George III’s court) to avoid giving them airs of importance.
Sat 12th April 1794
China news - The General Meadows (Lloyd) has arrived Calcutta from Canton via the Malacca Straits. Lloyd saw no enemy ship. The rest of the Company’s fleet was nearly ready to depart Whampoa when he left. They were to be convoyed by HMS Lion on about 10th March.
James Crichton of the Bombay Castle is appointed doctor to the Company’s factory in China vice Alexander Duncan, gone home.
Dr James Dinwiddie, of Macartney’s embassy, has lectured the English community at Canton on natural and experimental philosophy. He offers to visit Calcutta and repeat his experiments there before returning home.9
Sat 26th April 1794
China news – we hear, shortly before the sailing of the General Meadows from Whampoa, that an order was received from Peking requiring Macartney’s embassy to depart China within ten days of receipt of the mandate. Conforming to the mandate, Macartney left China and went to Macau where he planned to remain until the Indiamen were ready to depart. The Cantonese provincial government has interpreted the Imperial order literally - a young writer who was sent out on the Hindustan to join the China factory, is denied permission for a passport to remain in China because the Hindustan carried part of the embassy.
Sat 12th July 1794
The last fleet of the Company’s indiamen to China will sail from Bombay on 27th July. It is comprised of Friendship (George Smith), Shah Muncher (John Anson Smith), Shaw Ardaseer (Nimmo), Phoenix (Edward L Hay), Gangavar (Trasker), City of Goa (Collis) and Shaw Huriswami, later corrected to Hormuzier (Meek).
Sat 9th Aug 1794
News from China:
The Royal Charlotte (Douglas) has arrived from China and Batavia. She left Canton on 16th April 1794. She was convoyed by Commander Mitchell’s squadron to Pulo Baba then joined two Dutch warships Amazon and Swan as far as Anjier Point.
Cotton was selling at Canton for 9 Taels 8 mace per bale, sandalwood 20 Taels, opium 350 - 550 Taels per chest, depending on quality.
Douglas reports the arrival of Venus (Elmore) at Macau on 21st April with an opium cargo.
Douglas had no news of Macartney but got a note from Staunton indicating the new Viceroy Sung had agreed to improve pilotage by basing the pilots on Lintin rather than Macau.
Sat 9th Aug 1794
Petition to Sir G Staunton from two country ships’ captains at Lintin, 16th March:
We country merchants believe Macartney’s embassy important. From the record of his Governorship of Madras, we can confidently expect the highest quality of service. With the assistance of Sir George Staunton, it is the best England can do.
Our ships are detained at this island two weeks for want of pilots to Whampoa. Formerly we reported the name of the ship and the captain and got a pilot in 24 hours. The Company’s ships get instant service. Why not ours?
Also privateers prevent our sailing direct to India. We have to take a circuitous route around the Pacific. We are detained here waiting for a pilot and we have longer voyages. These are hazards to our trade and impoverish us.
Sgd Capts W Douglas and G G Richardson.
Reply of Staunton, off Samkok 16th March:
Macartney remonstrated with the new Viceroy over inadequate numbers of pilots and received an assurance that an increased number would be stationed on Lintin which is more convenient than Macau.
He is now departing and has no time to remind the Viceroy but assumes the matter is in hand. The Company’s homeward fleet is now discharging its pilots and you should have but little more time to wait.
Sat 8th Nov 1794
Capt George Smith of the Friendship has written from Malacca dated 30th August. His ship and the Company’s China fleet of Shaw Ardaseer, Shaw Muncher, Shaw Hormazeer, Phoenix, Gungaver and the Bombay frigate have arrived safely en route to China. The City of Goa is unseen. Two French privateers are thought to be in the Straits.
Sat 13th Dec 1794
The Company’s war-sloop Swift arrived from Penang on 11th Dec. She met the Duke of Clarence (Hayes) from Canton and learned all the fleet has arrived safely in China together with an English transport from Botany Bay.
There were five Americans, four Dutch, one Dane and a Spanish vessel in port.
A small American ship (Rogers) has arrived Macau from Oregon with a cargo of sea otter pelts and the schooner Spy has arrived from Manila.
The first India ship got 10 Taels 7 mace for her cotton but since then the Chinese are paying average 9 Taels 2 mace and some masters are disinclined to break bulk. Opium is unsellable and 2,000 chests are in storage. Tin is selling at its prime cost of 14 Taels, sandalwood 18 Taels, pepper 15-16 Taels and sharks fins 22 Taels.
The low offers for our imports are reflected in cheap exports. The teas have not arrived from the tea districts and the price remains unfixed but soft sugar is 4 Taels 2 mace and Company-quality nankeens are $80 per 100 pieces.
The treasury was not open when Duke of Clarence left but it is expected to open once all the ships arrive. The Select has indicated, subject to any instructions for them on the ships, to continue sale of Bills at the same rate as last season.
A Dutch ambassador has arrived at Canton from Batavia with a small military escort and presents for the Emperor. He awaits a passport to go to Peking.
Sat 13th Dec 1794
Letter from Canton 13th Oct 1794 – The rain this summer since April has been uniquely heavy. The countryside around Canton is flooded. A cotton manufacturing town 80 miles west of Canton is particularly affected and alone accounts for the lack of demand and low prices – the factories are hardly able to process anything. If the Canton cotton manufactories were operating normally, cotton would be selling at 12½ - 13 Taels per picul.
Letter from Canton 15th Oct 1794 – cotton has continued to fall and 8 Taels is now unavailable. The Hongs say it is due to the flooding which has drowned 18,000 – 20,000 people involved in cotton manufacture. We think they are also using the opportunity of heavy rain to limit the demands of the current Hoppo, who is hungrier than any in living memory, and this provoked them into pushing down prices (i.e. this Hoppo’s percentage is based on value and the Hongs have used their monopoly to procure a reduced value of trade. By paying less for imports they necessarily receive less for exports, and all bribes are reduced pro-rata.)
The Dutch ambassador was politely received at Peking, patiently heard, gave his presents and received some in return and is now coming back.
Sat 27th Dec 1794
Editorial – the late failure of our cotton trade is disastrous. This staple employs nearly all Bombay capital. Many of the ships that carry cotton are unsuitable for other cargoes. The reluctance of the Hongs at Canton to buy is resented but the abundance of the coming crop encourages us to hope.
Sat 10th Jan 1795
Letters from Madras say the Gungaver has arrived from China with news of the failure of Shy Kinqua, a Hong merchant and frequent recipient of Madrassi loans. He ceased payment in November owing 2,200,000 Taels. The Company and numerous Madras investors will be affected by his failure.
Sat 7th Feb 1795
The Upton Castle has arrived from China. Prices at Canton continue low.
Sat 14th Feb 1795
The Lowjee Family (McIntosh) arrived from China last Monday 9th Feb. When she left Canton the price of our cotton had risen. The low prices earlier are now attributed to Shy Kinqua who was selling-off his stock at a loss to delay discovery of his bankruptcy. Now his Hong is closed, the market has returned to normal.
At that time the only country ship still in the river was the General Meadows from Calcutta. The Company’s ships at Canton then were Alfred, Canton, Ocean, Taunton Castle, King George, Middlesex, Ganges, Nottingham, Sulivan and Ponsborne. There was also a Botany Bay convict ship in port called Indispensable which was to sail with the Indiamen.
The Company had not opened its treasury in China at the time of the Lowjee Family’s departure and no Bills were available (at the great risk of the country trade). The free mariners have to bring back their profits in silver in their own ships. It was supposed Bills would eventually be offered at 5/3d per dollar at 2 years sight, which was last year’s terms.
Sat 14th Feb 1795
Private letters from Canton say Shy Kinqua’s failure has not had the bad effects expected. His total debt is reassessed at 1.8 million Taels and his assets at 1 million. The balance will be paid by his relatives and the other Hong merchants.
Brown, President of the Company’s Select Committee at Macau, has negotiated to have the Company’s purchases from Shy Kinqua this season receive precedence in payment and the complete debt to the Company will be discharged within this single season. Shy Kinqua’s other creditors are in the country trade and with loan-brokers. They will get the leavings and no doubt face substantial delays.
Sat 14th Feb 1795
The American Major Samuel Shaw has died. He was well-known and liked in India. He died shortly after leaving Canton in the Washington.10
Sat 21st Feb 1795
A superficial report of Macartney’s embassy to the Kien Lung Emperor. The only new fact is that Macartney had intended to stay in Peking until March but was hurried off by the Peking officials early ‘before it gets too cold’ as they said. All his requests for trade concessions were declined.
Sat 21st March 1795
The calligraphy of the Kien Lung Emperor which he gave Lord Macartney has been spoofed into verse:
|
When a King or a Queen Sends a great mandarin And our footstool he humbly approaches, He must come with prostration Or meet flagellationAnd must give us some whiskies and coaches. |
There are several more verses.
Sat 25th April 1795
A ship from China reports that in January cotton was selling at 10 Taels 5 mace the bale. Rice has gone up to $3.50 (10 rupees) per bag as a scarcity has developed. The Hoppo exempts rice ships from the Port Entry Charges.
Sat 9th May 1795
The Eliza (Gibson), our first ship to China this season, sailed on 5th May. She was followed by the Lowjee Family (Elliot). The Friendship (Smith) will sail for China today and the Lady Shore (Willcocks) will leave shortly with a rice cargo. The expected Bombay cotton export to Canton this year is 40,000 - 50,000 bales.
Sat 4th July 1795
The General Meadows (Lloyd) arrived at Calcutta from China with letters to 24th March. The Company’s Select Committee at Canton is selling Bills at the same rate as last season – 5/3d to the old Spanish dollar, 2 yrs sight. These are favourable terms for the Company but China traders say it will have to improve the rate if it expects to get sufficient silver for the tea purchases.
Shy Kinqua’s failure still overhangs the market. His debts are promised for settlement before the end of this season. He has already paid off 600,000 Taels to the Company and has a further 300,000 Taels in cash to completely discharge this debt. The other (country trade) creditors remain in the cold. Bombay cotton is selling at 10 Taels 5 mace and one can get an extra Teal by bartering cotton for tea. Other commodities are low – there are still 1,100 chests of opium unsold from last year.
Sat 22nd Aug 1795
The Russians are establishing a factory at the mouth of the Don at Timurnikow. The items listed in the Ukase as permitted for trade are pelts, cordage, oil, wax, iron, wool, raisins, fish, ivory, saltpetre, silk and green tea.
Sat 17th Oct 1795
Bombay Presidency, Commercial Dept, 15th Oct – Government requires a strong ship to carry the Company’s property of 2,000 bales of cotton and 400 candies of sandalwood to China. Freight will be paid here. Thereafter the ship will carry the Company’s teas, etc., to England, freight for which will be paid three months after arrival London. The ship may then load any British goods for export to East Indies except arms and ammunition.
Freight rates Bombay/China to be quoted per Surat Candy of cotton and Bombay Candy of sandalwood; rates China/London in Sterling per measurement ton. The ship must be surveyed and reported fit for carriage of tea. Departure is required by 1st Nov.
Sat 2nd Jan 1796
The Lowjee Family (Elliott) arrived here from China (via Penang) last Wednesday. She left Whampoa on 10th Nov 1795. At that time, apart from English ships, there were 2 Swedish, 1 Spanish and 8 Americans in port. At Penang on 26th Nov she saw HMS Orpheus, HMS Resistance, the Arniston, Surprize Galley, Mary and the Penang grab sailing out to take possession of the Moluccas and Celebes for England. Dutch power is so shrunken that a small force will be adequate to garrison the principal islands and secure the spice trade to England.
The Company’s treasury at Canton was opened early November for sale of one year Sight Bills at 5/3d per dollar but few sales were made.
Early arrivals sold their Bombay cotton at 9 Taels plus while later arrivals got 10 –12 Taels per bale. Opium was unsellable. Sandalwood rose from 13 to 19 Taels. Rice dropped to 5 rupees the bag as the fear of scarcity receded. On exports, sugar was expensive at over 5 Taels a picul.
The Hong merchants have agreed to settle Shy Kinqua’s debts in six years but the Select has said its too long and wants it all paid at once. Munqua is supposed to be in difficulty as the other Hongs will not admit him to any share in this season’s cargoes. They do not want another Shy Kinqua debacle.
Sat 6th Feb 1796
The Gabriel (Carse) arrived Calcutta 11th Jan from Macau. She reports cotton has risen to a sale price of 14 Taels a picul at Canton and may go higher. She stopped at Malacca on her return and the Company’s expeditionary force remains there but will sail for the invasion of the Moluccas in early Feb.
Sat 5th March 1796
A Portuguese snow has arrived at Calcutta. She sailed from Macau on 20th Dec 1795. She reports the Emperor’s edict arrived some weeks before her departure containing instructions for the liquidation of Sky Kinqua’s debt in six annual instalments. No interest will be paid over that period.
Sat 5th March 1796
Letter from Manila, 31st Dec 1795 – the annual treasure galleon from Acapulco has not come and the Spanish colonial government is pleading poverty. The Governor is trying to recruit soldiers and cavalry to reinforce the forts (presumably against the English). He is also wary of the Filipinos being infected by French principles. It’s a bad time to be short of funds.
Sat 2nd April 1796
The Eliza (Gibson) arrived from China last week. Cotton was in demand and selling at 13 –14 Taels the picul. Sharksfin was 17-18 Taels, tin 17 and pepper 14 Taels the picul. No-one is buying opium (the Dutch sell-off has deranged the entire Asian market).11
The Company’s treasury is open for receipt of cash in exchange for one year Sight Bills on London or Calcutta at 5/3d per silver dollar (old head12). Few subscriptions have been received in view of the depressed state of our smuggling trade.
Sat 2nd April 1796
Excerpt from Anderson’s narrative of the British embassy to China:
18th September – Macartney went to the palace this morning. The Emperor declined to make a written treaty. He was prepared to review the duties payable by British ships at Canton. He would always care for his own subjects and withdraw his favour from any foreign nations trading incompatibly with his people’s interests.
He gave Macartney a box containing pictures of all the previous Ching Emperors. With each picture is a poem written personally by the relevant Emperor describing himself, his government and the line of conduct he commends to his successor. It is unique and absolutely priceless.
On handing this casket to Macartney the Emperor said ‘give this to your King with the advice that although the present appears small, it is the most valuable thing I own and something I had reserved to give to my son to inspire him to follow the noble example of his ancestors’.
The Emperor’s words were translated for Macartney by Mr Plumb (the name given to one of the Chinese students from Ripa’s College)
Sat 11th June 1796
The merchants of Bombay have met at the Bombay Insurance Office concerning convoying of the cotton fleet to China. The government has asked them for a date so it can supply an escort.
On considering the matter, the merchants suppose it would be more profitable to send the cotton in two separate fleets to mitigate the depreciation of value of Bombay cotton when arriving at the Canton market at one time.
The Upton Castle, Phoenix, Friendship, Travancore, Helen and Jehangir will comprise the first fleet and will sail 5th July. They pick up the escort cruiser at the Nicobars for passage through the Straits.
The second fleet will sail on the next spring tide on 20th July.
Sat 23rd July 1796
The Bombay fleet to China is departing. Many of them have squeezed 300-400 more bales of cotton on board than they formerly loaded. This has been possible using the steam press and the new cordage that Mr Tate has introduced from Manila that bales the cotton tighter.
Sat 24th Sept 1796
India Gazette, 29th Aug - The Dart has arrived at Calcutta from China. She reports opium is either very cheap or unsellable. It is believed the continuing disorder in the opium market is due to enforced Dutch sales of their stock.
As soon as Dutch colonists knew that their country was at war with England, they sent all their opium stock East for sale. The government of every Dutch settlement has contributed to the over-supply.
Canton Register Vol 8 No 5 – Tues 3rd February 1835
Captain Broughton lost his ship Providence on a reef at Tai Ping Shan forty years ago on 17th May 1757 and came up to Canton in the tender, an 87 ton schooner. Here is an edited extract from his diary:
“Abreast of Lintin I sent a boat to Macau for provisions. After receipt, I approached the Bocca Tigris and found 13 East Indiamen at anchor which officers gave us advice and help. I continued up to Whampoa arriving next morning. I took the pinnace to Canton and interviewed Hall, the British Chief. I arranged for provisions and for the division of my crew amongst the East Indiamen. On 6th June a Hong merchant asked me where I was from and I told him. I asked him for provisions from the government. The next day I left for Whampoa where an official came on board saying the information from Canton was confused and he had come to check it but I could not wait as I wanted to sail to Macau as soon as I had got provisions from the Indiamen.”
Sat 6th Jan 1798
The Gunjaver has arrived from Canton. She left there 23rd Nov. The Company’s Canton Treasury was then open for silver in exchange for 12 month Sight Bills on London at 5/6d old head dollars or 24 month Bills at 5/10½d.13
1.2 million Rupees was also collected by the Canton Treasury as a loan for 30-day Bills on Bengal at 38½ ‘old head’ dollars per 100 current rupees. This was a poor rate and was raised to 41 ‘old heads’ with option to pay in money or certificates, on which terms it was heavily subscribed by the China traders who have no other means of remittance since the Danish and Dutch Treasuries have withdrawn from Far East.14 About 1.5 million Rupees have been freighted here for the Company by the Nancy grab. It should relieve mercantile distress in India. Cotton is selling at 12 Taels per picul in Canton.
Sat 6th Jan 1798
The increasing Chinese community on Penang is making the island prosperous. It certainly seems very fertile. The large fleet and numerous troops recently conveyed via there (for the invasion of Malacca) were easily provisioned and, in spite of increased demand, prices remained very reasonable. All necessaries and luxuries were available. Chickens and ducks were sold at $1 each.
Sat 6th Jan 1798
India Gazette 11th Dec - The Nancy grab (Carnegie), which has just arrived, left Canton on 3rd Nov. A few days earlier the Armenia (Sands) arrived Canton from Bombay with an opium cargo, 1,200 chests of which remained unsold when the Nancy sailed. The asking price was $180 per chest with no buyers.
Capt Carnegie says letters from Manila dated 18th Sept 1797 and received at Canton while he was there, say the Spanish Governor was completing his preparations to repel a British invasion. All Spanish warships have been moved to Cavite.
Sat 20th Jan 1798
The Governor of Manila has received an address from the neutral merchants of the city (Americans, Danes, Swedes, Hamburgers, etc) dated 1st Sept 1797:
“Your mild and liberal government is well known to us but a great many others are unaware of it. Many recall the unfortunate events of 1781/82 when two neutral ships with their cargoes were seized in this port.
“We write to counteract the aspersions of the ignorant. Any interruption to the trade of Manila will cause people to leave and diminish your government’s revenue. Encouragement of neutral trade will assure Manila of a plentiful supply of provisions some of which are necessary for the annual galleon to Spain. We wish to reassure our correspondents that trade with Manila is safe.
“We beseech you to indicate the nature of Regulations you will apply on neutral ships under European or Asian colours coming from Calcutta or Madras. Are they welcome? Can they sell their cargoes without impediment under your protection? Will you confirm there is absolutely no risk to them of arrest or confiscation?
“You may be surprised by our importunity when you have cared for us so well but public faith, so essential to commercial confidence, has been violated once and traders are doubtful. This spirit of distrust has reduced our numbers and allowed the British from Bengal and the coastal traders to monopolise all the business. This has restrained commerce in general and prevented the export of Manila goods. We cannot stay here without trade to sustain us and all the places in Asia from which we buy goods for Manila are now under British domination. We fear there will be difficulties in executing our orders unless your intentions are published.
Sgd Stephen Locatelli, Petrus Everhardus Camper, etc.
Published response of the Spanish Governor of Manila:
The old case of prize-taking in 1781/82 applied laws that have since been rescinded. All vessels visiting Manila since the start of my administration have been welcomed whether they are my national allies or neutrals. We have assisted them all even-handedly and you should know our good faith. We encourage them to visit and partake of the privilege of exporting Manila goods. Is that not the reason that you Memorialists came here?
All neutrals will in future continue to have safe conduct and free conveyance of their goods from any port in India to Manila although they may have been taxed by the British Customs en route. Spanish law supports commerce and these goods will continue to be accepted here. The Memorialists may, on the faith of this public proclamation, continue to pursue their business in neutral bottoms provided there is no trace of doubt as to their neutrality.
Sat 17th Feb 1798
The Asiatic Mirror, 24th Jan – 900 chests of opium from Boglepore, Patna and Rungpore have been burned here (Calcutta) by order of the Board of Trade.
This was in pursuit of a new Company Regulation that any opium failing to reach 200 Sicca rupees per chest at auction should be destroyed to assure the reputation of the Company’s supply for quality. The new law is welcomed by the speculators at Calcutta and should help to raise prices in the Far East.
Sat 24th Feb 1798
Four Company ships – Hope, Arniston, Cirencester and Thomas Coutts – sailed directly from London to China and arrived there on 26th Dec 1797.
They are said to carry $1 million in specie for investment. Cotton is selling at 11-12 Taels per picul.15
Sat 24th Feb 1798
According to George Staunton, China’s annual revenue equates with £46 millions. On the supposed population of 200 millions, this is 5/- per head. For comparison, our Colony of Ireland pays 8/- per head, pre-Revolutionary France £1. 6s 0d while English people today pay £1.14s0d.16
Staunton says a popular British export is ‘sing-songs’ – small clockwork toys, lavishly decorated with pearls and diamonds, and costing some £800 – £1,000 a pair (the Chinese buy these things in pairs). Some of them are snuff boxes, others are music boxes. The moving parts may be a dancing couple or a bird that moves its head and wings and appears to sing a song. They are very cute and the officials love them.
Previously the main source of revenue of the Ching was a land tax but that was substituted for a poll tax by Kien Lung. There are import duties at the frontiers and transit duties between provinces. Every province has some product or manufacture that is valued in the others. These are known as Provincial Treasures and the tax derived from their transit throughout the empire is substantial. There is no tax on any of the five grains.17
Sat 17th March 1798
It is little known that the Chinese have been printing documents for ages. The quality of their press is of course inferior to ours. They write a page, then glue it to a piece of wood and cut away the unwritten paper and wood to create a block of embossed characters. This wood-block is then used for the print run. A friend of the Editor has sent him a sample of the Peking Gazette. It is printed on thin paper and stitched into double leaves to form a brochure.
An interesting item in this Peking Gazette reveals that the Chinese transport their armies in carriages. The French recently copied this to raise the siege of Dunkirk although the usual form of transport for troops is to march.
Our translation below is from the French as this document was provided by a French missionary at Peking:
Peking Gazette, October 1797 – The Kien Lung Emperor is 87 years old. He preserves his health and faculties and involves himself in the administration of Empire as before. The young Ka Hing Emperor will not reign until the death of his father. He remains an undistinguished man at Court.
There are rebellions in Szechuan, Hu Kuang and Shan Si. The Ching have inadequate Manchurian troops to deal with these insurrections and 3,000 men have been called from Mongolia. They will travel in carriages but flooded roads are delaying their progress. The Emperor is at Jehol and cannot return until the roads are repaired. Food is scarce and the silver Teal in Peking is now worth 1,200 cash.
Sat 31st March 1798
The Asia (McInnes) left Macau 10th Feb and has just arrived here. HMS Trident (64) with 14 Indiamen for Europe and two country ships Jehangir and Fairlie were in China at that time.
The two bits of interesting news from Canton are a scarcity of silver and a consequent fall in the cotton price to 10 Taels.
Sat 31st March 1798
The Madras Courier of 14th March says the Spanish fleet at Manila has put to sea. It consists of three capital ships (2 x 84s and a 74) and 3 frigates.
Sat 14th April 1798
Asiatic Mirror, 21st March - The Danish snow Duntzfelt has arrived at Calcutta from Manila. The Spanish Governor of that place has overcome his fear of an imminent British invasion and, when the snow left on 4th Feb, the fleet of Spanish warships was preparing to cruise against the British merchant fleet then at China and expected to shortly leave on the commencement of the summer monsoon.
Sat 21st April 1798
The Jehangir which arrived from China on 13th March reports the Hong merchant Gowqua is in financial difficulty and is offering to compound his debts with an 80% pay-off. He is supported by some other Hongs. The earlier reports of Pauqua’s difficulties appear incorrect. In consequence to the uncertainties over Gowqua’s payments, the market prices for all imports have fallen.
Sat 14th July 1798
Admiral Rainier is ordered to China for the protection of British trade at the request of the Select Committee there. He goes with three frigates - HMS Arrogant, Fox and Victorious.
Sat 1st Dec 1798
The Swedish factory at Macau is in mourning. Palme the Head supercargo died at the end of July 1798; then the second died at Canton on 10th August and finally the third Morras passed away on 19th August.
Sat 22nd Dec 1798
Capt John Canning has sued the Company. He bought opium at the Company’s sales but it did not accord with the muster. The Calcutta High Court found his evidence insufficiently weighty and dismissed his claim.
Sat 29th Dec 1798
HMS Intrepid convoyed the Company’s ships to Macau on 5th Nov. She brought nearly £1 million in silver in case the contraband receipts continue small. That amount of silver is more than sufficient to buy the entire year’s supply of tea. The Company is selling Bills at the same good rate as last year.
Sat 16th March 1799
Letters from Penang say opium is finally in demand again in eastern markets and the price is now $300 per chest.
Sat 23rd March 1799
A letter from Penang dated 6th Feb says a Portuguese ship has arrived from Macau with the news that a joint FrancoSpanish fleet from Manila has been cruising off the Pearl estuary in mid to late January. It comprises 5 Spanish and 2 French warships. HMS Arrogant and Virginie have gone to Macau to convoy the Indiamen back to Calcutta.
The Spanish contingent was reluctant to commence this cruise as the Governor of Manila still expects an invasion by the English. He has 2,000 European troops and has raised a force of 16,000 Filipinos as well.
Admiral Sercey, the French naval commander, was however dissatisfied with the Spanish Governor’s defensive posture. He ultimately got agreement to have the fleet mobilised and put to sea to distress British shipping in the China Seas.
Sat 23rd March 1799
Last year’s annual Manila galleon was wrecked on 23rd Sept 1798 on the return journey from Manila to Acapulco. She struck on Narantoss Rocks and was completely lost. Her frigate escort continued to Acapulco.
Sat 13th March 1799
On 11th March the Sarah arrived at Calcutta from Canton. George Cuming the 2nd of the Select Committee and James Drummond, another Company supercargo, arrived on her. Cuming got an eleven-gun salute.
They say the FrancoSpanish fleet was at Macau on 27th January. HMS Virginie was then in Taipa Roads replacing her mizzen mast while HMS Arrogant and Intrepid were off Sam Kok at the Bocca Tigris. The British ships tried to work their way to the enemy overnight but only discovered their buoys with cut cables off the Great Ladrone. On 8th Feb our East India convoy got underway with three Americans tagging along.
Cotton and opium is still hard to sell at Canton; tin and pepper are unsellable.
Sat 23rd May 1799
The Princess Royal has sailed from Bombay for Madras and Canton carrying George Cuming back to duty as 2nd supercargo of the Select.
Sat 25th April 1801
21st April 1801 – the Bombay Governor invites ship owners to quote freight rates they are willing to accept for the carriage of cargo to China. The Indiamen Henry Addington, Ocean and Nottingham will arrive here in May and be dispatched to Canton in August carrying the Company’s Bombay cottons. That is the time of departure. Interested ship owners are not required to use the Company’s remittance facility at Canton but it is available to them at the published exchange rates.
(By a later advert, ship owners using the Company’s finance get preference – commercial interest in this advertisement is greater than expected)18
Sat 23rd May 1801
The Bombay Courier Editor has received some translations of Chinese news from Peking:
Peking Gazettes 22nd 23rd April 1800:
The request of the Viceroy of Chih Li to open examination halls in Manchuria is refused. Tartars are martial people. They should learn horse-riding and use of the bow, not literary stuff. All national examinations will continue to be held only at Peking.
Peking Gazettes 28th 29th April 1800:
Kei Lung petitioned to command the army in Szechuan where he had previously served, saying he understood the country and would be victorious. We needed an officer of his rank there and permitted his request. He started as Viceroy quite well but for months he has done nothing. He stayed in town and sent off a subordinate to attack the rebels. That subordinate likewise stayed in town and sent his assistant.
This leaderless force was defeated by the rebels who might then have advanced to and captured the provincial capital had not one of their leaders celebrated a birthday with a long party. Fortunately I (the Emperor) had ordered General Te Lin Tay to leave Shensi and enter Szechuan and he defeated the rebels and captured two of their leaders. I reduced Kei Lung from the 1st to the 3rd rank but left him his command in the expectation of more diligent service.
However the rebels have now taken another city from him. He is divested of all rank and office and is to be gaoled in Chengtu. His three sons are likewise stripped of their ranks and offices. Li Pao is made Acting Viceroy of Szechuan and will investigate Kei Lung’s offences.
Peking Gazette, 28th 29th June 1800:
Ki King, Viceroy of the Two Kwang and Ki Shan, Hoppo of Canton report that Punkiqua and other Hong merchants together with Wan Yung Sze and the salt merchants have petitioned to be permitted to share the military expenses of the Emperor in the present campaign to the extent of 300,000 Taels which is the balance of their former offer of 500,000 Taels that the Emperor has not yet accepted.
We reported this offer on the occasion of the award of official positions to the Hong and Salt merchants at which time we accepted 200,000 Taels and excused them the payment of the 300,000 Taels. Now they ask to donate again.
For their convenience the Emperor allows they may draw the funds from the provincial treasury and repay it over the next six years. The Viceroy will tell Us the names of each donor and the amount of his donation.
Peking Gazette 31st July 1800:
The annals of Hong Hei show that when military law and discipline are strictly observed, the enemies of China are vigorously attacked. The conduct of each campaign in Hong Hei’s reign is exactly reported and the roles of commanders in victories and defeats is clearly shown.
Nowadays whenever an army is sent-off, it only reports victories.
All Generals and Colonels, all Viceroys and Governors, are to ensure that army reporting is scrupulously precise. Claims of undeserved merit will be punished. The army has failed to suppress the Pa Lin Ka. They are merely a turbulent tribe of Chinese. The army today is a shadow of what it was under Hong Hei – its all show and ostentation.
Victories and defeats must be reported in detail. The results are not secrets – many people know them and it will be easy to discover the Generals who misrepresent their battles. It is a particular problem in Shensi, Kanfu and Hu Kwang where the Viceroys and Governors should be extra diligent.
Peking Gazette 18th 19th April 1800:
1/ A eunuch belonging to Officer Jen Ming has been caught squeezing. Jen Ming was previously forbidden to have eunuchs. The High Court will investigate. In future only the highest officials and Princes of the Royal Family may have eunuchs. They are limited to four eunuchs each. If they have more they are to be delivered to the Court for Our service.
2/ The Viceroy of Chih Li reports that the officers sent to buy grain for the Imperial granaries have been paying unreasonably low prices and requiring the peasant farmers to bring their grain overland for considerable distances. He will investigate with his colleagues and stop this imposition on the farmers.
Sat 16th Jan 1802
The Americans seem to be moving into the China trade. When the Company’s fleet arrived at Canton in autumn 1801 it found five country ships from India and eighteen American ships from New England (Perseverance, Pacific Trader, Lovely Lass, Minerva, Dispatch, India, Mount Vernon, Thomas Russell, Connecticut, Diana, Ann & Hope, Lavinia, Aspasia, Hazard, Polly, Industry, Batley and Arab). The American ships are all quite small but their numbers are impressive.
Sat 12th June 1802
The Indiaman Walmer Castle left Portsmouth on 13th Feb and has just arrived at Bombay. She brings 28 Chinese who are returning to their own country.
Sat 25th Sept 1802
Accounts from Canton say Muslim invaders have entered China at So Che (Yarkand) and have reached Kokonor (Ching Hai), over halfway to Peking.19 They are supported by a good part of the population around Takla Makan and seem to have a well-appointed army. The Emperor has sent a force to oppose them which has reportedly obtained a signal victory.
Meanwhile in Eastern China a rare drought has emptied vast tracts of land. The people have migrated in search of food and water.
Sat 16th Oct 1802
HMS Amboinya arrived at Madras from Macau which she left on 29th May. She reports a fall in Indian cotton sale prices to 9 – 10½ Taels per picul. A month or two earlier it was selling at 18-19 Taels. This collapse caused the buyers of the former (expensive) shipments to find grounds to reject their cotton purchases and send them back to Canton for resale. At the end of April 40,000 bales arrived at Canton from Nanking (from the big national brokers to whom the Hong merchants sell).
The Hongs have little cash. They are offering payment for imports, half in cash and half in Company Bills which they endorse to the sellers.20
Sat 13th Nov 1802
The Company’s frigate Alert has arrived at Calcutta from China which she left on 22nd June. She reports the Hindustan was lost in Taipa roads in a typhoon. She had completed loading and was on the point of leaving for Calcutta. All the crew and passengers survived.
Sat 1st Jan 1803
The Carron (Stewart) arrived from China last Monday with the good news that cotton had improved to 14 Taels. The supply was totally in the hands of opulent men who were able to dictate their own terms by withholding supply when unfavourable to sell. They were however unable to withstand the effect of the new supply that arrived in October and November when 30,000 bales of last year’s stock still remained on their hands.
Opium is selling poorly and imports from Europe were equally low.
Sat 8th Jan 1803
News from Canton - A large body of men has emerged in the last few months whom we call the Illuminati.21 They identify themselves to each other by innocuous signs. They have an initiation into membership involving the exchange of blood and fraternal oaths.
There is a prophecy that a man will arise before 1804 to depose the Ching and restore the Ming dynasty. A dignitary who lives 50 miles out of Canton where the Illuminati are strong and who earlier bought official rank, encouraged his neighbours to suppose that his son was the awaited man and some thousands of peasants congregated under his banner. He had the temerity to wear the imperial yellow.
The Viceroy of Kwangtung has led an army against them and killed 5,000 of the son’s followers which procured the desertion of many thousands more. The lad was betrayed and captured and received the slicing death (formally deft knife work at the limb joints distal to proximal culminating in a fatal thrust to the heart - but it is commonly abbreviated). Since then things have been quiet. The Viceroy has not however returned immediately to Canton and it is supposed there remain dissident elements for him to contend with.
Sat 8th Jan 1803
The China market is firm. Opium is selling at $650 – 700 per chest, Bengal cotton at 16 Taels per picul and Bombay cotton at 14.
Sat 15th Jan 1803
The disturbances in Kwangtung have approached close to Canton and are preventing the dispatch of our woollens and metals up-country.
It seems the Viceroy’s efforts have had less effect than reported. As a result the prices obtainable for foreign imports has fallen.
Sat 22nd Jan 1803
A Spanish frigate from Manila to Macau was lost en route in late Oct/early Nov and the Select Committee at Canton sent a Botany Bay ship out to search. The frigate was carrying a large amount of silver and its salvage will be valuable.
Sat 29th Jan 1803
Three big ships are to be added to the China fleet this season. The Directors had allotted 15,648 tons but it is belatedly thought this will be insufficient. The new additions bring the capacity to near 20,000 tons.
Sat 29th Jan 1803
Two of the five Portuguese ships from Macau this year have arrived at Calcutta. They are the Carmo and the Pouvidor Pereira. They bring passengers M/s P V Bello, J J de Souza and J J Gomes. The ships arrived via Malacca.
Sat 29th Jan 1803
The Calcutta fleet to Manila has arrived safely. Private letters say the market for Indian goods is very depressed.
Sat 19th Feb 1803
Robert Money of the Company’s China establishment has been drowned at Calcutta. He was coming up the river in a ferry boat, escorting a treasure chest containing $30,000 of gold dust from Canton, when the boat hit a passing river barge and overturned. His body has not been found. Neither has the gold.
Sat 23rd April 1803
Notice, 23rd April – Anyone wishing to ship goods to China under the relaxation of the Company’s monopoly should send in their sealed proposals before 13th May. The China fleet is expected to start arriving at Bombay in June. No opium may be shipped. The proceeds of China-trade sales plus the freight are to be exchanged at the Company’s Treasury at Canton for 12 month Sight Bills on London at the exchange rate of 5/6d per dollar.
(advertisement is in English, Gujerati and Parsee)
Sat 14th May 1803
In response to our previous advertisement, the demand for tonnage to China has been great and the Governor-in-Council has resolved to auction whatever is available. All the Company’s usual reservations and indulgencies are continued. The auction will be on 20th May.
Sat 19th Nov 1803
Letter from Canton, 12th Aug 1803 – the pirates in the approaches to Canton River are getting bolder.
One pirate boat approached an American brig which mistook it for the pilot and was very nearly captured. They usually make a fearful sound as they approach. Fortunately the captain saw their pikes and spears in the bottoms of their boats and alerted his crew. The Captain had not visited China before and was reluctant to fire until they fired at him. After that brief exchange the Americans sailed off.
An insurrection is reported in Northern China but no Chinese is talking about it.
Thurs 3rd April 1804 Extraordinary
Report of Commodore Dance’s encounter with Admiral Linois fleet off Pulo Aor:
The Company’s returning China fleet of 16 Indiamen each carried an average £200,000 cargo. It sailed with 11 country ships with unreported cargo.
On 15th Feb Dance encountered the French fleet. He formed his ships in line ahead and hoisted his colours. The four French warships did likewise (one Dutch brig in the fleet, making five). At noon the French attacked and it seemed the rear would be cut-off from the van and the centre.
Fortunately, Capt Timmings of the Indiaman Royal George advised Dance to tack and throw his ship abreast of the French admiral. He was well supported by nearby ships. This decisive move caused Linois to waver. The action lasted 40 minutes until the French withdrew. The only fatality was a seaman on Timming’s ship. Dance ordered a pursuit for 3 hours and then resumed his course for the Malacca Straits. The fleet anchored at Malacca on 18th Feb. The country ships held a subscription and collected £1,138 for Dance which they presented with a suitable Address.
Of the 11 country ships three were from Madras and the rest from Bombay. We later heard Linois had information from some Portuguese at Macau that three of our ships had been fitted-out in China as warships, each having 60 guns and 500 men aboard. When he saw three of our fleet bearing down on him he may have assumed they were the ships he had been advised of.
Timmings is the son of the late Major Timmings of the Chatham Marines. This family has distinguished itself many times in the Royal Navy.
General Decaen, in charge of French activities in the East from the French base at Mauritius, reported to the Minister of Marine in Paris that Linois got his information on the sailing dates of the fleet and numbers of ships in the convoy from the captains of neutral ships departing Macau before the Company’s fleet. Linois said he was convinced that Dance was inviting battle because he (Dance) concealed his second deck of cannon until the moment of engagement.
Sat 2nd June 1804
An American brig, recently arrived from Batavia, reports that Admiral Linois arrived there and reported an engagement with 2 capital ships and 3 British frigates convoying a fleet of Indiamen and that the superior force of the enemy obliged him to withdraw. This must refer to his encounter with Dance’s fleet off Pulo Aor.
Sat 29th Dec 1804
The Company’s China fleet under Commodore Dance has reached England. Dance is knighted. The Directors have rewarded him with 2,200 guineas; Timmings gets 1,100 guineas. All the other Captains get 600 guineas and the officers get some money as well. Even midshipmen and petty officers are included as well as a passenger, Lt Fowler of the Royal Navy, whom Dance consulted over tactics. The total presents are £50,000.
The value of the hulls and cargoes is being stated to have been £8 millions (must include some valuable stuff on the private ships or perhaps the Company has used its sale price rather than purchase price for value). If this convoy had been captured it would have severely embarrassed the Company. Its just the sort of thing that could lose the war for England.
The poet Hayley has written two lines on the event:
I honour the trusty and brave Captain Dance
The merchant who beat the Marengo of France.
Sat 9th March 1805
Linois is in trouble over his failure to capture the homebound China fleet with their rich cargo of tea, silk and silver. Napoleon has discovered that the same ship that brought the news of Linois’ failure also carried $100,000 belonging to the Admiral. It has been deposited in the national Treasury for the time being. Linois’ main line of defence is that the Dutch Admiral at Batavia failed to arrive in time to support him.
Sat 29th Dec 1804
The Anna (Smith) has arrived at Calcutta from China. She reports that the rebellion in Kwangtung is still raging but the Viceroy seems unconcerned.
Sat 12th Jan 1805
Statement of the annual estimated costs and charges of produce and the nett profits on sales at the Company’s auctions in England in £ millions from March 1799 – Mar 1804:22
|
|
India goods |
China goods |
||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
- 1799 1800 1801 1802 1803 1804 |
Costs & Charges 4.2 2.9 3.3 2.2 1.8 1.9 |
Nett profits 3.6 3.6 3.1 3.1 2.2 2.4 |
Costs & Charges 2.8 3.2 2.9 2.8 2.9 3.0 |
Nett profits 3.7 3.8 3.6 3.5 3.8 3.6 |
||
Sat 19th Jan 1805
The Bombay country ship Page has been sold to the Chinese Government. She is to be fitted out as a cruiser against the pirates infesting the Pearl estuary and delta.
Vol 1 No 1 - 8th November 1827
This newspaper will provide accurate ‘prices current’ and news of trading partners and of the Chinese. There will be shipping information and translations of Chinese texts. The paper will be published fortnightly.
Sat 26th Jan 1805
The country ship La Paix (Wright) has arrived Calcutta from China on 26th Dec. She reports Prices Current when she left were:
|
Bengal cotton Bombay cotton Tin Opium |
14.5 – 14.8 Taels per bale 12.5 – 13.0 Taels per bale 150 Taels per picul $1,350 – $1,360 per chest. |
Sat 16th Feb 1805
The Portuguese ship Luconia sailed from Macau 3rd Nov 1804 and has just arrived at Calcutta. She brings $400,000 Spanish, proceeds of trade.
Sat 23rd Feb 1805
The Portuguese ship Rosario arrived at Trincomalee on 15th Jan from China bringing the Governor of Macau, Jose Joaquim de Souza, and his family.
Sat 23rd Feb 1805
The Lord Castlereagh (McFarlane) has broken the speed record for China voyages. She left Bombay on 15th Sept passed through the Straits of Malacca to Palawan coast to Manila and thence to Whampoa arriving 4th Nov (7 weeks).
She remained 4 days and returned to the Sand Heads on 13th Feb – that is under four months for the round voyage.
Sat 2nd March 1805
Several of the China fleet have arrived back at Calcutta. They say trade at Canton has been profitable this season. Sugar supply is reduced owing to the failure of the crops (or an effect of the insurrection) and little was available for purchase. Cotton and opium sold at record prices.
Formerly we had nothing the Chinese wanted and we had to pay specie for our tea and silk, but the supposition of economists that China would swallow the silver of the west was confounded this year. Great quantities of both gold and silver have been exported from Canton. The great increase in sales of Indian cotton and opium has changed the pattern of trade and the lack of Chinese sugar exports increased the amount of specie we have taken out of China this year. If this continues for a few years it might reduce the value of precious metals in Europe.
The problem of piracy has worsened. They infest every creek between Macau and Canton. An American ship (usually small) going up the river was attacked by many pirate boats but successfully fought off the attack. The pirates are most densely concentrated at the mouth of the Broadway.23 There are innumerable canals through which they escape with the booty. They have evolved a new scheme of ransom, They keep only a few hostages for security.
The Portuguese have an old contract with the Canton government to provide two ships at Macau for anti-piracy patrols. These are supposed to protect the river trade but have been neither adequate nor effective. The Viceroy has bought some European ships for the same purpose and has also fitted out a fleet of armed Chinese junks to cruise against the pirates.
The increase in piracy reflects the disordered internal state of China. There are rebellions in the north which have attracted the attention of government and whenever that happens the unaffected areas slip into anarchy too.
The Company had nine (named) huge Indiamen at Canton in 1804. Of the country trade that year, four Bengal ships, one Madras ship, three Bombay ships and nine Bombay/Madras ships were involved (Bombay ships mostly export cotton whilst Bengal ships carry both cotton and opium.) The total tonnage of English ships to Whampoa was over 15,000 tons. The Americans sent 36 (named) ships to Canton in 1804 but they are mostly 200-300 tons and totalled slightly less than 10,000 tons. A couple of Swedish ships and a single Dane turned up this year.
Sat 9th March 1805
The remainder of the China fleet has arrived. They took the inner passage between the Paracels and the Vietnam coast which has never been fully charted and several bottomed on the shoal (van Holland’s Garden) near Pulo Cecir de Mer - its over 6 miles in diameter. HMS Grampus and the Indiaman Canton were heavily damaged.
The best prices are being paid in Canton for imports of bird’s nests, camphor, Bombay carnelians, ivory, nutmeg, mercury and tortoise-shell. Opium is firm at $1,350 per chest.
Nankeen silks are selling at 360 Taels the bale. Hyson tea is 58 Taels; hyson skin 28 Taels, pu-erh 12 Taels.
Sat 30th March 1805
Macau, March 6th – 350 Chinese emigrants have embarked on one of our Indiamen at Macau for Bencoolen where they are to supervise the cultivation of the spice plants we obtained from the Dutch Colonies. The Chinese are skilful market gardeners.
Sat 1st June 1805
The Friendship sailed from Macau for Cochin China but sprang a leak and became totally water-logged. She had to be run aground off Hainan Island. All the cargo was damaged by water. One man was drowned getting ashore.
The rest of the officers and crew were well cared for by the Magistrate of the island and junks were provided to move all of them to the mainland. They travelled overland to Canton arriving 17th Dec. Every man received 30 Cash per day for his needs.
Sat 2nd Nov 1805
Russia is sending an embassy to China. It is expected to stay in Peking for three years. The ambassador is Count Narischkin who will be paid 60,000 Roubles a year. M de Baikov is appointed Secretary of Legation. Another embassy is planned to Tibet. The embassies will include numerous scientists.
Sat 21st Dec 1805
News from China:
The Daniel (Fraser) has arrived at Calcutta from China and reports the pirates in the approaches to the river have become very numerous and formidable. They attempted to take HMS Harrier and attacked an armed Portuguese brig too. HMS Harrier and HMS Phaeton were at Macau. The pirates are selling protection – they burn villages that do not pay and have approached very near to Canton itself.
The Thomas Henchman (Hodges) has also arrived from China and reports his cargo of Bengal cotton sold for 14.5 Taels a bale.
Sat 18th Jan 1806
Letter from Canton:
The pirates at Canton are in control of a large part of the river delta. In early October they burned several villages in sight of Whampoa and dared the officials to stop them. The Security Merchants requested ship commanders to send as many armed men as they could spare to protect the factories at Canton. It is widely said the inhabitants of the southern provinces are generally dissatisfied with government and willing to revolt. The government response has been to issue pompous Edicts describing the arrests and executions of pirates and warning the populace not to break the law. These are published almost every day.
Recently a junk which came down the coast for shopping in Macau was taken in sight of the Bar Fort24 as it departed with a cargo worth 200,000 Taels. The alternative to distributing our goods by sea is to ship them through the inland waterways. The infestation of pirates on inland waterways decreases the further one travels from the coast but unfortunately the prevalence of Customs officials increases on a inverse ratio and they are as bad as pirates.
When the pirates come close to Canton, the officials fit-out some boats for counter-attack and that tends to keep the pirates at bay. What the pirates would really like is to fire and loot Canton – there is more wealth there than in all the rest of the province – and they are coming closer to the suburbs. The merchants are securing their property in safer places but the officials seem less concerned. When the foreigners landed 200 armed men from the ships to tackle the pirates around Whampoa, we just did it without permit or passport and the government did not know if we were landing to help or hinder them. The Canton government does not attempt to physically control its people – it publishes Edicts for their direction and supposes they are sufficiently mature to control themselves.
There are now four fleets sent out by the Viceroy to ‘find and annihilate’ the pirates. Each government fleet totals about 40 - 50 boats with each boat having 6 carriage guns, 30 sailors and 60 soldiers. It is difficult for the commanders of these government fleets to confront the pirate fleets which are generally much larger. The foreign traders have little expectation of the Canton officials dealing effectively with pirates – we prefer to improve the defences on our own ships and warn our crews to take care. Care is imperatively necessary – we hear the pirates are quite likely to eat some parts of their captives (the gall fluid of a brave opponent diluted in wine is particularly esteemed - the gall bladder is supposed to be the seat of courage).
Sat 1st Feb 1806
George Baring, the Manager of the Company’s Agency House in China, has arrived Calcutta on the Lord Castlereagh. Cotton is selling at 15 Taels the bale at Canton but opium is down at $1,150 per chest. Sales are still profitable.
Sat 8th Feb 1806
The last China fleet to London (arrived summer 1805) brought 233,330 chests (24,657,495 lbs) of tea, 3,475 bales (487,253 lbs) of raw silk, 1,143,487 lbs of Indian pepper, 175,000 pieces of Nankeens and 9,000 quintals of Mocha coffee.
Sat 22nd March 1806
The Betsey (Dundas) has arrived at Calcutta from Penang and China. Dundas says he sold his opium in the usual way but the Chinese buyers later rejected 200 chests and the Macau brokers returned them to him to bring back to India.
The retail price at Macau fell from $1,350 to $850 per chest and has alarmed all Calcutta. On maturer reflection, knowing the opium market is subject to endless deceptions and frauds, the market quickly recovered.
At the last Company auction on 12th Feb, Bihar sold at 1,570 Sicca Rupees per chest and Benares at 1,520 (i.e. approaching $800 per chest).
Sat 5th April 1806
Letter from Canton of 31st Jan – Indian cotton continues to sell well due to the insurrections in China and the non-availability of the local harvest. Bengal is selling at 14 – 15 Taels a bale and Bombay at 13 – 13½ depending on quality. Opium is depressed at $1,150 the chest. The Americans have brought Fijian sandalwood this year which has sold well.
Sat 19th April 1806
Two Russian frigates, last from Japan, have touched at Canton for provisions. They are on a voyage of discovery. The Russians are supposed to connect with China via Kiakhta (Cakurtu) and the Canton Viceroy has charged them double duties.
They refused to pay and the Viceroy has referred the matter to Peking for a ruling. This delay will allow the Russians to remain for a few months and check out Canton and Macau.
Sat 26th April 1806
In the last trading season at Canton (1805/06) there were 50 American ships at Whampoa that loaded about 8,000 – 10,000 tons of export cargo, much of which finds its way to the European market. This season the Eugenie was freighted to America with nearly 800 tons of tea at a rate of $100 per ton.
Canton is said to be full of American adventurers, many of whom retire after a few year’s trade with handsome fortunes. At present there are over a dozen Americans who have been in residence for a couple of years and made great capital. The Americans represent a challenge to our global monopoly of colonial goods.
Its not just in China – they are everywhere. Even the coffee trade of Mocha receives their attention. In the quarter Nov 1805 – Jan 1806 twenty ships visited Mocha for trade of which ten were American, eight Arab, and one each, Portuguese and English. The Company’s purchases of coffee are done at Bombay to which port the Arabs bring supply for trans-shipment to our Indiamen.
Sat 28th June 1806
The two Russian ships that visited Macau are on a political and commercial mission. One belongs to the Tsar and the other to the Russian American Company that has the Tsar’s Charter to trade along the American west coast. The costs of the voyage for both ships are all being paid by the Tsar. They arrived from the American northwest coast under the command of Capt Krumstern. They had tried to offload an ambassador onto the Japanese but, apart from a few cordial interviews, they made no progress and he is still on board.
When they arrived at Macau the Chinese were curious to know who they were. Once they were satisfied the strangers were not warlike, they were invited up the river. They had a cargo of furs from the American northwest which sold well. Their commercial arrangements are made by a supercargo provided by the Russian America Company. They bought a large amount of nankeens, some high-quality tea and a small amount of silk cloth. The Tsar wants to open maritime trade between Western Russia and China. The Russians drink much tea but the price of supply via Kiakhta at St Petersburg is excessive compared to the maritime supply at Hamburg.
The Viceroy has sent a rescript to Peking to report their arrival but he has allowed them to appoint a security merchant and buy and sell in the interim. He told them that, having entered the river, they could not leave until the Emperor’s response arrived. Capt Krumstern did not understand the significance of this and applied for a Port Clearance certificate on completing loading. This produced a visit by two Chinese war junks to remind the Captain. The Hong merchants were so alarmed they stopped supplying provisions and water to the ships for two days.
The other foreigners have commended Krumstern to protest the Viceroy’s act in order to establish his ‘prickliness’ and get more consensual treatment in future. Krumstern has accordingly sent in a Protest referring to the potentially serious consequences for the relationship of the two countries, etc, etc, and again demanded his Grand Chop. The response from Peking was to limit Russian trade to Kiakhta, the place established for it, and to permit no extension of that right to Canton. This Edict arrived at about the time the Russians left so no problems arose from it. The Viceroy and Hong merchants might have wished the Russians to trade at Canton but the other foreigners were not so keen.
The Chinese seemed dismayed by the good relations between the Russians and the English (they are allies in Europe now) and enquired if the Russians had found their way to Canton via England.
An overland embassy from St Petersburg to Peking set-out last year but its arrival at Peking has not yet been reported in Canton.
Sat 5th July 1806
There is a perception amongst the foreign merchants at Canton that the disordered state of society in southern China might produce a shortage of grain this year. It is expected that rice shipments will be made from Calcutta very soon.
Sat 26th July 1806
A report from China says all rice imports received before October this year will be allowed in without any measurement fee of the ship. Several ship owners are said to have taken advantage of the incentive.
Sat 30th Aug 1806
For sale - 1,600 cwt of sandalwood from the Company’s forest at Canara. To be sold in lots of 20 Candies each (588 lbs per Candy). Very suitable for the China trade. Payment in cash or Treasury Bills. Goods to be cleared from the Bunder warehouse within a month.
Sat 27th Sept 1806
The Asia (Smith) left Canton on 2nd July and has just returned to Calcutta. Smith says the first Bengal rice ships got $5 per bag but it quickly dropped-off and rice was selling at $2 by the time of the Asia’s departure.
Sat 11th Oct 1806
The Directors have shipped four wagons of silver dollars from London to Portsmouth in early May to be taken on the China ships for Canton trade next season. The Chinese merchants pay a premium on the Carolus dollar (called ‘olo head’ dollar in Canton) that makes the freight worthwhile.
Sat 20th Dec 1806
The Gillwell has arrived from China with the news that opium is selling slowly at $810 a chest and rice is firm at $3 a bag.
Sat 20th Dec 1806
Early on 25th May 1806 the Travers was in the East India Dock at London when a sound was heard from the fore hatch and Ah Kum, the cook, was found decapitated within. Ah Kau confessed. He said Ah Kum had deceived him.
A sentence of death was quickly obtained from the Admiralty Court but execution was delayed while the file was seen by the Privy Council.
Ah Kau was hanged at the low-water mark and the body handed-over to his friends. Both men had joined the Travers in Calcutta.
Sat 31st Jan 1807
The Russian Embassy to China has been coolly received at the Chinese frontier. Many obstacles were placed in their way to deter them from proceeding further and the Tsar ultimately ordered his Ambassador to return.
He says he has received sufficient marks of friendship from Peking to assure him of the goodwill between the countries. He also notes the friendly treatment his two ships received at Canton.
Sat 14th Feb 1807
News from Canton:
The Fijian sandalwood that the Americans discovered and took to Canton, which adversely affected the Company’s own sales of Canara sandalwood, has turned out to be an inferior product and the Company’s Select Committee says its not much valued by the Chinese.
The famine in China has been ended by an excellent harvest in Autumn 1806. About 30 rice ships from Bengal sold their cargoes at satisfactory prices but late arrivals found no market and lost money.
Bombay cotton is in demand and maintaining its price but all China exports, except tea, are expensive.
The Select Committee at Canton has bought the small Bombay ship Prime to conduct surveys of the China coast. The overt purpose of the ship is to hunt pirates.
Sat 21st Feb 1807
The Fortitude (Hughes) is taking a cargo of Chinese settlers to Trinidad. It called into St Helena for provisions. St Helena has lost all its cargo-workers – they could not be deterred from joining Popham’s South American expedition. Fortunately, the emigrants willingly assisted in off-loading the ships in port.25
Sat 7th March 1807
Duncan Forbes of M/S Hatton & Forbes has left China on the Jehangir and has just arrived at Penang. He reports that the Macau Governor has died.
Sat 7th March 1807
James Drummond and J B Urmston, two of the Company’s Select Committee at Canton, arrived at Calcutta on 8th Feb.
Sat 28th March 1807
George Baring and his wife are going to Penang on the Lord Melville. He is the man managing the Company’s Agency business at Canton. The couple will travel on from there to China.26
Sat 25th April 1807
On 21st April the Portuguese ship Carmo sailed from Calcutta for Macau with a cargo of 1,000 chests of opium, 600 bales of cotton, besides piecegoods and others.27
Sat 16th May 1807
The General Wellesley (Ferguson) has arrived at Calcutta from China. The Portuguese merchant A. Barretto and a few Armenians returned as passengers from China on this ship. She left Macau on 1st March at which date opium was selling $950 – $1,100 per chest.
At Penang, where she touched on her return, opium was $600 nominal with no buyers.
The Anna (Smith) has also arrived Calcutta from China. She reports a fight between English seamen and Chinese at Canton in early March in which a Chinese was killed. Trade was then stopped and the murderer was required to be surrendered for judgement.
Sat 16th May 1807
The Fortitude (Hughes) arrived at Trinidad on 18th Oct 1806 with 191 settlers from southern China. Governor Hislop proclaimed that their arrival would introduce a new free race of farmers whose interests would naturally attach to the European population. Hislop urged kindness and friendship be shown to the new arrivals in order that they will spread good news to their countrymen and promote further emigration.28
Sat 27th June 1807
The Marchioness Wellesley (Gibson) left China on 25th March and has just arrived at Calcutta. The trade stoppage, for the murder of a Chinese by our seamen, was continuing at the time of the ship’s departure. The circumstances of this murder are as follows:
A group of 30+ sailors from the Neptune Indiaman were allowed ashore for rest and recreation at Canton early in March. They provoked a fight with some Chinese youths. The following day 2,000 – 3,000 Chinese assembled outside the Company’s factory wherein was Captain Buchanan of the Neptune. They called him out to explain himself and threw stones, etc when he did not appear. It had been supposed they would soon disperse but they remained camped outside the Company’s factory overnight and this was inconvenient to the Company’s staff.
The Select accordingly armed a body of seamen with sticks and sent them out to disperse the crowd. The charge surprised the Chinese and many fell and were beaten by sailors or trampled by fleeing people. Having dispersed the crowd, the Company resumed its usual business.
The next day it was said that a Chinese in the crowd had died of injuries sustained in the sailors’ charge. He had been hit on the head and had been able to return to his home but had then deteriorated and died in the night.
The Company assessed this was insufficient to constitute murder under English law and supposed the death could be adjusted by a payment of compensation to the deceased’s next-of-kin. After a few days, before the Company’s compensation had been accepted, a formal demand was made by the Viceroy of the Two Kwang for the surrender of the responsible sailor. The Company said this was too difficult as the sailors had beaten people left and right and could not remember whom they had injured. Aware that the Ching penal code requires the innocent be distinguished from the guilty, the Company sought to establish that the guilty man could not be identified and thus avoid responsibility for the death.
The Viceroy was not so easily rebuffed. Mow Qua, the security merchant for the Neptune, was arrested and his property sealed by the Hoppo (effectively preventing his Hong from transacting business for the duration – it concerns the foreigners for their imports are stored in his warehouse.). Mow Qua was required to sign an undertaking to the government to produce the guilty man within ten days. All other trade with the Company’s ships at Whampoa was then stopped pending for the surrender of the murderer.
The Company’s Select was supposed to dispatch the fleet to London by end March or early April at the latest. That is a more important consideration for them than Chinese law enforcement. They have proposed that they load all the other ships first and just leave the Neptune’s trade stopped until the matter is resolved. They have also requested that Roberts, one of the Select, be permitted to go to Peking to make representations there.
The Select Committee leads the British community at Canton and Britain has the bulk of Chinese export trade. If the Select makes concessions to the Chinese they may raise further demands until we have become like beggars imploring their trade. In that event, they will not respect us. Pursuing this train of thought, it is consequently being argued that our better course is to make a stand to assert the justice of uninterrupted trade. It was unanimously agreed that we cannot surrender a suspect as he will certainly be executed.
Sat 8th Aug 1807
Mr Mrs Baring and brother George (the Company’s commission Agent at Canton) have left Penang for Canton on 18th May. They are in a hurry due to the unsettled state of Canton trade since the murder. The Margaret of Calcutta has also left for China with a ‘valuable cargo’ on board.
Sat 29th Aug 1807
The Select Committee at Canton has continued to withhold the suspect involved in the murder case. He has been identified as Edward Sheen and is being held in La Palacio at Macau (the Company’s summer palace). He admits to wounding a Chinese whilst drunk. The Select has obtained the Canton Government’s agreement to discharge Sheen’s offence by payment of a fine. They are said to await ratification of the agreement from Peking.
Sat 29th Aug 1807
Excerpt from Barrow’s Travels:
In 1774 three brothers killed the King of Cochin China and his family and installed themselves as rulers of the country. The King of Tong King objected and the brothers attacked and dethroned him too. He fled to Peking and claimed the protection that was due to a vassal. A Chinese army was sent against Cochin China but was driven back, nearly to Canton. The officer in charge of this extensive defeat (he lost half his army) reported a series of spectacular victories to Peking whilst at the same time indicating the merit of the usurper and the worthlessness of the dethroned King of Tong King. He cogently developed this into a change of imperial policy whereby Peking supported the three brothers and one of them was accepted as the ruler of a combined Tongking and Cochin China. That was in 1779.
The Jesuits were already involved in Vietnam and had routinely patronised the ex-King and his family as their invariable route to influence. They were now out of power. The Catholics hid the Royal Family throughout the period they were being sought. They secured the help of several European ship captains whose vessels were more powerful than the Vietnamese ships. When the search for the ex-King was ended, the Catholics brought his family back to the capital where they were joyfully proclaimed by the people.
This attempt to restore the monarchy failed and the King was again forced to flee with 1,200 followers, including his Catholic advisers, to an island off the coast. He then found the court of Thailand was supportive and he helped that King to defeat the Burmese but the Thai King’s gratitude was brief.
Ultimately his Jesuit friends sought the help of the King Louis XVI of France and took to Paris one of the King’s sons as his representative. They arrived in 1787 and concluded a treaty whereby Louis XVI was to supply 20 warships, five French regiments and two regiments of local troops to act under the King of Cochin China’s control and recover his domains. A sum of silver was also paid to Cochin China to fund the attempt. In return France was to receive the sovereignty of the Bay and peninsula of Turon in perpetuity together with its nearby islands.
Before the Jesuits could start war they were thwarted by the French governor of Pondicherry who involved himself of his own volition. The priests continued to Cochin China, arriving in 1790 to find their friend the King again in possession of his capital. By 1793 the King had recovered a good part of his previous lands, including Turon. By 1800 he was strong enough to contemplate an invasion of Tongking.
Sat 17th Oct 1807
18th Sept - The Governor General has ordered the Select Committee at Canton to issue no Bills on London this 1807/08 season, except to the Company’s ship commanders in respect of their own privileged trade.
The country traders may have Bills on Bengal or Bombay only.29
Sat 12th Dec 1807
A Chinese passenger, who has just arrived on the brig Tweed from Borneo has reported a fraud that the merchants in the states of the Rajahs of Sambas, Mompasia and Pontiana adopt of which we should be aware.
They use brass and silver filings to bulk-up the gold dust they offer in exchange for our goods. This could explain the losses some of our merchants have discovered on assay.
Sat 16th Jan 1808
The Jehangir left China on 6th Nov and has arrived Madras 23rd Dec. She reports opium is selling there at $1,400 per chest.
Sat 30th Jan 1808
The Indiaman Albion (Robinson) caught fire at Whampoa when she was almost fully loaded for her return voyage. The fire was detected, the ship run aground and the cargo largely saved. It is hoped the smoke and water-damaged raw silks and piecegoods will fetch half price.
The Company had £1.3 millions in silver on board, proceeds of sale of Bills, which was being taken down river for trans-shipment to HMS Modeste for carriage to Calcutta. It was all saved. No private treasure was on board.30
Sat 6th Feb 1808
On 20th Nov 1807 the Company’s Treasury at Macau was quoting 5/7d per Dollar for Bills on London at 730-days Sight and 5/4d per Dollar on one year Bills.
Sat 5th March 1808
The Milford has arrived from China bringing Father Marcello de Gradisea from Macau to Madras
Sat 12th March 1808
A Chinese junk Chamchin has arrived at Calcutta under the command of a Portuguese pilot. Junks are common at Batavia, Malacca and Penang, but they seldom come as far west as British Indian ports for trade.
Sat 7th May 1808
Advertisement – Last year the Bombay Insurance Society agreed with the merchants to a 5% rate on goods from Bombay to China (plus 1% for harbour risks of loading) and reminds customers that these rates apply to ships convoyed by HM frigates. If any insured ship separates from the convoy and sustains a loss, that Master will have to establish the separation was unintentional.
The Society suspects that the recent total loss of the Albion by fire at Whampoa was due to the inclusion of fireworks and oiled-paper umbrellas in her lading. ‘We expect members to avoid these predictably dangerous items,’ it says. If losses continue from this supposed cause, we will introduce a restriction on the cover.
Sgd John Forbes, Secretary. In English and Persian.
Sat 28th May 1808
The Company’s ships now arriving from China under convoy of HMS Bombay have brought £1.5 millions in specie. It’s the most we have ever taken out of China in one season. No wonder the Company was not selling Bills to the country trade. Opium is selling in Macau at $1,300 per chest.
Sat 25th June 1808
For sale – 21 maunds of Surat sandalwood for sale by tender. Payment can be made here or into our Treasury at Canton (in which latter case, interest of 8% per annum from date of delivery to your ship here to date of payment in Canton will be added).
Sat 6th Aug 1808
Government Notice, Bombay Castle, 8th Aug – applications to resort to China and thence to London for the recovery of health (available to officers of staff rank) has increased so much that government has withdrawn the concession.
In future, voyages for health will be approved on the same terms as voyages to St Helena and the Cape. Capt E S Clifton, who has permission for a voyage to China, has agreed to withdraw his application.
Sat 27th Aug 1808
The Mercury has arrived at Calcutta from China and reports opium is selling at about $1,200 per chest.
A small American brig arrived this season from Mauritius with 100 chests of prize opium bought from the French administrators of that island. This is the first time Americans have traded in Company opium.
The average sale prices per chest at the Company’s auctions between July 1807 – Mar 1808 equates with $882.
There has been a partial drought in south China and the rice harvest is expected to be small. The wholesale price has risen to $4.50 per bag.
Sat 17th Sept 1808
Surrey Assizes – Daly v Rolles
The plaintiff was a young midshipman on HMS Lion and the defendant is the Captain. The frigate recently took the British embassy to China and then stood-by in the Pearl River estuary for its return. Whilst there, the plaintiff complains Rolles deposited him on Lintin Island31 and left him to find his own way back to England.
Pearson, another midshipman, said on 5th - 6th May 1807 HMS Lion was anchored off Lintin awaiting the assembly of the departing fleet of East Indiamen. Capt Rolles returned on board from a visit to Canton and directed the 1st Lieutenant Peel to take Midshipman Daly and his chest to any ship in the convoy he wished. Daly had neither money nor friends on any of the ships and wished to remain on HMS Lion. Rolles insisted and dropped him on the beach at Lintin, an island then in the possession of pirates, according to the pleadings.
Charles Matson the purser gave evidence. He understood Daly had been turned-out of the ship for contemptuous behaviour to Rolles. He recalled Daly objected to the entry Rolles made in his (Daly’s) Discharge Book because it named Lintin as the place of discharge. Thomas Haly, the Master at Arms heard Daly say he did not know what he had done to be turned-out and Rolles replied ‘you have said enough and out the ship you must go’. Duncan Murphy, Master of HMS Lion, heard Rolles tell Daly his conduct was such he could not remain on board. He heard Daly say he had no money or friends in China and Rolles reply that he could not stay on board.
Lt James Peel gave evidence for Rolles. In mid March he went onto the quarter deck and heard Daly speak loudly to Lt Eaton, the watch officer. Peel ordered Daly to be silent. Eaton told Peel in explanation that Daly had been off-deck during his duty time and had been insolent when reprimanded. Daly continually tried to speak even though ordered three times to be silent. Then Daly questioned whether the two lieutenants were gentlemen. Both lieutenants understood that as a challenge to their honour. That was the main offence.
On another occasion Daly was ordered to take a boat ashore for provisions but he was slow to respond and declined to walk faster when ordered to do so. Again, towards the end of April, Peel ordered Daly to keep watch for a boat that would come from the shore at night, but it was Peel himself who saw the boat first, evidencing that Daly was not attending to his duty. On that occasion Peel reported Daly to Lt Thomas Graham, the watch officer, who had him arrested until Rolles should return to the ship which event occurred on 1st May.
Graham said Daly transferred to the frigate from HMS Greyhound when HMS Lion was at Penang and he discovered very quickly that he was a disrespectful junior officer.
Midshipman Todd took Daly in a boat to the beach at Lintin. He warned Daly he should get aboard one of the merchant ships or he would be robbed or murdered.
Capt Richardson of the Albion East Indiaman said Daly came aboard his ship from the Arniston East Indiaman after spending a night on Lintin. He agreed to carry him back to England. His messing cost £30 - £60 and he used the boatswain’s cabin which rented for £85 for the voyage. He said that whilst the East India fleet is at Lintin he thought there was no danger from pirates.
The Judge in his summing-up, said Daly’s offensive language to the officers was a crime for which the punishment is death. His other acts were disrespectful. He was guilty of acts that might foreseeably bring about his court martial. On the other hand Rolles had put him ashore alone on an island. The jury awarded Daly £450 damages which will largely go to repaying the costs of his passage home.32
Sat 24th Sept 1808
In consideration of his assistance with the Canton Government in the recent case in which a Chinese was killed by an Englishman (the Thomas Sheen case), the Directors have made Sir George Staunton their Chinese Interpreter on a handsome salary. This is the second time Staunton has saved an Englishman from Chinese law.
Sat 8th Oct 1808
The country ship Margaret (Kitson) has arrived at Calcutta from Canton and reports sale prices for cotton there are nominal at 13 Taels 5 mace per picul but no purchasers and some 24,000 bales in stock.
There is also 2,000 chests of opium on hand offered at $1,200 but, with this year’s crop being dispatched from India, that price is certain to fall.
Sat 5th Nov 1808
The Commodore of the Company’s naval service has given a dinner to Drummond, President of the Select at Macau, at the London Tavern in recognition of the help he has habitually given ship owners in China.
Sat 10th Dec 1808
The country ship Canton (Falconer) arrived at Calcutta from China on 7th Nov. Between mid-June and 18th Aug (two months) some 400 chests of opium were sold in China for an average $1,000 each. Remaining stock is about 3,500 chests.
Bombay cotton was selling at that time at 13 Taels the bale; Bengal cotton was not selling but the asking price was 12 – 12½ Taels.
Sat 31st Dec 1808
In March 1808 the Discovery left Macau for the Paracels. Here is a report of the voyage:
On 16th March we arrived at the Amphitrite Islands (Paracels) and saw a coconut tree on the western-most island. These islands are made of white sand and coral and are covered with low brush. They are reminiscent of some Red Sea islands, particularly the Asakows. A few islands, like Lincoln’s Island, afford water sufficient for a small ship.
On the eastern-most Paracels we saw a huge Chinese junk stranded on the coral and many people waving to us from the nearby sands. We approached to ½ mile in the late afternoon but the wind got-up and we moved away for the night. Next morning we moved round to leeward of them. The wind continued strong. We anchored in 15 fathoms and sent our boats ashore. The people were starving and fought to get on the boats. By 20th March we had them all on board (360 in the Discovery and 200 in the Antelope). They had been stranded 3-4 days before we arrived and had only dried fruit to eat and no water. About 25 of them had already left the island in a tank and it later transpired that 14 survived that desperate voyage to Turon. We discovered this because the captain postponed our survey to land all these people at Turon first and we met up with the first party when we arrived there. It’s a port on the coast of Cochin China about 120 miles from the Amphitrites.
About 8 miles east of the Paracels is Woody Island which has thick vegetation and some Chinese fishermen build and occupy temporary huts there whilst they gather beche-de-mer. When we returned from Turon we hired one of the Chinese on Woody Island as a pilot. He had been visiting the area for 25 years. He certainly knew his way around and accurately described the Comet and Intrepid (the two India ships sent to survey the Paracels that had been lost) which he said had called at the islands for water.
There are vast flocks of seabirds on these islands that do not fear man. We caught a great many and the gulls are good eating.
On 4th July we returned to Macau and anchored in Taipa Roads.
Sat 14th Jan 1809
The Surat Castle arrived at Calcutta from China on 5th Nov followed by the Macalister on 15th Nov. They left China before trade was stopped and report there are three American ships in the river which have remained there a long time, apparently awaiting owner’s instructions in respect of Jefferson’s embargo.33
Sat 25th Feb 1809
Advertisement – An invitation for subscriptions for an English translation of the moral axioms of Confucius with a commentary by the Chinese philosopher ‘Chee Hee’. Translator Joshua Marshman and his son (assisted by Johannes Lassar).
Marshman and his two sons and his other pupils have been studying Chinese for the last two years. In the language examinations at Serampore on 10th Feb 1808 before the Revs David Brown and W Carey, Marshman recited the 8,000 characters of Volume One of the Axioms of Confucius to the satisfaction of the examiners. This proposed publication will be in two volumes each of 600 pages at 64 Rupees per volume.
If the subscription is successful, it will be followed by a translation of the Imperial Dictionary of Hong Hee (the Hong Hei Emperor) in 32 volumes. This dictionary is reputed to contain every Chinese character.
Sat 18th March 1809
Mrs Baring and her children, together with George Baring, the Company’s Commission Agent in China, have arrived at Calcutta from Macau in the Portuguese ship Ouvidor Pereira.
Sat 22nd April 1809
Our recent creation of and alliance with the new junta as the government of Spain has ensured that Manila is open to British Indian commerce.
Our piecegoods are in demand but sales must be completed before October or November. At about that time the annual treasure ship from Acapulco arrives and all Manila capital is absorbed in preparations for loading local produce on it.
Sat 3rd June 1809
Canton trade news:
Bengal cotton is unsellable at Canton on account of both the over-supply and the doubtful quality for the last 2-3 years. The last sales of Bengal were at 11-12 Taels per picul. The Hong merchants have some 70,000 bales of Bengal and Bombay cotton in stock and can take no more.
Opium is satisfactory and the stock is small pending arrival of the new crop from this January’s Calcutta sales - Patna is selling at $1,050 and Benares $1,000. A great difficulty in China trade continues to be the scarcity of silver which the Americans are no longer bringing due to their embargo.
Sat 1st July 1809
Advertisement, 20th June 1809 - The Company is offering the country trade 500-600 tons of space on the China ships Neptune, True Briton, Scaleby Castle and Cumberland in equal proportions on each ship. Pay freight in Bombay on loading or to the Select at Canton within 30 days of arrival.
Sat 29th July 1809
The Directors have sent 30 copies of a chart of the Pearl River Estuary based on surveys recently done by the Company’s cruisers whilst on the China station.
The chart shows the harbours and the channel from Lintin to the Bocca Tigris.
The chart, with its attached plans and memoir, are permitted for sale to Country captains at 25 Bombay Rupees per copy.
Sat 2nd Sept 1809
A merchant sought to bring a quantity of Malwa opium into Bombay but it has been confiscated by the Bombay government and will be put up for sale by auction at the Police Office on 6th Sept. It is offered in small lots for home consumption only.34
Sat 16th Sept 1809
The Captain, Chief Officer and Purser of the Marquis of Ely have been suspended from duty and replaced. The Indiaman was searched by Customs at Gravesend in April before departure for Whampoa and 100 guns were found in the privileged tonnage. The Marquis of Ely is part of the China direct fleet.
Sat 30th Dec 1809
A Prices Current of late September for China is published:
Chinese imports – amongst Bombay goods, Indian cotton is slow at 11 Taels per bale; sharks’ fins, sandalwood and ivory are firm; Patna $1,250, Benares $1,150 each per chest, Malwa no demand.
Chinese exports – raw silk, silk cloth, nankeens, tutenague and mercury (metals must be smuggled out) at usual market rate; teas are not yet available; pure gold $23 per Teal, pure silver $101 per 100 Taels, sycee bar, vermilion at market rate, etc.35
In the 1809/10 season 10 Bombay ships, 5 Bengal ships, 4 Penang ships, 9 Company ships and 17 American ships arrived at Whampoa for trade.
Sat 30th Dec 1809
Pirates in the Pearl estuary have captured a boat of the Marquis of Ely and are holding its officer and eight men for ransom. $30,000 has been demanded for their release. This is the Indiaman that was taking 100 guns to Canton but was inspected at London prior to sailing and the arms offloaded.
Sat 30th Dec 1809
First news of Admiral Drury’s ‘invasion of Macau’:
China, 5th Dec – All trade is held up by the Select Committee’s requirement that its complaint be referred to the Emperor. They objected to the Viceroy stopping trade when Drury occupied Macau and thought a reference to the Emperor would embarrass the Canton officials into reversing their decision. Contrarily, the officers appear unconcerned. As a result of the complaint, ships are welcomed at Whampoa but cannot open hatches until the Emperor’s reply arrives. The Select has since asked the Viceroy to reopen trade.36
Meanwhile American trade is continuing briskly and some British goods are getting through via this medium. 12.3 Taels is paid for Bengal cotton and 11 Taels for Bombay - sales are up slightly. The entire stock of opium has been sold to the principal merchant of Macau (Judge Arriaga, the second official in the colonial hierarchy) and prices have risen to those shown in the Prices Current. Pirates are active and the Viceroy has chartered the Penang country ship Mercury (Williams) to cruise against them commencing 25th Sept. He has fitted out this ship at Whampoa as a warship but it has only captured one junk so far. The Mercury is escorted by sixty war-junks. Once this easily-recognisable fleet appears the pirates disappear into the myriad waterways of the delta. They have been astonishingly forward in their depredations on all the villages near the coast or waterways. Three senior Chinese officials are on the Mercury with Williams.
A Chinese agent at Canton has provided some information. He says a new Viceroy Pang has arrived and visited Macau where he gave a strip of silver to every Portuguese soldier for their ‘defeat’ of the English invaders. The Governor of Canton and Hoppo are in disgrace for permitting the invasion and the Governor is particularly vilified for his willing concessions to the English. He is said to be under house arrest.
Two of the linguists have been assigned by the new Viceroy to remain at Macau and report all new arrivals of foreign ships. Thereafter the Baring, Cumbrian and Troubridge arrived and were all detained at Macau for many days until a general permission for country ships to enter the river was obtained.
The Hong merchants are attempting a combination which may relate to the Macau Judge’s monopolisation of the opium supply. They say Security Merchants will be appointed to incoming ships by rotation. That merchant will buy all the ship’s cargo at a price determined by the Consoo before the merchant is selected. The export cargo likewise is to be bought from the same Security Merchant. This applies to all cargo (including privileged tonnage) and water and provisions. The Hongs want payment for their exports, two thirds in goods and one third in cash and if cash is unavailable they expect four month’s credit. The new system commenced with the three named country ships. The prices available were generally 10% below the open market which has consequently fallen to the new low Consoo level. President Roberts has been unable to effect a change and the ship masters have entered a joint Protest. After several weeks of delay, the Hongs agreed to abandon their attempted monopoly.
The Emperor’s response to the Company’s complaint then arrived. It instructs the new Viceroy to obtain a written explanation from Roberts upon receipt of which, assuming it is satisfactory, British trade may be reopened. Our negotiating position has been undermined by the Chinese discovery that some foreigners are supplying the pirates with goods.37 Company cotton which obtained 14½ Taels last year is now under 13 and Mowqua, who bought much of it, has lost $400,000 on paper while Howqua, who bought most of the balance, has lost $200,000. This year’s Bombay cotton is selling for an average 11 Taels.
The Hong merchants overall are in difficulties – they cannot sell-out the English goods while the proscription on our trade continues and their warehouses are full of our goods. Mowqua is trying to resign but the new Viceroy will not permit it. Another Hong merchant who retired a few year’s ago was pressed to rejoin and only averted that calamity by an immense bribe, said to have been 200,000 Taels. In April Fonqua failed owing $325,000 mainly to Bombay merchants. A complaint was sent in to the officials who routinely arrested him and prospects of repayment have lowered. No settlement arrangements are yet known.
The only bright ray of sunshine is the return of the Americans after the repeal of their legislated trade embargo. The Chinese are delighted. They have brought much silver which should restore liquidity and facilitate trade.
Sat 27th Jan 1810
The present King of Nepal has been expanding his lands for many years. He occupies all the valleys on the lower slopes of the Himalayas and has in the last few years extended his domains as far as Srinegar in the west giving him a long frontier north of Sikh domains (with which people he has had several fights) all the way to Afghanistan.
It now seems he may have been probing into Tibetan lands as well, as a Chinese army of some 16,000 men has reportedly arrived from Shigatse on his north eastern frontier. Tibet is a vassal of China and an Amban resides in Lhasa.38
Sat 7th April 1810
We have killed another Chinese and trade at Canton is stopped again. A seamen from the Royal Charlotte is accused of the killing in a fight. The Select arranged an examination of the accused and became convinced of his innocence. They accordingly declined to surrender him to the Chinese Magistrate. All the English merchants are blaming an American whilst all the Chinese are satisfied it was the Englishman. They demand he be surrendered in accordance with the Ching legal principle of ‘a life for a life’.
The Bombay ships Henchman, Cornwallis and Byramgore were allowed to clear port at the application of their Chinese security merchant and they have brought the news back. The Company’s fleet was almost loaded and would have been ready for sea by 4th Feb but must now be delayed.
It is also reported that another Hong merchant, Gnewqua has defaulted with debts of $2 millions of which $700,000 is for the Company’s account. It may relate to the unexpected absence of American silver in the market last season due to the Order-in-Council against neutral shipping.
Cotton has dropped to 12 Taels 2 Mace and there is 60,000 bales in stock.
Action against the pirates seems to have stopped their depredations. They have agreed peace terms with the Canton government and a fleet of 300 pirate ships was seen at end February sailing to Chuen Pi to negotiate terms.
Sat 7th April 1810
The Portuguese ship Andromeda (Jose Franco) has arrived at Calcutta on 18th Jan from Macau. Franco reports opium has declined to $1,000 - $1,050 per chest.
Sat 28th April 1810
Penang, 17th March – Reports from China say trade is still stopped over the latest affray which caused the death of another Chinese. It is hoped that the Company’s fleet will be released by 1st March and HMS St Albans is waiting outside to convoy them. All the country ships have been detained in the river for a month now.
On 19th Jan the Olivia was at anchor in Macau roads, and two comprador boats had just delivered full loads of fruit and vegetables. At about noon three similar boats were seen pulling towards the Olivia. One with over 20 oars came directly to the Olivia. There was only a sentinel and a sea-cunny on the Olivia’s deck. The crew was ordered to quarters and, seeing this, the rowing boat crew rested on its oars. It could then be seen to be full of armed men. It hailed us saying it was a comprador boat but we told them to ‘go away’ and tried to keep our guns bearing on them. They rowed around the ship at a cable’s length and a man could be seen using a telescope to observe us minutely.
At that moment three junks came out of the Taipa and the pirates immediately left us to give chase. We saw them capture the junks and move off to the East with their prizes.
The Sir Edward Pellow (Stevens) has arrived Penang from China which she left on 2nd Mar. She reports the pirates have assembled a fleet of over 300 junks, some very big, and the Select say this is the real reason for the detention of foreign shipping in the river. An American named Cox has arrived on Sir Edward Pellow.
Sat 5th May 1810
The latest murder in Canton involves a Chinese found in mid-January at the mouth of Hog Lane within the foreign factories. He had been stabbed in the side with a knife, reportedly in a scuffle with some Europeans the previous night. The foreign merchants left the body there, adopting an attitude of non-involvement. It is occasionally the case in winter that Cantonese die on the streets from a combination of malnourishment and chill – this chap was treated in that way.
The Hongs reported the death to the Canton Provincial Government and an enquiry commenced that identified English sailors as the people involved in the scuffle. It was traced by the officials to a party of sailors from the St Albans (Austin). The captain had already sailed down river to Chuen Pi to join his ship and the Select had to recall him to attend the investigation. A conference was held in the factories wherein the officials said they had (undisclosed) evidence that the murderer was an Englishman.
The Select have contrarily blamed an American. The Viceroy, to cover both possibilities, had required the Hoppo to withhold the Grand Chop from all American and British ships. This routinely meant an instruction to the Bocca Tigris forts to fire on any foreign ship attempting to leave the river - there is a history of escapes. The Select took the position that the officials should produce their evidence or allow the shipping to clear port and, being commercial men, they threatened to charge the officials for demurrage if the evidence was not instantly produced. This caused a second meeting at which two witnesses were produced. The officials proposed to interview the two jointly but the Select objected and after some discussion it was agreed to debrief them separately.
The first witness said the deceased was a pimp but had failed to produce a girl to the Indiaman sailor after payment. The English sailor had become enraged and stabbed the man. The witness identified the sailor as English from the language he spoke. It was then very dark at Hog Lane and he could not see the sailor clearly to identify either his face or clothing. The group of foreigners then walked away and witness followed them to Imperial Hong. That Hong contained the residences of several Indiamen captains and some American traders. He was unable to pursue the group inside.
The second witness said nearly the same except he recalled the moonlight was sufficient and he could see the long queues and glazed hats of the participants in the struggle. He added that he could not distinguish an Englishman from an American and neither could he identify the culprit.
On this revelation, the Select applied for Port Clearances for their fleet unless the Chinese officials could adduce better evidence of the murder being done by an Englishman.
Nothing happened until 25th Feb. Other trade continued as usual. The merchants who had come up to Canton for trade left to rejoin their ships and between 18th – 20th Feb the American and country ships all received their Grand Chops and departed. The Select Committee supposes their fleet would similarly be permitted to depart at the time fixed for convoy (1st March).
Meanwhile piracy continues unopposed in the estuary. One of the pirate fleets, led by a woman, had just beaten off an attack by a squadron of government warjunks supported by five Portuguese ships. No English ship has been attacked for some time.
Another fleet (about 100 junks) under Cheung Po Chai had sailed up to Chuen Pi just before the Lady Barlow sailed and commenced a negotiation with the Canton government for their rehabilitation. The Viceroy came down to Chuen Pi to supervise but refused a meeting with Cheung Po Chai which caused that pirate to call-off the discussions. Only very few of the pirate junks accepted the terms on offer from the Viceroy. During this discussion the pirate fleet was anchored port and starboard of the St Albans and about one mile apart. The St Albans will be carrying a large shipment of silver for Madras. When negotiations collapsed, the Viceroy returned to Canton.
During Capt Austin’s stay in the factories, he discussed with officials the most effective way of equipping the Chinese warjunks to deal with the pirates. The government fleet is numerous and expensive and its costs are paid by the Hong merchants who are the people trying to involve foreign captains in effective measures.39
Sat 2nd June 1810
Letter from the Agent for the Sulimany at Canton, 12th March:
The Select positively refused to surrender the man wanted in the fatal affray at Hog Lane. The Viceroy was asked instead to permit an investigation to be carried out in London when the ship returned there and he may agree as he has serious problems with the pirates.
When Cheung Po Chai moored his pirate fleet around the St Albans, the government warjunks were under the Bocca Tigris guns and some Portuguese ships were south of the St Albans. The Viceroy gave precedence to this piracy matter and said he would settle the matter of our Grand Chops (Clearance Certificates) once it was concluded.
The Select chose to keep on pressing him and ordered the captains to drop down to 2nd bar. Consequently, our armed fleet of Indiamen was approaching the Bocca Tigris down river as the negotiations with Cheung Po Chai at the river mouth continued. This pressure on the Viceroy was increased when the pirate chief demanded the cession of Lintin as a base for his supporters. It seems the Select is helping the pirates to get better terms by harassing the Viceroy.
At about the same time some Lascars from the ship Ann arrived in Canton. That ship is registered to Bombay and disappeared on a voyage from Timor to Canton in 1807 – now the crew is turning up at Canton. It is said some Chiu Chow pirates responded to the Fukien Governor’s amnesty proposal and surrendered at Amoy. Amongst their crews were these Lascars who were captured on the Fukien/ Kwangtung coast. Many of them were killed and only those who agreed to join the pirates survived. They have now been brought to Canton.
I heard this from President Roberts who got it from a Linguist.
Sat 12th May 1810
Bombay Government Notice - Lt Davis Davies and Wm Pratt of the European Regiment who have been on leave in China for their health have the permission of the Select Committee at Canton to proceed to Europe and the Governor-in-Council confirms that permission.
Sat 30th June 1810
The Bheemoolah (Patrick) has arrived at Calcutta from China on 5th June. She reports several American ships have arrived there (the ships that slipped out of New England ports when it appeared the Federal embargo would end) and imports of treasure of $1.5 – 1.8 millions have been made into Canton. This has revived sales of cotton and opium.
Sat 14th July 1810
The Bheemoolah has arrived Bombay from China and Calcutta. She brings letters from Macau:
One dated 11th April says there was not a single ship at Whampoa, the first time for many years. The resident merchants hope there will be no arrivals for 3 - 4 months to allow them to sell-off the great stocks of cotton and opium they have accumulated. The arrival of a ship always affects the market price for its cargo and these fluctuations deter Chinese buyers when prices are high. Opium is selling at $1,090 – $1,100 a chest but sales are slow as it is known in the market that the Portsea is en route with a cargo of new opium.
The Viceroy has proclaimed an invitation to all trading nations to bring rice to Canton for sale and copies have been sent to Bengal. It indicates the likely price China will pay at the time of its publication but does not guarantee that price.
The Viceroy has agreed terms with the chiefs of the two principal pirates for an end to their depredations. They are not quite honourable to the provincial government but they allow the Viceroy to concentrate his efforts against the remaining pirates. The Portuguese in Macau became so concerned for their safety that they sent a requisition to the Governor of Manila for troop reinforcements (the two countries are temporarily united under British rule). The Spanish force arrived at Macau on the Diana on 10th March but the Viceroy’s treaty with the main pirates is expected to pre-empt Macau’s need of them.
Sat 22nd Sept 1810
A letter from the Select Committee at Canton to the Governor of Bombay dated 7th June 1810 concludes with:
“The principal body of pirates has agreed with the Viceroy to forsake their livelihood in return for pardon and government employment.40 Another great group of pirates remains active on the coast to the west and ship masters should remain cautious.”
Sat 22nd Sept 1810
The Mornington has arrived at Calcutta from China. Bengal and Bombay cotton are selling at 13+ Taels per picul; opium is $1,080 per chest but will decline once the Portuguese ships arrive at Macau from Calcutta (they bring consignments of Patna and Benares). Few Americans have arrived Whampoa in the last months and their presence is again needed to restore liquidity to the market.
The Fair American has also arrived Calcutta direct from Baltimore which she left 5th May at which time the maritime dispute with England and France continued.
Sat 29th Sept 1810
We have received a letter from Macau reporting the recent situation there. It says Canton Provincial Government officials frankly admit their inability to deal with the pirates. The pirate fleet had grown to 400 warjunks each armed with 12+ guns each and manned by 50 – 200 men. They are not merely predating on the coast but are routinely entering the inland waterways and controlling the activities of all the floating population as well as villagers who live near the coasts and waterways.
Everyone is assessed a contribution to pay and non-payment or opposition result in attack and often death and destruction. Recalcitrant villages have been barbarously attacked and men, women and children promiscuously slaughtered.
The belated government response has been to raise a fleet of 40 warjunks with 14+ guns each and send it against the pirates. In its first engagement it was heavily outnumbered, 28 government boats surrendered and the rest fled. This initiative merely increased the number of ships and guns in the pirate fleet. The ubiquitous success of the pirates has induced all the young coastal people to join them. It offers a way to preserve their lives. They have been able to take one American schooner and have attacked other foreign ships but so far without further success.
The communications that we have established by boat between Canton and Macau are disrupted by the pirates. As the area under piratical control increased, it approached nearer and nearer to Canton. Eventually the pirate chiefs declared an intention of evicting the Ching and restoring the Ming. This politicisation of the anarchy induced the Viceroy to contract with the Governor of Macau for the eradication of piracy.
The agreement, dated 23rd Nov 1809, nominates three Chinese officials and two Macanese to supervise the effort. The Macau men are Miguel de Arriaga Brum de Silveira, the Judge, and Jose Joaquim de Barros, the Procurator. It specifies the immediate creation of a coast guard of 6 Portuguese ships, armed and manned by the Portuguese, which will sail with the government fleet. They will cruise the estuary and around Heung Shan41 for 6 months and prevent pirates from entering the inland waterways. The Viceroy will pay 80,000 Taels for this Portuguese service. All prizes taken by the combined force will be equally shared between the Portuguese and Chinese fleets. When the pirates have been removed, the ancient privileges of the Portuguese in Macau will be restored.
On signing this agreement Judge Arriaga had no ships, arms or men but in five days he had chartered six ships, equipped them with 118 cannon and employed 730 men as crews. The ships are Inconquistavel (26), Palla (18), Indiana (24), Bellisario (18), Sr Miguel (16) and the brig Princess Carlotta (16). All the fleet is deficient of naval stores and shot which the Select has agreed to provide from the Company’s fleet of Indiamen on the basis of the treaties of friendship done between Portugal and England.
This flotilla joined 60 government warjunks and commenced cruising. Generally the pirates fled on the approach of the combined fleet but on a few occasions they were cornered and obliged to stand and fight and on each of those occasions, the pirates were defeated.
One of the pirate chiefs, Cheung Po Chai, was induced by the government offer to negotiate in January and his 100 junks and 8,000 men have agreed terms of surrender. He is now employed by the Chinese Navy doing coastguard duty in Fukien and has added the honorific Qua to his name.
In February a second negotiation was commenced with some other pirate chiefs but this failed. The Portuguese fleet was then again sent against those pirates and many of their boats were trapped in the waterways and had to be abandoned. On 12th April the Portuguese managed to trap a large number of pirate ships under the pirate chief Ah Juo Chai and obliged him to treat for surrender.
The Viceroy came down to Heung Shan and met Arriaga who was allowed to mediate the settlement. After 3 days an agreement was made. A general amnesty for their past depredations has been given. In return 270 pirate junks, 16,000 men, 5,000 women and 1,200 pieces of ordnance have been surrendered to the Viceroy.
Now, for the first time in 20 years, piracy on the Canton coast is under control. The Portuguese fleet returned to Macau on 21st April and entered the harbour to the acclamation of most of the populace. Salutes were fired from the ships and forts, the church bells were rung and a Te Deum was sung in thanksgiving.
Sat 20th Oct 1810
The Auspicious has arrived at Calcutta from China and Malacca. She left Macau on 4th July and reports that at departure opium was nominal at $1,040 a chest with no demand. The late accommodation by the Viceroy with the pirates had been expected to stimulate opium distribution and increase demand but no effect is yet discernible.42 Bengal cotton is selling slowly at 13+ Taels. The problem is silver - no Americans have yet arrived.
Sat 10th Nov 1810
H Brown, the new President of the Company’s Select Committee at Macau, Sir George Staunton and the writer Millet passed through Penang in September on their way to take-up their new duties in China.
Sat 8th Dec 1810
Advertisement – Vol 1 of the Works of Confucius, translated by J Marshman, has just been published at Calcutta. Price 64 Sicca Rupees. The preface includes a biography of the sage and an account of the most esteemed Chinese philosophical works. There is also a dissertation on the Chinese language with tables of the elementary written characters and all the words of the oral language.
Available from Forbes & Co, Bombay.43
Sat 15th Dec 1810
A letter from Macau dated mid-October says Roberts and the Select circulated a letter to all ship captains in Taipa roads requiring the sale and delivery of cargo be suspended until the Viceroy returned to Canton. He had gone to the west on some matter relating to the negotiations with the pirates who had since become peaceful in the area of the Pearl estuary and delta.
The Select is continuing its own negotiation with the Viceroy concerning terms of trade following the occasional stoppages that occur every time a British seaman kills a Chinese. Roberts wishes to withhold foreign goods as a negotiating tactic. Effectively, he is copying the Viceroy in stopping trade.
The resident foreign mercantile agents went to Whampoa in late July but by 13th August the Viceroy had still not returned to Canton and the season was advancing. Country traders were disappointed by the delay in disposing of their cotton. Roberts was persuaded to permit trade to proceed and they started selling and delivering cargo on 18th Aug. It was finished about 3rd Sept.
The former pirates have been taken into government service and many of their boats are now in the Macau inner harbour. The Viceroy returned to Canton in early Sept and a deputation of the four main Hong merchants and some officials went to Macau to interview with Roberts at La Palacio. They returned to Canton after a few days for instructions and then went back to Roberts for further discussions. Roberts and Elphinstone then went to Canton with Capt George Elliot of HMS Modeste. The Hong merchants Pui Qua (How Qua) and Gneu Qua are indebted to the Company in about $800,000 and with their other debts to the country trade and Americans are in the hole for $2 millions. All the other Hong merchants are more or less in debt to the Company too, but Roberts is reliant on these two to progress the foreigners’ case in his negotiation.
The Viceroy takes the position that our smuggling funds the pirates and he wants us to either contribute $2 millions to the costs of their suppression or accept new taxes on our trade. Roberts says the Honourable Company would never involve itself in smuggling and is concerned only for real trade.
He told the Viceroy that Pui Qua and Gneu Qua had failed.
In the previous case of Shy Kin Qua’s failure in 1794, the Co-Hong paid-off the debt by instalments and recovered the outlay by new taxes on both imports and exports which continued to be levied even after the debts had been discharged.
To avoid this Roberts is offering to support Pui Qua and Gneu Qua by continuing to give them shares in the Company’s business which will enable them to trade through. The Company will assume the financial control of both Hongs, make their payments and discharge their debts until they recover. Roberts also apprehends that all the new smaller Hongs are in financial difficulty and cannot pay-off their present debts without jeopardising some other part of their business. They certainly cannot bear any new taxes. He accordingly commends the Viceroy not to solve the problem in the way that was done after Shy Kin Qua but to, effectively, transfer control of trade to the India Company which has the funds and expertise to develop it uncontentiously.
Roberts said he could not authorise the ship captains to deliver their cargo when payment had become so uncertain. If they did not deliver their cargoes they could not buy Chinese teas and silks. The presence of Capt George Elliot helped to give force to his words. HMS Modeste will remain at Chuen Pi until November and return to India on the winter monsoon.
Sat 22nd Dec 1810
Admiral Drury has arrived back at Malacca. He took four Chinese junks en route with cargoes of sugar, arrack and bird’s nests which they had bought in Batavia. He brought the prizes into Malacca. The Chinese are completely ignorant of the reason for their detention. They have no doubt Drury is a pirate.
They attended Mr Koek, the Dutch representative and Prize Agent, to complain. He did not explain either. He offered them a charitable allowance of 25 Cents a day and a garden house to live in but they were dissatisfied and commenced a riot. They demand the return of their property.
The garrison had to turn-out and a few Chinese were arrested but they were still resentful. Drury agreed to give back their junks to enable their return home. He is keeping the cargoes.
Sat 22nd Dec 1810
Don Juan, the Regent of Portugal, now holding Court at Rio de Janeiro has ordered the formation of a battalion of 500 men to form the garrison of Macau. He wishes to assert his rule over this distant but lucrative enclave. He has appointed Colonel Jose Ozario de Castro Cabral as the commander of the battalion. He has also appointed a new Governor of Macau - Bernardo Alexo de Limas a Faria and a new Dezembargador - Miguel de Silveira. Both the latter officers have been awarded the Grand Cross of Christ. Several supportive members of the Leal Senado of Macau are made Knights of the Order of Christ. Three of them are the merchants Bernardo Gomes de Limas, Manoel Ferreira and Caetano Antonio de Campos.
The Regent has permitted the free import of Macau goods into all the Portuguese ports of Brazil.
Sat 5th Jan 1811
Letters from China dated 31st Oct 1810 report that Man Hop, another Hong merchant, has failed.
Sat 9th Feb 1811
The Company’s ship Indiana went aground on Pulo Aor (off the Johore east coast) whilst carrying 300 Chinese emigrants from Canton to Penang. Most were saved but the ship went to pieces.
Sat 23rd Feb 1811
The Directors are trying to limit the visits to China of staff officers in the Company’s and HM’s forces in India. Staff officers might be any rank from Lieutenant up. A doctor issues a certificate saying they need to go to China for their health and the Presidency has to agree.
Now the Directors have ordered the Select at Canton to cease providing any financial assistance to army officers visiting from India. They required substantial sums for their support during the recent trade stoppage which deranged the Select’s financial planning.
Sat 23rd March 1811
Notice 23rd March 1811: The Canton Insurance Society was established at Canton on 1st Jan 1811 and M/s Shotton Calder & Co of Bombay are authorised to issue the Society’s policies on ships or merchandise from Bombay to China. Claims payable at either Canton or Bombay.
(This induces Forbes & Co of Bombay to issue a Notice that the Society should be distinguished from the Canton Insurance Company, established in the season 1806/07, for which it is the Agent . The Canton Insurance Company was formed for five years expiring on 3rd Jan 1812. It will be continued thereafter as the Old Canton Insurance Company and the following members have already offered to subscribe to the continuation company: Forbes & Co, Palmer & Co, George Baring (who runs Baring & Co of Canton, the Company’s Agency for private Indian exporters), the Hon Hugh Lindsay, William Tierney Roberts, four of the Barretto family, et al)
Sat 30th March 1811
Calcutta, 6th March – The Select Committee at Canton have been requested by the Governor-General to immediately re-open their Treasury for the sale of Bills on Bengal at $44 Spanish per 100 Current Rupees payable 30-days after Sight.
The Governor-General requires the Select to keep the Treasury open for receipt of silver until he orders otherwise.
Sat 30th March 1811
The Portuguese ship Andromeda has arrived Calcutta from Macao, via Malacca and Penang, in early March after a voyage of only 37 days.
Fifteen American ships had arrived at Macau by 15th Jan, before the Andromeda sailed, and silver was abundant.
Cotton is 14½ - 15 Taels per picul and may go higher. Opium is flat at $1,000 – 1,050 per chest.
The Canton Government seized a large shipment of silver sycee that some country traders were trying to export. Export of sycee is illegal (its the currency of the country). Chinese policy is to constantly balance its foreign trade and she has enacted a law requiring it. The involved foreigners are incensed and are seeking for ways to recover their great loss.
Sat 11th May 1811
The transport Canada has arrived at Calcutta from Whampoa. She is on the return leg of a voyage to deliver 122 female convicts to Botany Bay. She was licensed to visit China and load a full cargo of tea for the Company’s account. The Company has accumulated 60,000 chests of tea in its Canton warehouse but has inadequate ships to carry it back to London.
At the time of the Canada’s departure, the snow Amethyst (Chimenant) was anchored at Whampoa as the opium store ship. Sales of opium continue strangely dull. The price is unmoved at $1,050 nominal per chest. Indian cotton is selling at 13.5 Taels a bale.44
14 American ships had arrived in China at the time of the Canada’s departure.
J W Roberts, for long the President of the Select in China, had sailed for England on the Wexford.
Sat 18th May 1811
Letter from Canton, 27th Feb:
The market for Bengal goods has been poor this last two months. 13.5 Taels is the very maximum to be expected of Bengal cotton. Opium at both Macau and Whampoa is nominal at $1,050 – 1,070.
Letter from Canton, 1st March:
The Select Committee has applied for Clearance Certificates for the residue of the Company’s fleet still at Whampoa but the Hoppo has issued none. The Canton officials say the affair of Williams remains unadjusted and we are supposed to report that to them. Williams was the seaman who killed a Chinese many months ago. We said we had sent him to England for punishment. Now, they want to know the result.
Eventually, the ship commanders addressed a petition to the Viceroy and on 6th Feb the Company’s Commodore with Capt the Hon Hugh Lindsay, several other captains and Mr Parry of the Select together with their pursers and some European servants, totally about forty men, entered one of the gates of the city and marched in without opposition. Some of the residents pointed out the way to the Hoppo’s yamen. The foreigners entered this building and requested to deliver a petition to the Hoppo. Soon afterwards several officials turned-up to receive the petition on behalf of the Hoppo. Lindsay insisted on presenting it to that officer in person.
Most of the European party withdrew leaving Lindsay and Parry in the Hoppo’s Audience Hall. Then a high official with a numerous train of retainers came in whom the two foreigners assumed to be the Viceroy and he accepted the letter. He passed it to his interpreter for translation and then said it would have his attention. The foreigners then formed up outside the Hoppo’s doors with their servants like a military party and marched back to the city gate. On passing out of the gate, the servants at the rear of the party were jostled by the sentries who had been embarrassed by our entrance (they had been absent from their posts at the time of our entry). They said no-one should enter Canton without permission. There was some fighting but no-one was seriously hurt.
The following day the Hoppo sent back the petition for amendment. He said if the words ‘injustice of the Chinese government‘ were removed, he would grant the request. This was done and the Grand Chops were issued a few days later.
The whole protest was the idea of Hugh Lindsay who convinced everyone to join-in and who personally led the march through the city. The shipping thus released is worth over £1 million. Lindsay should get a reward.
Sat 10th Aug 1811
The Indiaman Taunton Castle arrived Madras from London on 27th July 1811 bringing inter alia 20 Chinese emigrants.
Sat 16th Nov 1811
Every warehouse in Bombay is empty. All our local produce has been loaded into the Company’s China fleet that leaves tomorrow for Canton. HMS Teignmouth will provide convoy protection.
Sat 14th Dec 1811
The country ship Hope arrived Calcutta from China on 4th Dec. She reports that several Bombay cotton ships and some Portuguese ships had arrived at Macau and Indian cotton was selling at 15 Taels the picul at Canton.
The price of opium fell in July due to unregulated Dutch sales of stock from Java prior to its invasion by the British and was thereafter trading at $900 a chest.
When the Hope sailed from China there were only two American ships at Whampoa.
Sat 14th Dec 1811
One of the English ships at Whampoa, on learning of our conquest of Batavia, fired a salute. The shot killed two Chinese and a trial is to be held.
Sat 25th Jan 1812
Letter from Canton, 30th Oct 1811 – the cotton crop in China failed this year and this is the reason that Indian cotton has been selling so well. It continues at 15+ Taels a bale.
The present Viceroy Sung knows Sir George Staunton. He became Viceroy here after the 1793 Embassy and knew Staunton in Peking. When Staunton arrived at Macau he was invited to Canton for an interview with both the Viceroy and some other high officials. Since then the Viceroy has visited Macau and been entertained by the President of the Select, Elphinstone, with Staunton in attendance.
It is being said by the English that whenever any difficulty arises, Staunton only has to send a letter and the Viceroy will send chairs and an escort to bring him to his yamen and settle matters.
The English mercantile community is pleased but the junior Chinese officials are distraught. They fear for the income from their unauthorised taxes.
On 30th Oct Elphinstone and Select member Parry together with Staunton and Captains Briggs and Broughton of the two visiting British frigates had an audience at the Viceroy’s yamen in Canton. No details are available. The Viceroy accepted an invitation to inspect the Balcarras, one of our most beautiful ships.
Sat 1st Feb 1812
Letter from Canton – An officer of HMS Indefatigable whilst out hunting at Chuen Pi (the navy anchors in Anson’s Bay) reports that he was surrounded by some villagers who confiscated his gun.
Capt Thomas Briggs, the senior naval officer on the China station, protested to the Viceroy stating that his orders were to act in China with mildness and he hoped provincial officials would reciprocate.
The Governor of Canton sent immediately to Chuen Pi and had several people taken back to Canton. The fowling piece was recovered and returned to the Englishman. It transpired the Cantonese do not use guns for hunting; they trap wild animals.
Sat 1st Feb 1812
A large fleet of China ships has arrived at Madras. They left Macau on 29th Nov.
Sat 7th March 1812
Calcutta, 15th Feb – The Portuguese ship Andromeda has arrived from China but she only brought $130,000 in silver and not the huge amount that was previously reported.
Sat 21st Mar 1812
Cotton prices in China have fallen to 12 Taels a bale. It is feared, if we war with America, that we will prevent receipt of their silver supply that lubricates China-trade. When silver is short at Canton, all prices collapse.
Sat 4th April 1812
The Mornington (Dunlop) has arrived at Calcutta from Canton and brings China news to the end of January. Mr Kerr, the King’s botanist, arrived on this ship. He has been collecting Chinese plants for Kew Gardens. The Mornington brought a considerable quantity of silver from China, part of the proceeds of our favourable balance of trade.
The generally unsatisfactory state of the China market has worsened and the stagnation of trade is unprecedented. 40,000 bales of cotton remain with the Hong merchants unsold. The Bombay ship Hannah and the Calcutta ship Anna arrived after the majority of sales were complete and had difficulty getting the Hong merchants to accept their cotton at any price. It was eventually sold at 10.4 Taels a bale but has been warehoused because of the lack of demand and will long remain a merely documentary transaction. We should say that the extraordinary demand of the Company for transports to invade Java meant that less ships than normal went to China this year. That is very fortunate given the market circumstances. In late years Bengal cotton sells in China at 1.5 – 2 Taels more than Bombay cotton. On present prices, this appears to fix Bombay cotton prices at a ruinous 8.5 – 9 Taels a bale.
Opium is still $1,060 per chest but the market is firming. There must have been an alternative supply to keep our sales so quiet for so long (rumoured to have been Dutch sales to resident Chinese merchants at Batavia before the British invasion - it was shipped to Fukien)
Whilst all our sales to China are cheap, the cost of exports has continued high. The resident European merchants at Canton say most of the Hong merchants are under-capitalised and the 2-3 merchants who have money are taking the opportunity to extend their control over the market. They buy our imports from the small Hongs, sometimes at an even lower price than we received. It is a Chinese mercantile habit to dispose expeditiously of items that one cannot sell in order to release capital for things that are in demand. The small Hongs only bought our goods so they could dispose of their exports. For a brief moment they may have thought they were making profit but they should have relinquished that dream by now.
The whole trade of India with China, both the Company’s and the country merchants’ trade, is under the control of these 2-3 prosperous Hong merchants.
At the time of the Mornington’s departure from Macau, there were 4 American ships in Taipa roads.
Sat 25th April 1812
Letter of 7th Dec from the representatives of Indian Agency-Houses (free traders) at Canton to J F Elphinstone, President of the Select Committee:
We are creditors of Ponqua and Gnewqua and write to you again concerning our large claims. We wish you to address the Chinese government on this subject but, before doing so, we would like your advice whether you will combine with us concerning our claims on Louqua, Ponqua and Manhop. We attach an Address to the Viceroy of the Two Kwang and request that you deliver it but we should like to have your comments on it.
Sgd Baring & Co, H D Forbes for Bruce Fawcett & Co, A L Barretto & Co, Alexander Shank, H Wright, G Webb, C C Mackintosh, Hormusjee Bhicajee, Hormusjee Dorabjee, Tarachund Motichund and Mohamed Ali Rouguey.
The Address to Viceroy Sung:
We are saddened to hear you will soon be posted to another province but congratulate you on your promotion. We have relied on your protection and support to relieve us of the distress of our commercial situation.
In the 14th year of this reign, Gnewqua and Ponqua were unable to pay their debts to us and petitioned for the protection of the Select. The Company replied with a plan to administer the business of all the Hong merchants in order to procure their solvency in 2-3 years. The Company will not trouble the Canton government in its plan. We approve any arrangement that would save Gnewqua and Ponqua from bankruptcy but, although we have not reported the claims we have against the two Hongs, Your Excellency was pleased to arrest the two merchants and Ponqua has since died in prison while Gnewqua is ordered to be banished. The remaining Hong merchants then informed us that the debts of Gnewqua and Ponqua would be paid-off over the next 10 years, commencing in the 17th year of the Ka Hing (Jiaqing) Emperor. Three years have elapsed and ten more are required for us to collect our debts before we can return to our families. Throughout that time a part of our capital is sunk in the failed merchants’ debts and we cannot trade to our full extent.
Please pay our claims quickly. The Emperor’s Decree on the disposal of these debts was made without any representation from us. Please have compassion and help us. Amend the Emperor’s Decree to extend justice to us
Elphinstone’s reply of 8th Dec:
The Company will summon the Hong merchants, who are the official channel of communication with the Chinese government and request them to deliver your Address to the Viceroy.
We recognise the hardship of your case but warn you that your present application is unlikely to afford relief.
Concerning Euchin (Louqua), Ponqua and Manhop, we made no complaints last season and do not intend to make any this season. Two of them owe very considerable sums to the Company and, should they become bankrupt, we will certainly report the Company’s claims against them to the Chinese government.
We advise you to take whatever lawful measures you think appropriate. We cannot give any advice concerning the eligibility of country traders to address the provincial government.
Sat 2nd May 1812
Serampore, 21st March - Marshman’s translation of the Works of Confucius has been delayed. The fire in the printing works at Serampore destroyed the entire stock of Superfine Royal paper on which the first 200 pages of the book have already been printed. The fire not only destroyed the paper stock but damaged the fonts for fifteen Asian languages. There is no stock of this quality of paper in India and replacement will have to be ordered in London.
In the interim Marshman will print his dissertation on the Chinese language on the best paper that is locally available.
Sat 15th Aug 1812
Theophilus John Metcalfe and John Reeves have left London on Alnwick Castle for China. Reeves is the Company’s new tea taster. John William Roberts of the Select has also left London on Bombay for China.
Sat 7th Nov 1812
House of Lords, 5th May – Marquis Wellesley had a petition from 700 London merchants against the opening of the China trade.45 He was merely a conduit and did not share the petitioners’ views. They say they have risked their capital in China trade because the law restricted it to London.46 If it is extended to the outports, they say the whole country will lose, not just them. They conclude that if parliament disagrees, it should pay them compensation.
Buckingham said the negotiation with the Company had become intemperate. The parties were far apart. No agreement should be expected for parliamentary approval until next session.
Petitions were also presented from the people of Wakefield and Halifax and the manufacturers of Wiltshire against the renewal of the Company’s monopoly.
Sat 26th Dec 1812
Notice – Bombay land and building for sale:
The landed estates of Sorabjee Muncherjee and Herjee Jivajee will be sold by tender on 12th Jan 1813. They are divided for sale into 19 lots of land or buildings.
The 18th Lot is an office and warehouse in Canton, China built by Sorabjee Muncherjee and presently leased at 100 Rupees per month.47
Sat 2nd Jan 1813
The Anna (Tate) has returned from Canton bringing letters to 7th Oct. Cotton is selling slowly at 12 Taels but returns are difficult to procure. The Chinese cotton crop this year has been very big but the tea and sugar crops seem to have reduced; indeed sugar is being imported from Manila and Batavia. The weather has been boisterous and the Lord Castlereagh of Bombay reported losing two anchors at Lintin before entering the river.
The Warren Hastings and Lord Castlereagh have arrived at Calcutta from China bringing slightly less than a million Rupees in silver (c. $500,000), remitted by the country trade through the Bills mechanism. It will alleviate the local shortage in Bengal. Actually money at Canton has been scarce this season owing to the Americans again staying away. This has caused an accumulation of 60,000 bales of cotton in the warehouses of the Hong merchants. Opium was $1,055 the chest in early Oct.
Sat 2nd Jan 1813
Portsmouth Telegraph, 3rd June 1812 – the Company’s returning China-fleet has arrived with £3.5 millions in silver (390 tons in dollars and sycee) from Canton. A single merchant bank in the West End had $173,000 of this shipment consigned to it. This single great importation has caused the silver price in London to fall considerably.
Sat 30th Jan 1813
Letters from Canton say it was a large import of opium from Batavia that deranged the market and collapsed sale prices. It was a side effect of our occupation of Java. Cotton is also very low.
Sat 10th April 1813
The Arabella arrived at Madras from China in late March. She left Whampoa on 13th Feb. She reports opium and betelnut are selling well at $1,170 and $8 per picul respectively.
Mowqua has died and his stock of cottons, nearly 50,000 bales, was put on the market and completely collapsed prices. The main trading difficulty is not an excess of products but a dearth of currency to fund deals (all our smuggling trade is done for silver). There is little silver remaining in Canton.
An American ship arrived just as Arabella was leaving and another seven followed her in. They were all unaware of the outbreak of war with England.
Sat 29th May 1813
Notice, 26th May - The French Society of Foreign Missions has supported Catholic missionaries serving in Asia for decades. They have just issued an appeal for help:
Since the commencement of the war, we received support from Mexico and it was sufficient to maintain us until now. Recently a great fire at Penang destroyed our building and possessions.
From Penang we provide funds and material to our brethren in Siam, Tong King, Cochin-China and China. We send preachers to those countries and receive back native youths for instruction whom we indoctrinate in the true faith and return to inform their fellows.
As we have so long been cut-off from Europe our staff are aging and diminishing in numbers. About 30 European priests remain and 120 native auxiliaries (mostly Chinese) have been trained. We have a Christian congregation of almost 300,000 in China and its surrounding countries. The seminary for all these churches is at Penang. The expenses of maintaining all these people and sending them back and forth has been defrayed by our rental income on several houses in Penang which is where we invested all our capital. All of these houses were destroyed in the fire.
We appeal to the charity of British India. We still own the land on which our buildings were erected. Our main claim on your attention has been our acts in various Asian countries when we have used our local influence to obtain board and lodging for your shipwrecked crews. We have also occasionally facilitated your admission to ports that would ordinarily be closed to you. We are known throughout Asia for our upright behaviour which has facilitated the introduction of your trade.
We throw ourselves on your commiseration and liberality.
Donations to Forbes & Co or Bruce Fawcett & Co.
Sat 31st July 1813
A letter from China via Java says Patna opium is selling at $1,200 a chest in good demand but the Portuguese supply will shortly arrive and depress prices. Cotton is selling slowly. Thirteen American ships have come to Whampoa from the eastern islands (whence they source sandalwood and sea cucumber), unaware of the war. They are now laid-up and some are being dismantled although there is no blockade by HM frigates.
Sat 9th Oct 1813
An account of the Russian mission to Peking in 1805 has been published at St Petersburg. The object of the mission is said to have been solely commercial. Count Geloskin led the Russian delegation. They were met by the Governor of the frontier province of entry who said he was a brother-in-law of the Chinese Emperor.
Everything appeared to be going well until a feast commenced. The Russian party were expected to bow to a vacant throne representing the Emperor. Geloskin said he could not bow to a chair but would bow to the Emperor in person. After two hours of discussion, Geloskin left without his feast.
A Chinese official proposed that one Russian might be escorted to Peking with a letter from the Provincial Governor explaining what had happened and requesting instructions. This was agreed. In Feb 1806 an answer was returned from Peking that the Russian emissary seemed to be mad and the best that could be done for him was the grant of safe conduct back to the frontier. By the time of his arrival, the Count had 11 days of safe conduct remaining to complete the journey back to Russia. He left immediately.
Sat 1st Jan 1814
Letter from Canton - The Company’s ships via Bombay to China arrived at Macau on 28th Aug and Whampoa on 6th Sept. The direct China ships and the Castlereagh of Bombay arrived Whampoa the day before. The fleet via Madras to China had not arrived as of 17th Oct.
There is a dispute in the Canton market concerning cotton sales which may delay the departure of the Bombay ships.
Two American frigates have been seen off the Lima Islands and the three Royal Navy ships at Macau have gone out after them.
Sat 1st Jan 1814
Penang, 13th Nov 1813 – The Friendship and Mysore arrived here from China and report all foreign goods are selling at low prices. The Captains of the many Indiamen passing through this port en route to China do not expect any profit on their personal trade this season. The problem as usual is a shortage of circulating medium, the Americans necessarily having stayed away again.
Sat 29th Jan 1814
Letter from Canton, 17th Nov – Whilst the Emperor was away from Peking, he left his nine sons in charge. They are hedonists and opium smokers and only one or two show much promise as administrators of a great Empire.
Three of their cousins, acting with 12 eunuchs and a party of about 70 rebels, forced an entrance to the palace and executed thirty of the palace guards. They appear to have intended a coup d’état. Fortunately the Emperor’s second son cut one down and shot an arrow at another and that was enough to make the rest of them run away. The palace gates were closed after them.
Since then a faithful General has arrested the plotters and they are condemned to death. The eunuchs and cousins, and ten officials who were at best negligent, have been sentenced to slicing; the remaining sixty soldiers are to be beheaded.
Sat 5th Feb 1814
Canton, 8th Nov 1813 – an Edict of the Ka Hing Emperor has arrived. He blames himself for the palace revolution. When he assumed the government from the Kien Lung Emperor, the country was in good shape. Remainder illegible.
Sat 12th Feb 1814
The Portuguese ship Carmo has arrived Calcutta from China. She brings $750,000 in silver. The dispute between the Select and the provincial government continues and Company ships are not allowed to land their cargoes. The private trade is unaffected.
Canton Register Vol 13 No 19 – 12th May 1840
Editor – The late John Morrison wrote this in his memoirs in 1814. We believe it has not previously been published. It should be widely read because his opinions then are clearly still true today:
The conditions of trade at Canton are onerous. They arise from a system of oppression that is presented formally, but speciously, as reasonable. There is no acknowledgement of reciprocal benefit from trade. That would form a basis to the expectation of reciprocal rights. To avoid the equality of bargaining positions that this would entail, they assert a disdain for trade and hold that they only permit it from motives of compassion for ‘men from afar’. They, being the benefactors of foreign traders, build an expectation of gratitude on this. In this way the foreign merchant is relieved of the legal rights he would enjoy elsewhere and is supposed to become a grateful and submissive supplicant for business.
This method of dealing characterises all the proceedings of the Canton provincial government. They skilfully present their positions as reasonable and commonsense and the perplexed foreigner is left dumb-founded. The Cantonese have a saying “the mandarins have the largest mouths”. They shape this oppressive system with a semblance of justice to facilitate their tyranny and oppression. And observers far away in Europe, reading the sense and reason of Chinese documents, conclude the Chinese are being misrepresented by the foreign traders.
It would be an endless task to recite all forms of oppression - their persons, their employers, their country and their King are contemptuously described in official papers; we are routinely called barbarians, devils and liars. The officers of HM ships are called plunderers. When we submit petitions through the Hong merchants we are not allowed to call our firms ‘honourable’ or our King an ‘independent sovereign’. Our native servants are fined and punished from time to time simply because they serve us. Trade has been interrupted on frivolous grounds – say, an official fee due from a Hong merchant that remains unpaid. These are daily features of our lives here.
The system has more serious ramifications:
A Company employee was imprisoned for being in possession of a letter from the Select to the provincial government;
An English seaman was judicially strangled for accidentally killing a Chinese;
The entire Company fleet was once detained after a man was killed in a fight. When the foreign murderer could not be identified, two Hong merchants were sentenced to transportation. These two, with government permission, were then trading through a cashflow shortage with Company help. This affair brought out many wild accusations against the then President of the Select and an attempt to remove him from office.
Refusing provisions to HM ships then in China whilst provisioning the warships of England’s enemies.
A refusal to hear the Company’s side of a matter whilst peculiar official accusations were accepted as matters of fact.
These are the bricks and mortar of our grievances. They can be lessened by tackling the Chinese insistence on their superiority. We need an English judicial authority with civil jurisdiction to reside here and be the accredited point of contact on all non-commercial matters. That would require the provincial civil officers to deal with him on terms of equality. We have 2,000 – 3,000 people subject to English law coming here each season. Some of these have dealings with the worst types of Chinese. They get together in the suburbs and arrange crimes. This produces the occasional acts of violence that give us so much difficulty with the Chinese officials. We try to screen murderers from the Chinese but our law does not permit us to punish them in England for offences committed in China. If an Englishman kills another Englishman here he gets away with it. Thus every year a few thousand people are unregulated by any form of law.
When frauds are perpetrated on Chinese shopmen they respond by cudgelling the fraudster. If they get caught they are liable to punishment but not the foreigner. We really need someone to regulate the foreign community and restrain its wilder elements. The power to punish for crime is highly respected in China and a foreign magistrate would have higher standing with them than any trader, no matter how rich. The Chinese will not accept a permanent Embassy at Peking but if we had a Judge here who visited Peking, say triennially, his acts would curb the worst excesses of the Canton government against foreigners.
The Chinese government, like all others, has repeated financial difficulties. In 1814 they were really in difficulty. Rebellion and poor harvests do immense injury and merchants throughout the empire fall in arrears of duty and taxes. The land tax cannot be paid by a farmer whose crop has failed. He cannot even pay in kind or refund the seed grain he was given to start with. The Chinese government responds to shortage by requesting contributions from wealthy natives, by reducing salaries of civil servants and by selling honours at reduced rates. It appears to be true that they would not voluntarily make any fundamental changes merely to preserve the foreign trade. Actually we do not ask it of them – merely that they be just, equitable and civil.
Sat 26th Feb 1814
Penang, 10th Jan 1814 – a letter from China says Elphinstone (President of the Select) has received the Canton Viceroy’s agreement to the commercial points in dispute and trade is re-opened. The Company’s ships are expected to load and sail for London in February.
The attempted coup in Peking last summer was concurrent with extensive flooding along the Yangtse and other rivers and a famine has developed.
This has slowed trade. Bombay cotton gets 13 Taels a picul; betelnut $4. Only pepper is selling well at $6 per picul.
Sat 2nd July 1814
The India ship Providence was detained at Whampoa for a month. She feared attack by an armed trading ship America with a crew of 50 and a cargo of sea otter furs from the Canadian west coast. The supposed privateer was lurking in the Ladrones until the frigates HMS Phoenix and Doris left to convoy the returning Company ships. She then came straight up to Whampoa, sold her furs, loaded a return cargo and was actually on her way down river when a report was received of HMS Doris returning to Macau.
The America was not the only ship inconvenienced by this stratagem of the Royal Navy; the American ship Hunter has been laid-up in the river for months awaiting an opportunity to sail. She loaded and sailed but was captured by HMS Doris. The America privateer remained at Whampoa and the Providence then sailed on 8th April. She has just arrived at Calcutta. She brings 700,000 Rupees in silver and a large amount of Bills on the Company.
It is reported that several country ships at Macau were permitted to join the Company’s convoy to Calcutta.
Sat 2nd July 1814
Letter from Canton, 3rd April – the quantity of cotton imported to China this year is large and has reduced prices. Early arrivals got 13 Taels whilst late arrivals are getting 11.5 Taels the bale.
Opium is now offered at $1,130 per chest but few buyers and over 800 chests remain in stock. By the time the Madras ships arrive it is expected there will still be a stock of 600 chests overhanging the market. If high prices are maintained at the Calcutta auctions, the speculators will keep their opium here and may eventually profit. If Calcutta prices fall, the speculators will be hurt.
Sat 2nd July 1814
The Editor has received some papers from Canton concerning the rebellions that have been reported in China. The information is sourced from extracts of the Peking Gazettes published between Nov 1813 – Jan 1814 and from private letters:
Twelve days after the coup at the Imperial palace, a leading official in Peking wrote to the Viceroy of the Two Kwang. He says a town in Hunan Province was occupied by insurgents and the government officials put to death; another town in Chih Li Province was burned and a third in Shantung was pillaged.
The imperial army is suppressing dissent wherever it goes – men, women and children are being executed. In one place where the famine was particularly severe, the residents captured their magistrate, who was a fat fellow, and cooked him. Officials have adverted to supernatural occurrences that, they say, reveal the disapproval of ancestors to dissent. A virtuous man, long since dead and deified, is popularly expected to be resurrected and save the country. Indeed, the rebel leader in Shantung is named Lin and identifies himself as a reincarnation of a good and brave man from a millennia ago.
The causes of public disorder are not clearly identified but there are three contending suggestions:
Some say it is due to a comet that appeared two years ago.
Others say that it is due to the disaffection of the Emperor’s brothers. It is widely believed that three of the Emperors brothers and many of the palace eunuchs were involved in the coup d’Etat. Eighteen eunuchs were executed after the attempt on the Emperor in the palace and numerous palace ladies were assisted to commit suicide.
Two prior attempts to kill the Emperor are mentioned. One was when he was reading some official papers and called for his pipe. A servant brought it and the emperor had it in his hand when it exploded but caused him no injury. The servant was executed. On another occasion, one of the palace eunuchs presented a cup of ginseng tea but the emperor was not inclined to partake and gave it to a favourite who died shortly thereafter.
The conspirators fixed their insurrection while the Emperor was at the summer palace in Jehol. He was expected to return at the time of the planned assassination but was delayed a couple of days. It is said this fortuitous escape reveals he has Heaven on his side which is an important consideration.
The third popular belief concerns the style of Chinese administration, which keeps everyone at subsistence level and the slightest reduction of their provisions (from unrest, floods, droughts, etc) brings on an instant threat of famine. When times are hard and the local magistrate demands a share of agricultural production as tax, the people have the choice of giving the grain and starving or rebellion.
The Laws of the Ching Dynasty look very well on paper but their execution is left to officials who, though well qualified, have their own extensive personal needs. The central government policy is to keep the people poor, but the local administration of that policy makes them even poorer than intended.
A system of travelling censors, supposedly the Emperor’s ‘eyes and ears’, should have forewarned Peking of famine but the institution has reportedly become corrupt and ineffective.
The famine of 1813 was very severe in many provinces and is said to have been the worst for centuries. It was caused when the Cheung Kong (Yangtse) broke its banks in many places and destroyed a vast amount of rice. Every flood is followed a week or two later by an epidemic, so there is disease as well as privation. In February 1814, in response to widespread hardship, the Emperor required the Canton Provincial Government (a rich province) to contribute to alleviate suffering but this attempt to mitigate distress was too late and too little. In these circumstances the popular response is rebellion and an exciting if temporary career as a plunderer.
The main body of rebels in Hunan have retired into a mountainous area where the army will have difficulty reaching them. They descend onto the surrounding towns for plunder whenever necessary. Usually these rebellions end with amnesty once the causes have evaporated.48
Sat 16th July 1814
The 15% import duty on British goods and manufactures to Goa and Macau and the other Portuguese ports has been levied by mistake. Under the Anglo-Portuguese commercial treaty of 19th Feb 1810 it should be 5% as was previously levied. The Prince Regent at Rio has decreed the 5% rate is to be used.
Sat 20th Aug 1814
Canton market news – Buyers at the Dec 1813 and Feb 1814 opium sales at Calcutta are likely to lose money on their China-trade. Cotton is also cheap; the Ganges sold its cargo for 10 Taels 8 Mace per bale.
A letter from Macau, dated 10th May, says the number of ships arriving has been large and the market for foreign goods has diminished as the Chinese buyers wait to see how cheap our goods will get. Only when the last ship has arrived will prices become firmer. The Chinese cotton crop this year was very small and Nankeens are in short supply. This should eventually mean that Indian cotton will appreciate as the better qualities of Indian fibre are sometimes mixed with China cotton and sold as Nankeens by the Canton merchants. The foreign trade is therefore anticipating that Indian cotton prices will incrementally rise and by August may be at the 16 Teal level.
Sat 17th Dec 1814
HMS Doris has arrived at Madras from China. She reports trade is again stopped.
Sat 24th Dec 1814
The state of trade in Canton is worrying. HMS Doris is at Penang from whence Capt O’Brien of that frigate reports that the Canton Provincial government is generally in favour of the ‘new people’ (the Americans) whereas we are at war with them and will attack their ships wherever we meet them.
Currently there are 20 American ships in the River and our China squadron of three warships is in the estuary just waiting for them to come out. They are from Boston and New York and do not support Madison’s War but we cannot distinguish them from their government or exonerate their national activities.
The Hong merchants have procured some help for the Americans. The English warships are not being provisioned until the Select agrees not to harass the China-trade (i.e. the Americans). As a result, trade is temporarily stopped. HMS Doris is coming to her home port of Madras for instructions from the Admiral. The other two British warships remain in the estuary to maintain the blockade.
From a correspondent in Canton, we hear the Hong merchants expect to resolve the matter by loading the India ships in the expectation that the warships will convoy them away and thus allow the Americans to likewise depart. The receipt of our trade-proceeds from China (in silver) may be slightly delayed.
Sat 31st Dec 1814
The Upton Castle has arrived from Whampoa. At the time of her departure in August, she was the only country ship at the anchorage. As soon as she started to descend the river, the US privateers Jacob Jones and Tommy Hummimah also raised anchor and followed her down. The Upton Castle anchored in the river within the neutral jurisdiction of China and sent a boat to the estuary to call on the British warships for protection.
After a few days the sails of HMS Doris were seen and the Upton Castle continued its voyage undisturbed by the Americans. Fortunate she was that the Americans turned back as the incoming ship was not HMS Doris but another country ship United Kingdom. In this unintended way one merchant ship escaped and another reached safety.
Sat 7th Jan 1815
The Editor has published two letters from Canton:
Canton, 20th Oct – All trade is stopped. The three
direct Indiamen from London are at Whampoa but not allowed to open
their holds. The crews have been aboard for months and are
boisterous. None of our ships are allowed compradors; none are
receiving provisions through the formal system. Our warships at
Chuen Pi (HMS Grampus and Owen Glendower) are getting
neither beef nor vegetables from the compradors. Since the stoppage
of trade, no British ship is allowed into the river. There are nine
British merchant ships anchored at Lintin.
Ten Chinese warjunks
are anchored across the river about two miles above the Tiger’s
Mouth. They have advised the warships that if they or their boats
enter the river they will be fired upon. Extra artillery has been
installed in the forts at either side of the river’s entrance.
The
British offence that caused this situation is attributed to HMS
Doris (O’Brien). He entered the river in hot pursuit of an
American ship, seized it at Whampoa and tried to take it away. The
Chinese call it piracy and a breach of their strict neutrality. The
Select has sent O’Brien and HMS Doris away to mollify the
Chinese but they want more - specific undertakings that the boats of
our warships will stay out of the river and not disturb the trade
again. We cannot make that promise – the Royal Navy must be free
to go wherever our merchant ships go.
The Chinese admiral has
sent a message to the British shipping at Lintin and Chuen Pi to
come into port and trade or go away. We told him Capt O’Brien
ordered us not to enter. Now the Select have ordered the shipping at
Whampoa to leave the river and, together with the four ships at
Chuen Pi, to assemble with the other five ships at Lintin
preparatory to departure.
There are 11 American ships at Whampoa
including four privateers (Sphinx, Russell, Jacob Jones
and Rambler). Some are loaded and ready to sail but they are
unwilling to risk the chance of capture by the Royal Navy once they
exit the river. It is supposed that they have called on their ally
Howqua to fix things with the provincial officials.
The Americans
have a better relationship with the Chinese than the British. When
the Rambler came in, she tied-up to starboard of a big
Chinese junk and the two ships sailed into the river together passed
HMS Grampus in Anson’s Bay which could not clearly
distinguish the little American ship.
Its not just How Qua and
the Hong merchants that are biased, the Canton government has also
taken the American part. The Chinese are unconcerned by our
squabbles – they are only concerned for trade and they are
irritated by the British who, they say, carry their disputes all
around the world. This morning, they requested the Royal Navy ships
to leave the estuary. We refused.
We have complained about the
American privateers but the Chinese officials say they are armed for
self-protection. It is true that all the British Indiamen are
well-armed too and our country ships have a few cannon as well –
it is difficult to sustain an argument that American ships should be
less well-armed, particularly when they are so small. The annoying
thing is the Chinese cannot know we are much stronger than the
Americans militarily - they treat both our countries equally.
Canton, 27th Oct 1814 – On the advice of the senior
British naval officer on station, Capt Brian Hodgson, the Select
Committee advises all British shipping to exit the river within the
next four days.
This manoeuvre is intended to encourage the
Canton Provincial Government to re-open trade. We are not really
leaving, just trying to persuade the Viceroy that buyers need
sellers and vice versa – we rely on each other.
An
appeal to the clemency of the Emperor has also been made by the
Select.
Sat 14th Jan 1815
Calcutta, 20th Dec – the Emma has arrived from China which she left on 18th Oct. She brings $350,000 in silver coins from South America via Manila. It’s the first South American silver we have received for a long time. The rest of her cargo is Chinese tutenague.
Emma reports that the dispute between the Select and the Canton Provincial Government has worsened. Capt Patterson, one of the Indiamen commanders, was stopped while travelling up the river in his ship’s boat. Trade remains stopped and many little vexatious restrictions have been introduced to annoy us. The Chinese do this to curb our pride.
Informal communication between the shipping at Whampoa and the shore is stopped.49 The Select has told all the Europeans resident in the factories at Canton to leave for Macau.
Our trump card, Sir George Staunton, was sent to Canton with James Molony of the Select but was rebuffed and sent away. We have now prepared a complaint to the Emperor against the Viceroy and his officers and are seeking for a way to deliver it to Peking (usually done by Portuguese priests or Hong staff).
The last opium sale at Calcutta (1,512 chests of Bihar and 324 chests of Benares) on 19th Dec produced 2,631 and 2,313 Rupees per chest respectively whereas the requested price at Canton, according to the Prices Current of 15th Oct (all nominal due to the confrontation), is $1,170 per chest. This might permit a tiny profit to holders of the new supply but there is no demand and a large stock on hand. The annual opium export for China market is set by the Company at 2,300 chests but on 13th Oct there remained 1,900 chests at Macau.
Sat 21st Jan 1815
HMS Doris (O’Brien) after a brief visit to Calcutta has returned to the Far East with a cargo of treasure.50
Sat 28th Jan 1815
Two Dutch ships have touched at Port Louis, Mauritius, for water and provisions. They are in ballast and are travelling to China for tea. They are the first Dutch ships in Asia for many years.
Sat 18th Feb 1815
The spat at Canton has taken a new twist and trade remains stopped but now it is the order of the Company that prevents it.
Ah Yen, a Chinese shopman and important source of advice on official thinking at Canton, has been advising the Select to be firm because he says the Canton officials imperatively need trade and must ultimately submit to the Company’s wishes. He was then arrested by the Canton government for improper relations with foreigners (Chinese are not supposed to connect with foreigners – only Hong merchants can do that).51
In consequence, the Company purports to have voluntarily withdrawn from trade. They say they will send their cotton shipments to Europe instead of selling them here. They have also declared they will send a letter to the Emperor, but getting to the north at this time of year is impossible. Everyone is astonished and no-one believes them. Their attempt to influence Chinese domestic administration cannot succeed.
Nevertheless, the Chinese have re-opened trade as the tea shipments are starting to arrive and it is only the Company’s order that is preventing their sale. That is unlikely to endure for long.
Sat 11th March 1815
The Diana (Tyrer) sailed from Whampoa on 21st Jan for Madras. The first fleet of seven Indiamen sailed the same day. During the previous week six of the American ships blockaded at Whampoa slipped down river and somehow evaded HMS Grampus at Chuen Pi and made good their escape. The dispute with the Canton government is ended but the terms are unknown.
Sat 1st April 1815
The Good Success (John Reid) and Ann (Riddock) have arrived from Canton. They left there in late-January. Sale of Indian and European goods has been very difficult. All except one of the American ships trapped in the River have left. They are said to have temporarily abandoned trade for privateering and are cruising off the Pearl estuary. The two arrivals bring no other news.
Meanwhile the Diana and Frederick Maria have arrived at Madras with the annual supply of China-goods for that port. The Albion subsequently sailed from Madras with what is reported to be the highest value cargo ever shipped by a country ship from that port.
Sat 15th April 1815
The China-trade was opened for a few weeks at the beginning of the year – just long enough to buy and load the teas and get the Company’s fleet away. It was then stopped in response to the Imperial reply to the complaint of the Select against the provincial Viceroy.
The Emperor is surprised that a small group of visiting foreigners would see fit to complain the Viceroy of two large Provinces. He refers to his clemency and kindness in permitting foreign trade and is shocked that these people are ungrateful and contentious. He says they quickly forget every kindness and concession and covet more advantages. They are ‘insensible to the blessings showered upon them’. China sells them the useful inventions of her civilisation and they reciprocate by corrupting the morals of the Chinese.
The Emperor concludes with the advice to the Select that, if they find the terms of trade inconvenient, they may leave.
Opium has risen to $1,300 a chest but is in only slight demand.
Sat 22nd April 1815
Walter S Davidson (the Calcutta merchant) and Alexander Shank are returning to China from the Cape.
Sat 13th May 1815
Canton – the Indiaman Wyndham has arrived at Calcutta from China on 17th April with news:
The American ships have all left the Pearl river and escaped via the Sunda Straits.
An Imperial rescript has arrived at Canton requiring an investigation of the smaller Hong merchants. It is alleged by our traders that the Edict was procured by the big Hong merchants to perfect their control of trade by eliminating their smaller competitors.
The Select has been unable to get the concessions demanded of the Canton government and Sir George Staunton has left Canton for Macau. Sir Theophilus Metcalfe is to come to Calcutta to brief the Governor-General.
Private letters per Wyndham say the quarrel between the Viceroy and the Select is far more serious than is generally known. The Chinese were offended by our warships coming into the river, killing people and endeavouring to steal a ship. They are uninterested in our squabbles and insist we leave them outside Chinese jurisdiction. They also allege our interference with Chinese servants who are supposed to be entirely under the Canton government’s jurisdiction. The Select responded that the Royal Navy is beyond its control. They conceded the Viceroy’s right to regulate his own people and have withdrawn their pretension to protect Chinese servants (Ah Yen).
On that being agreed there were smiles all round and trade was back to normal until a month later when the Emperor’s Edict arrived, replying to Staunton’s complaint on behalf of the Select. This Edict deplores the infringement of Chinese sovereignty by the Royal Navy. It also orders the dismissal of all junior Hong merchants, who are suspected of assisting the foreigners against their own government for reward. That leaves the trade entirely in the hands of 3-4 prosperous merchants. Punkiqua (who supposedly purchased his resignation a few years ago with $3 million Spanish) has been called out of retirement to sort everything out.
Our defence is that we patronise the small Hongs to spread business and deter price-fixing. This has resulted in their all becoming indebted to the Company’s ship officers for their privileged trade. We had expected they would trade through and pay off their debts in instalments but now they are dismissed they have no trade and no income and our debts may be worthless. The Select professes a concern that the few remaining prosperous Hongs will become prey to venal officials and the costs of doing business will increase. The Select is particularly fearful of the big Hongs’ proposal to buy the entire cargo of each ship in turns. This would depress the price of our cotton and opium and might even balance the trade.
The Emperor castigates Staunton for lese majeste and requests his arrest (hence his departure for Macau). Until now we have considered Staunton as our trump-card in the poker game we play with the Viceroy. The Select felt it was incumbent on them to do something and, now the season’s tea has been shipped-off, they have stopped trade.52
A country trader based at Canton has advised its Calcutta Agents to send no cargo for a year and see what happens. Another says Staunton has been ordered out of China.
Vol 1 No 1 - 8th November 1827
|
Opium Patna Benares Malwa Turkish |
Oct 1827 Deliveries 286 189 456 N/A |
Stock at 1.11.27 1,080 203 1,767 N/A |
Selling $ 1,180 – 1,220 1,150 – 1,180 1,380 – 1,420* 750 - 800 |
* Company Malwa & Smuggled
Sat 27th May 1815
Bombay, 27th May – the Company fleet for China came into port from London today bringing 80 Chinese – 40 in Vansittart and 40 in Marquis Camden.
Canton Register Vol 5 No 18 – Fri 16th November 1832
The 1814-1815 Nepal War provided the first occasion for British and Chinese negotiators to come into direct contact. At commencement the Nepal King applied to Peking for help.
During the first government of Lord Cornwallis, the Ghurkhas invaded Tibet and plundered the palace of the Tseshoo Lama at Jigurchee. A Chinese army was sent to punish them and the Ghurkhas withdrew. The Chinese General then proposed through the Amban at Lhasa that the British should cooperate in a simultaneous attack on Nepal. This was declined and the Chinese proceeded alone, obtaining a victory in the Tingren desert which brought the Ghurkhas to submission. Since then Nepal is considered as a tributary nation and a legation travels annually from Kathmandu to Peking.
When the Anglo-Nepalese war commenced in 1814 the Ghurkhas told Peking the dispute arose from our demand for access to the passes through Himachul which they, as faithful allies, had refused. Then the Chinese Resident at Lhasa sent in a long report to Peking which, relying on a British denial of such a demand, assumed its opposite. China then sent an army to Nepal but it arrived after our war was concluded. In September 1816 the Sikkim Rajah forwarded a letter from Lhasa to Calcutta in Persian from a Chinese named Shee Chuen Chang (The Amban) acting on behalf of the Lhasa government and requesting to know British intentions.
At the same time a Chinese force arrived at Jigurchee and the Ghurkhas asked Britain for help, in case the Chinese wanted more than had previously been agreed. Our Indian government offered no support to Nepal and replied accordingly to Shee in Lhasa. This satisfied the Chinese but the British remained uncertain of Nepal’s position. The Ghurkhas met with the Chinese and requested Chinese help to remove the English trading station at Kathmandu saying they suspected the merchants were actually soldiers. Shee noted that Nepal had agreed by treaty to receive the trading station. He complained that Nepal had said the British wanted access to the Khoten passes to invade China but, had they really intended invasion, he was quite sure they would use another route.
Shee supposed the Ghurkhas could raise 200,000 soldiers but asked how much money they had? They replied 500,000 Rupees. The Chinese then withdrew their troops from Jigurchee and Lhasa but they did tell the British Governor-General at Calcutta that they would like the Kathmandu Residency removed - ‘the young Nepali King is inexperienced and suspicious. It would be a friendly gesture to China to withdraw your Resident’.
Sat 22nd July 1815
The Lady Barlow has arrived at Calcutta from China bringing letters from Macau and Canton up to 11th April:
A letter of late March says the dispute between the Select and the Provincial government has subsided but gives no explanation. The Select had threatened a stoppage of trade but a continuous arrival of ships with cargo rather damaged their credibility. Some prohibitory Edicts against opium have slowed that market and, whilst the merchants are asking $1,320 a chest, it is only nominal as the Chinese have closed the markets in both Macau and at Whampoa.
In late Feb the Chinese official at Casa Branca, who supervises the Portuguese in Macau, came down to that city and arrested all the major opium dealers. They thought it was a sting and offered money which seems to have angered him more. They have confessed their involvement in opium distribution (a crime) and identified their western suppliers. They have been banished to Ili as slaves of the garrison.53
Since then some speculators sold a few chests in Macau to exploit the unmet demand and some of them were caught too. It is absurd for the officials to try to stop this trade because the people will have their opium – its like requiring a western nation to forego alcohol. We have 700 chests remaining in Macau but surveillance is so close we cannot get it out of the warehouses without the risk of discovery and arrest. When this year’s opium arrives we will store it on the ships for better security.54
Cotton is not selling well either and, since the departure of the Company’s fleet, the factories at Canton have become quiet. The small Hongs continue to have cashflow difficulties. If they are allowed to trade through they should pay-off their debts in seven years. If they are bankrupted, we will all lose heavily.
Sir Theophilus Metcalfe has arrived at Calcutta on Lady Barlow. He is here to obtain a shipment of silver for the Select at Canton. The stoppage of trade, the continuing absence of the Americans and now the effective suppression of opium distribution have combined to deny the Company its usual source of silver by diminishing the sale of its Bills. The galleon from Acapulco is due at Manila about now and that should help alleviate the silver shortage.
Sat 19th Aug 1815
The Day, 18th April – Now he is reinstated in his sovereignty, the Prince of Orange has chartered a company to have the exclusive Dutch trade in tea from China. The VOC became bankrupt several years ago.55 He says China-trade requires great capital and cannot be left to private merchants – he knows about the artificial market we have created in China.
The new Dutch Company has a guaranteed monopoly for 25 years and pays 5% tax on all tea imports to the Netherlands. A draw-back of tax is available on re-export. The initial capital of the Company is 8,000 shares of 1,000 guilders each. A Board of five Directors and a Secretary will operate the business.
Sat 18th Nov 1815
Directors’ letter of 18th May 1815 – Company employees of the China factory are prohibited from trading for their own benefit as Agents with effect from 1st Oct 1816. After that date all private agency business conducted under the Company’s licence will be conducted by two members of the factory acting under the direct supervision of the Select. The commission derived from this Agency trade will in future be shared by all the Company’s supercargoes in China.
Sat 30th Dec 1815
Letter from Canton, 6th Oct – The Wyndham (Nicholl) has sunk but all the cargo of opium and 1,500 bales of the cotton was salvaged. Most of the rest should be recovered too. Our staples are selling well – cotton is 13.5 Taels a bale and opium is selling at $1,480 a chest. There are 20 Company ships at Whampoa that will sail with the winter monsoon in January. Several country ships are also in port.
The Americans recently commenced to supply Turkish opium to the Chinese. The first shipment sold at $1,100 per picul and the second, which was larger, at $770. Five more American ships are on their way here with further supply from Smyrna. This will diminish the price we are able to get for Bengal opium. There is another strange discrepancy in this market – Bengal and Bombay cotton attract different prices, the former getting ¾ Teal more on average.56
1816 - Whole year missing in BL copy
1817 - Whole year missing in BL copy
Canton Register Vol 13 No 42 – 20th Oct 1840
China news - The sailing of some of our ships is delayed due to extensive desertions in the merchantmen crews. Macau recently appointed a Ghaut Serang to assist in regulating the port and he has induced seamen to desert. Macau is full of Lascars. They offer themselves for re-employment through the Ghaut Serang but at enormous salaries - $9 per month and six months advance payment. The Ghaut Serang is responsible for this organised labour movement. It is a conspiracy. He allures the lascars with promises of high pay; they reside in his accommodation enjoying wine and women and incurring debts which he then distrains from their prospective wages.
A similar system was briefly attempted in 1816-17 in Calcutta and was brought to an end only after lascars burnt the shipping in the Hooghly.57
Sat 3rd Jan 1818
Letter from Canton, 2nd Oct 1817 – All the ships of this season have arrived safely at Whampoa. Bombay cotton was selling at over 13 Taels but has now declined to 12.3 Taels. Chinese goods for export are all expensive.
The Select has opened its sale of Bills on Calcutta and is offering 205 Sicca Rupees for every $100 silver dollars.
The new Hoppo is enforcing the ban on exports of Sycee silver and we may have difficulty removing the balance of our trade from China this year.
There are six American ships at Whampoa but no other foreign ships.
Sat 3rd Jan 1818
Just before the Helen left Macau, all the Captain of ships in port individually addressed the Select on the new Hoppo’s plan to search foreign ships prior to issuing the Port Clearance certificate. He is looking for illegal exports of sycee. They ask the Select whether they may resist the Chinese authorities by force. The Select’s reply was still awaited when the Helen sailed.
Sat 10th Jan 1818
Letter from Canton, 1st Nov – two French warships are in the China Seas sailing to Cochin China with presents for the King. It is supposed they intend to renew the relationship that existed between the countries before the Revolution.
The Select is concerned at the increasing numbers of merchants from India who remain in China after their ships leave. The European merchants are not allowed to do this and the Parsees and Armenians should be similarly restricted. Both the Select and the Provincial government are dissatisfied with these all-year residents of the factories at Canton. It is supposed that the Company will enforce its Regulations and remove them.
Sat 21st Feb 1818
The Friendship (Horwood) arrived Bombay from China on 14th Feb. Cotton is a little lower; opium is $1,350 a chest. H Magniac arrived by this ship.
Sat 7th March 1818
Indian Government Gazette, 19th Jan - The Chinese are fortifying the river access to Canton. They frankly wonder if the next Company ships to arrive will be bringing goods or soldiers (the ejection of Amherst’s embassy).
Cotton is selling at 12½ Taels but we are in no hurry and are holding out for more. The rumour is that the cotton crop on the Yangtse has at least partially failed this year and nankeens will be in short supply.
Sat 21st March 1818
Amherst’s failed embassy to China did produce something. He was able to form an opinion of the present Chinese Emperor whom he characterises as ‘impetuous’ and ‘capricious’, which characteristics were increased by constant intoxification (not alcohol). He was extremely desirous of the ambassador’s performance of the kow-tow – it is the Chinese way.
We saw the Chinese army is composed of four types of soldier – matchlock men, archers (usually mounted), spearmen and ‘tigers’ (the Emperor’s bodyguard, armed with short swords).
The Chinese Imperial revenue is collected in kind, like our tythes, by a fleet of 20,000 junks that sail the rivers and canals to the furthest parts of China and return on the change of the monsoon.
We obtained much useful survey details of the Gulf of Chih Li and the Korean coast. We visited the Loo Choo Islands and recorded their productions.
Sat 28th March 1818
The Bombay Castle (Cleland) left China 22nd Jan and arrived here 21st March. Cotton has fallen in price and the extra supplies sent out recently will keep it low. The Chinese are canny traders and never buy on impulse.
Sat 4th April 1818
Asiatic Mirror, 4th March - The Rev Robert Morrison is publishing 750 copies of a Chinese dictionary at Macau. It will be in three parts; first English to Chinese arranged alphabetically, second Chinese to English arranged by radicals and third English to Chinese. The Company as his employer is taking 100 copies. He has spent 10 years on its preparation and is asking for 20 guineas per copy but one may buy just the English to Chinese dictionary (Part 1) at a reduced price. There are about 40,000 characters in the dictionary including many classical quotations and popular phrases. His agents are - Calcutta M/s Colvins Bazett & Co, Madras Arbuthnot D’Monte Mc Taggart & Co, Bombay Forbes & Co.
Morrison has previously published a Chinese grammar, a collection of Chinese dialogues and a philological examination of China – geography, population, government, religion, customs, etc. All his works are published by the Company.
Sat 18th April 1818
India Gazette, 9th March – 80,000 bales of Indian cotton remained unsold at Canton in January. British merchants say the opium price is softened by imports of Turkish by the Americans. They seem to be affecting this important market.
Sat 6th June 1818
The Ganges arrived Calcutta from China on 5th May. She reports cotton is selling at 13 Taels, opium at $1,350. Some counterfeit sycee has been discovered in the market – its about 75 – 80% silver.
Sat 20th June 1818
The Syren has arrived at Calcutta from Macau on 28th May bringing letters up to 4th April. She says the quantities of Indian cotton held by the Hongs at that time were:
|
- Chunqua Mowqua Poonqua Howqua Punkiqua Kinqua Powqua Cowqua |
Bengal9,000 7,000 1,100 3,800 2,000 2,000 350 0 |
Bombay9,000 7,000 7,200 4,300 3,000 2,000 1,200 1,000 |
In addition to this stock of 60,000 bales, the Resource, David Clark and Exmouth are bringing another 10,000 bales. This has depressed prices below 12 Taels.
The opium stock at Whampoa has been sold and only a fortnight’s supply remains in the hands of the brokers. They will in future have to buy in Macau where prices are now $1,300 for Patna and $800 for Malwa.
Sycee is selling at a premium of 2-3% over its silver value. Its more difficult to export now due to increased vigilance of the Customs. There is also the perceived risk of counterfeits in the market.58
Sat 15th Aug 1818
Quarterly Review, No 34 – McLeod, who was a sailor on HMS Alceste taking the Amherst embassy to China has written a book of his travels:
They dropped the mission at the Pei Ho and sailed north. They landed near the great wall. The people were friendly but declined to trade saying they did not recognise the Spanish dollar’s value. They seemed to find the foreigners had nothing that they wanted.
The expedition continued to Korea. The Chinese interpreter had no Korean and the Koreans had only a few characters of Chinese. We received a paper from the Korean headman saying in Chinese “who are you and why have you come” but we only got it translated when we returned to Canton. The headman indicated he would be executed for permitting us to land. He wept.
We found over a hundred islands down the coast but the women ran away with their children and the men signalled us to go away.
We continued to the Kingdom of Loo Choo where one of our sailors died and was buried on 15th Oct 1816. All the Loo Choo people we met were polite and gentle. They deplored our shooting birds and said they preferred to hear the birds singing around their houses. They offered us some chicken as alternative. The Loo Choo Islands became known to the Chinese in about 600 AD and received the written language in 1187 AD. They became tributary to China in 1378 AD and have sent a mission to Peking every two years since then. The big Loo Choo island is about 50 miles long and 12 wide.
The Loo Choo King wrote a letter to the British Regent in Chinese but this was lost when HMS Alceste foundered. He declined to speak to us as we had no official character. The people are small, the men averaging 5’ 2” tall, and strongly built. All their cows, goats and pigs were similarly diminutive. They have the skin colour of Mediterranean peoples. We left an English bull and cow for them to breed and also gave them, and showed them how to plant, potatoes. We saw tea, sugar, rice, oranges and limes all growing on the island.
Sat 19th Sept 1818
The latest class of students at Fort William Language School have graduated. They now study Sanskrit, Hindi, Bengali and Persian.
Wellesley’s grand vision of a centre of oriental learning has been abandoned. Chinese language instruction has long been unavailable at Fort William. Its now done at Malacca for better control.
Sat 14th Nov 1818
The Helen (Richardson), which is owned by M/s Remington Crawford & Co of Bombay and sailed several weeks ago from Bombay for China, has encountered heavy weather and put in to Penang. Several bales of cotton were thrown overboard to lighten the ship and a further 400 bales had to be off-loaded at Penang to permit repairs to her fastenings and caulking. The ship was expected to continue its voyage on about 10th Sept.
The passengers are China free traders - Robertson, Magniac and Dent. They are all booked to return to China.
Sat 28th Nov 1818
The French ship La Caroline has arrived at Calcutta bringing Jacobus Leonardo Macsulla en route to Macau. He is appointed Lord Bishop to China.
Sat 12th Dec 1818
The Juliana (Kidd) has arrived at Calcutta from China with $800,000 in silver. This will relieve the scarcity of money in circulation at Calcutta. She reports Sir Theophilus Metcalfe is confirmed as President of the Select.
The Hong merchants have received an order to present 300,000 Taels to the Emperor and propose to levy a new tax on cotton to fund it. The Select has protested. Cotton and opium prices have fallen.
Sat 27th Feb 1819
Madras Courier, 9th Feb – everything is reportedly quiet in China. The Chinese are rebuilding the fort that HMS Alceste bombarded and destroyed. They are also building new forts now they know their protections are inadequate.
Sat 13th March 1819
The Andromeda (Almeida) has arrived at Calcutta from Macau. She reports that opium prices have been under pressure and Baboom, fronting a group of rich Chinese, has bought all the opium in the ships at Whampoa at $800 per chest. It is thought he intends to return the opium monopoly to Macau.
Apart from Baboom’s huge holding, we have had 47 chests landed from the Morning Star and 27 chests from the Portuguese ships - a total import of 70 chests for January 1819.
Sat 17th April 1819
The free trader Partridge (Kellie) left Liverpool on 1st Dec 1818 and has just arrived at Bombay bringing Wm Jardine as passenger.
Sat 8th May 1819
The Mentor (Parkyns) sailed from Calcutta to China on 10th April
Sat 26th June 1819
The Lord Castlereagh (Briggs) left Bombay on 20th June carrying Framjee Muncherjee and six other Parsees to China. The John Bannerman (Hunter) also left the same day carrying McCarthy to China.
Sat 18th Sept 1819
Rev Atwell Lake, the Chaplain at Penang, is posted to Chaplain of Canton.
Sat 16th Oct 1819
Letter from Canton, 7th June 1819 – the market for Indian goods is low and all exports are comparatively expensive. In late May, the Hongs were offering 11½ Taels for cotton and do not believe us when we tell them little cotton will be shipped to Canton this year. As a result the supercargoes are off-loading the arriving cotton into the Hong merchants’ warehouses but withholding it from sale until the remaining ships have arrived and the total cotton supply is apparent to everyone. There is 45,000 bales of Bengal and Bombay cotton in the Hongs’ warehouses so far.
Opium is hardly selling - Bengal is $1,000 and Malwa $670.
The Dutch have inflated the price of exports at Batavia. Sugar is $10 and coffee $32 the picul. Some ships are sailing up to Manila to seek for an alternative supply but it is rumoured this year’s harvest there was small.
Nevertheless, Manila is in expectation of the imminent arrival of the galleon from Acapulco which this year is expected to bring $11 millions in silver and copper. That will lubricate the market.
Sat 30th Oct 1819
The Shah Byramgore (Kiddle) has arrived from Batavia and China. She reports there are two opium ships trading at Whampoa – Syren and Mentor. A third is loading for Suez. Some Americans and English free traders were waiting for sugar cargoes but the price in early July was unworkable at $8.30 a picul. Silk is only average quality this season and expensive owing to great American demand. Bombay cotton is selling at 11 Taels 7 Mace; opium is $950.
Sat 4th Dec 1819
A report from Frankfurt dated June 1819 says Tsar Alexander intends to unite Tartary to his domains and establish a direct communication with China across the common border.
Sat 11th Dec 1819
The Charlotte arrived in port yesterday. She left Whampoa 20th Aug. The restrictions on foreigners at Canton are almost entirely taken off and smuggling is again the preferred occupation. Cotton is selling at 12 Taels but is not expected to hold as three American ships are bringing supplies they could not sell at Liverpool. Company opium is up at $1,300 and Malwa or Turkey are both selling at $900 the picul.
Sat 25th Dec 1819
Canton, 13th Aug – Robert Berry, formerly of Port Louis, Mauritius and for the last 12 years of Canton as the Swedish and (since amalgamation) Norwegian Consul for India and China, has commenced a House of Agency with Sir Andrew Lyungstedt under the style M/s Berry & Lyungstedt.
Sir Andrew has 20 years experience as the supercargo of the Swedish factory in China. He is a Swede. Berry is an accredited Swedish diplomat and is accordingly exempt from the Company’s restrictions on Englishmen.59
Sat 25th Dec 1819
Sir Theophilus Metcalfe, President of the Select in China, is returning to London on Lowther Castle. His job is assumed by Urmston.
Sat 25th Dec 1819
22nd Dec - W S (or W T) Davidson has come to Bombay from China on Syren.
Sat 1st Jan 1820
The Sullimany left the Canton river on 6th Nov and arrived Bombay via Singapore and Malacca on 30th Dec bringing Wm Jardine back. He has spent the summer of 1819 in China.
Sat 15th Jan 1820
London Morning Chronicle, 28th June 1819 – Mr Assey’s pamphlet says the American merchants to China in 1817/18 season exported $7 million in silver and employed 16,000 tons of shipping in their trade to that country. British trade to China in the same year took $6.5 million in goods and employed 20,000 tons of shipping.
The Americans supply tea to both America and Europe and their China-goods are bought for silver. British purchases of China-goods are bartered for British and Indian manufactures and in 1817/18 we took away the balance of over $1 million in silver.
The Dutch China-trade is operated mainly by Americans who are allowed to bring teas to bonded warehouses for re-export by their Dutch principals. It is reported that there are totally 120,000 chests of tea at Rotterdam and Amsterdam awaiting re-export.
The Company chartered 19,278 tons of shipping from London ship-owners for the China-trade of 1817/18. Adjusting for their quaint tonnage calculation, the gross tonnage figure should be increased 15% to approximate actual carrying capacity. The Company pays half-freight on any excess shipped.
For the 1818/19 season the Company chartered 27,831 tons (on their own calculation of capacity) which appears to suggest a big push on China trade. This British tonnage excludes the country trade from Indian ports (principally Bombay and Calcutta) which has become extensive and is increasing.
It is a common prediction amongst China-traders that on the expiration of the Company’s present Charter, the trade will be opened as it has been to India. The opening of India has not been without distress. Overall the free trade may be marginally profitable but it has glutted England with India goods and ruined almost half of the participants.
Sat 11th March 1820
India Gazette, 14th Feb - Calcutta merchants have received letters from Manila reporting the arrival of the Carmo, Santa Rita and Activo from New Spain with $2 millions in bar silver. This will reanimate the market which has been slow.
Sat 18th March 1820
The American frigate USS Congress is at Macau. Her captain is disappointed that the honours paid to British warships are not offered to him.
Sat 8th April 1820
The Carmo left China on 27th Jan and has arrived at Penang. She reports cotton was a selling very slowly, opium was £1,250 a chest and pepper $17 per picul.
Sat 8th April 1820
Letter from Ludiana, 24th Feb – Moorcroft has gone to Srinegar and Nahan via the Dhoon. He will avoid Nickteeghaut as the Chinese control immigration there and will instead travel via Kooloyone to Ladakh. The Chief of that area is independent of China. Our party has killed three tigers and a bear.
Moorcroft wrote from Ghurwal to the Asiatic Society on 31st Dec that the priest at the temple of Oonkeemuth, a dependency of Budreenath, has allowed him to copy some of the temple records.
Sat 24th June 1820
It is reported that numerous industrious Chinese have occupied the border lands with Burma and have commenced cotton farming. The Chinese are favoured by the new King. An attempt by a British trader at Rangoon to buy Burmese cotton for Penang failed when the Chinese combined against him. All their production is sent overland and sold in China.
Sat 29th July 1820
Manila – the goods recently sent to Spanish South America have returned a quantity of silver which has released greater commercial activity here.
Sat 23rd Sept 1820
HMS Conway has been commissioned by Captain Basil Hall and is fitting-out in England for a survey of the coast of the Loo Choo Islands.
Sat 21st Oct 1820
A Chinese known in the Bombay community as Ah Hang and who works in the treasury of Catchatoor Johannes has been convicted of larceny at the Sessions.
Sat 16th Dec 1820
Letters received via the Shaw Byramgore (Crockett) from Canton:
5th October - When the Chinese had been convinced of our accounts of the failure of the Bombay cotton crop for this year, they started to buy and the price moved up to 16 or 17 Taels a picul. Consignees assumed they might move higher and refused sales at that level but they then fell back to 13 – 13½ Taels.
In fact the cotton failure at Bombay had induced a few of the largest merchants to attempt a speculation which was ended by the arrival of Sulimany from Bengal with the first of the crop from that province. We were all expecting the failure at Bombay to have at least reduced the harvest in Bengal but already 31,000 bales have arrived and it now seems there is another 25,000 bales due here soon.
13 –14 Taels was initially offered for two Bombay shipments but the holders held-out for more and they ultimately sold at 11 – 12 Taels. We are at a loss to explain the general lack of demand by the Chinese. Normally the demand is such that, if the Chinese harvest is poor, the market for Indian increases and vice versa. Bombay supply is less affected by this dynamic because it is cheaper than Bengal.
The market is very slow, particularly in Straits produce. Pepper is down to $10 and 70,000 piculs have been imported this season, double the usual annual consumption (it’s the returns of London pepper stock). Other Straits items are similarly depressed.
Canton 15th Dec - This is the worst trading season we have had since we came here. Bombay may have little cotton to supply but Bengal alone can supply more than this market demands. The market had anticipated a total import from India of about 25,000 bales. In fact we now expect 60,000 and once that became known the price fell to 13 Taels for new Cutchowra. Even then we have to be imaginative in forcing the sales. If we receive a similar quantity next season, prices will predictably reduce further - probably to 10 – 11 Taels a picul. Sgd Q.
PS – there is an American frigate at Lintin.
Sat 30th Dec 1820
Bengal Hurkaru, 8th Dec - The Lord Minto left China on 8th Oct and reports that information was received at Canton just prior to departure that the Ka Hing Emperor had died whilst visiting Tartary.
Sat 20th Jan 1821
Manila, 23rd Oct 1820 – On 1st Oct Manila was struck by a typhoon. The deluge raised Laguna Lake 10 feet and swelled the Sanelhateo River. A slight ground tremor followed. On 3rd Oct the lakes, rivers and tanks overflowed. On 5th Oct a epidemic spread amongst the Filipinos in consequence of which the foreign community was accused of poisoning the water supply. It appears the accusation took root because none of the Spanish or foreign community was affected by the epidemic. A French doctor who visited the affected districts to minister to the people was accused of poisoning his patients. A quantity of laudanum that he customarily prescribed was tested on a dog and the dog died, shortly followed by the doctor.
On 9th Oct the mob resolved to kill all foreigners and the Spanish garrison supported them. Barretto’s house was first attacked but spared when the crowd learned he was married to a Spanish woman. Another house in the same street was next. It contain a French captain and his supercargo and two Englishmen – Wilson and Nicoll. They hid in an upper room. The soldiery broke-in and forced the upper room door whereupon the occupants fired their matchlocks without hitting anyone. The soldiers returned the volley with better success and all four died. Next, the house of the Armenian merchant Isaiah Zecharia was attacked but a Spanish magistrate was induced to intervene and it was spared. The mob then attended Stevenson’s house where all seven occupants (Stevenson’s two Danish business partners Felish & Dunsfield and five Frenchmen) were strangled and decapitated.
The uprising then deteriorated into three days of looting, for which the Chinese community at Eseotta was particularly targeted. Eighty lost their lives and every Chinese lost most of his property. The riot was confined to the suburbs and the City of Manila remained safe. The Governor Mariana Fernandez Folgueras regained control late on 11th Oct and the area became peaceful. So far as the western community is concerned 26 died and $300,000 was plundered. Many hundreds of Filipinos have died of plague-like symptoms.
J H Campbell, commander of HMS Dauntless, later arrived and put the Governor on notice that the murderers of Englishmen must be identified and punished. A list of European victims is published in the report.
Sat 20th Jan 1821
The Lord Castlereagh (Briggs) arrived from China on 17th Jan bringing Thomas Dent to Bombay.
Sat 20th Jan 1821
Viceroy Yuen of the Two Kwang and Hoppo Ah of Canton have jointly addressed the rice shortages:
“Since April 1820 there have been fluctuations in the rice supply. We remitted the port duties on all foreign ships bring rice to Canton until the 10th moon. Now, in spite of fair harvests this summer and autumn, the 10th moon approaches, the shortages continue, and only four foreign ships have brought rice. We now extend the concession to the 3rd moon of the coming year. As before this licence does not permit the beneficiary to load a duty-free export cargo.”
Sat 10th Feb 1821
Madras Gazette, 27th Jan 1821 – a letter from Macau to a merchant here says the China market has become unprofitable. In May pepper was $20, in August it was $12. Cotton is selling at 12½ Taels a picul bale which approximates the cost to buy in India. European piecegoods have been over-imported and chintz, which costs $16, can be had at Canton for $8. European amber sells in London at 5 Guineas (£5.5.0d) but here is difficult to sell at $9 (£2.5.0d).
The China shopmen with whom we deal are all impoverished as are the Americans. If the trade is thrown open, as appears likely, our service will be annihilated. Only opium is profitable.
The market that flourishes is Singapore. Malacca has suffered consequentially. 18 months ago there were between 100 - 200 Chinese in Singapore; in Aug 1820 there were 5,000.
Sat 10th March 1821
Letter from Macau, 29th Dec (copied from Bengal Hurkaru of 12th Feb):
One of the officers in the foreign fleet has quite inexcusably shot a Chinese. The young officer was commanding a cutter up one of the branches of the river to get water. Farmers on the riverbanks were abusing the foreigners in the familiar way. He became irritated and fired pea-shot injuring two children. The temper of the farmers was aroused and the officer fired ball killing one of them. There is general agreement on the circumstances and the officer has fled to one of the British warships in Macau roads.
The Chinese insisted on the culprit being handed over for justice and sent an official party to search the Duke of York, which was the young officer’s ship. As luck would have it, the butcher on Duke of York, who has been depressed, had chosen that day to cut his throat, and it was immediately suggested that he was the culprit trying to evade justice.
The Select Committee compensated the dead farmer’s family and the Canton officials were apprised of and approved the plan. It seems the Chinese public have some suspicion that the matter has been glossed-over and they are not entirely satisfied.
As regards trade there has been an epidemic up-country which has limited the numbers of available coolies to bring the teas down and they are not yet all arrived. As a result our own cargoes are only slowly being sent up to Canton for exchange.
Sat 24th March 1821
The Juliana (Webster) has arrived Calcutta having left China on 16th Jan at which date most of the Indiamen had left for London. All trade at Canton is slow except opium which has risen to $1,750 per chest. Cotton is a drag at 11½ Taels per picul.
Sat 9th June 1821
Thomas Dent returned to China per the free trader Sulimany (Carter) on 2nd June.
Sat 29th Sept 1821
Every British-registered vessel is prohibited from going to China. The Board of Control is not the authority to issue such licences, which can only be obtained in India where their issue is restricted to ship-owners known to the Company.
A Committee of Trade established by the House of Commons in 1820 under Lansdowne has opined that this licensing system does not provide any benefit to British trade. A fee is charged in every case.
The Committee noted that the Company employs Collectors in the small ports along the Malabar and Coromandel coasts and believes a free trade to these ports might be introduced without damaging the Company’s monopoly.
The Committee was persuaded that the Indian natives have the buying power and the inclination to use British products. The effects of allowing the free trade to enter the Indian market at the three main ports have been great. The value of British goods to India in 1815 was £870,177 and in 1819 was £3,052,741.
The committee was perplexed by the Company’s requirement that only large ships be permitted to trade to India. This was included in the legislation and its effect was to prevent free traders from approaching close to the numerous small ports of Asia. The Persian, Arab and American trade to India was done in small ships. A suggestion that large ships are better able to deal with pirates is not supported by insurance rates which are the same for both sizes. Since the war the French have had moderate success in opening trade with Cochin China and we ourselves have become familiar with the trading peoples of S E Asia – the Bugis for example. Singapore contained about 200 people at the time of its lease to us. Within 3 months it had a population of 3,000 and now it exceeds 10,000. 175 ships entered and left Singapore in the first two months of this year.
The China trade is non-existent for British merchants outside the restrictive terms of the Company. Consequently, the Committee has looked at the experience of foreign countries in China-trade. This is mainly the American trade to Canton. There is no suggestion from the Company that the American China-trade has damaged their monopoly. The Americans use the small ships that British traders also prefer. The Company says the Americans are drawn to Canton because of the protection the Company gives to the trade of that port. It is difficult to comprehend why this should be withheld from the British free trader.
Lansdowne noted that the Company disapproved the American practice of distributing a share of the profits of each voyage amongst the seamen on their ships (which might give rise to a similar claim by British sailors), but this refers exclusively to the fur trade, which is only part of the American trade, and British fur traders do the same.
The Company has also alluded to the danger of disturbances at Whampoa when sailors are released ashore after a 6-month voyage but the Committee found that disturbances were mostly related to the practice of some Masters of Indiamen of letting their crews ashore in large groups. When the groups were reduced and supervised, the problem was alleviated. The Committee believes that the free trade could well be accommodated at Canton under a Consul or a suitably empowered Company official.
The Report concluded with the observation that a Bill was pending from last session for regulating the trade of British merchants with India and only awaited the conclusion of this Committee’s work before being introduced.
Sat 3rd Nov 1821
The number of foreign flowers and vegetables that have been introduced to Britain has markedly increased. In Elizabeth’s reign there were totally 578; it was about the same for the two Charles’ and Cromwell; James II received 41; William & Mary 298; Anne 230; George I 182 and George II 1770 but George III received specimens of 6,756 exotic plants during his long reign.
(a good number of those derived from a long visit of the King’s Gardener to Canton. It required the provision of an Indiaman fitted-out with an arboretum to bring all the plants back)
Sat 10th Nov 1821
Bombay Notice, 3rd Nov – the prohibition on export to China of metals sold at the Company’s monthly auctions in this Presidency is rescinded.
Sat 24th Nov 1821
Recent letters from China say opium is selling well but everything else is loss-making. There are 80,000 bales of Indian cotton in the Hong merchants’ warehouses awaiting sale up-country. Most of the Hongs will lose substantially on these investments. Some has been offered in pawn to release the capital but even 7 Taels is unavailable from the pawn-brokers. The Maitland brought a cotton cargo in the Spring and refused 11 Teal 7 Mace in March but more recently offered the whole lot to How Qua at 9 Taels and he declined it.
It is expected that the next Indian cotton crop will exceed 96,000 bales and we really have no idea to whom we can sell it.
Sat 15th Dec 1821
The China-ships that left the Pearl River and Macau in early October are arriving at Bombay. A letter from Canton dated 28th Sept has information:
The Americans are in dispute with the Canton government over the death of a Chinese woman alongside one of their ships. A sailor on deck threw a wine bottle at her and she fell in the river. Her body was later recovered and her skull was deeply fractured. It is feared the Americans will surrender the sailor to Chinese justice.
The first 9-10 ships from Bombay were able to sell their cotton at 9 – 10½ Taels a bale whereas the Company bartered its cotton at 11 – 11.4 Taels. Cotton brought from England sells at 9½ Taels and Bengal at 9 – 10 Taels.
The opium market has done very well in consequence of a combination of the few large holders of stock. An unusual feature is that most of the Bengal supply is with the Portuguese. They are getting $1,750 a chest. The strength of the combination reduces as the time approaches for the China traders to remit funds to Bengal in time for the next auction. The auctions commence early each year (usually in December) as soon as the winter monsoon brings the first ships and the proceeds of China-trade back to Calcutta.
Malwa has done comparatively badly. There are a large number of holders who compete amongst themselves (their capital is small) and they all want to sell. It fell to $1,020 at the lowest and has recovered to $1,050 now.
Sat 15th Dec 1821
Indo-Chinese Gleaner, Penang; July edition:
1/ The new Chinese Emperor (To Kwong) has placed Tan Ken She, whom he married on his first wife’s death, on the throne as Empress.
2/ Duke Ho has been appointed to the command of the Fuk Chow garrison in Fukien.
3/ The Hoppo at Canton has been told to send large sums to Hupeh, Hunan and Kweichow provinces for the relief of the people. The Emperor has remitted taxes to the inhabitants of those provinces since an overflow of the Yellow River but the civil service still needs to be paid. The payments to be made to each province are 200,000, 150,000 and 410,000 Taels respectively.
4/ A Chiu Chow man Wong Chang Ching has come to Peking to petition the Emperor. His family was solicited 4 years ago to join in a vendetta primarily involving two leading families of the town wherein he lived. His family declined to do so and since then they have been promiscuously attacked by both of the warring clans. Ten of the males in Wong’s family have been killed; twenty men and women were captured, their eyes and ears removed and their feet crushed. Thirty houses belonging to family members have been pulled down. 300 acres of family land had been appropriated by others. The Wong’s ancestral temple has been destroyed, their ancestral graves opened and defiled, the supply of mountain water to their houses and fields and their irrigation works are damaged.
Repeated complaints to local officials elicited four military raids which had all been expensive and unproductive and had mainly served to embolden the violent men who have now organised themselves into a society with four of them proclaiming themselves to be Kings. The Viceroy of the Two Kwang has offered a reward of 1,000 pieces of gold for the arrest of the leaders but without any apparent effect.
Wong was sent to Canton with Imperial instructions to the Viceroy and Governor to attend personally to his case.
5/ Sung, the high official who delighted Macartney, was made personal adviser to the new To Kwong Emperor during December 1820 (the first month of his reign). The old fellow so irritated his new royal master with honourable advice that he was ‘promoted’ to Adjutant General of Jehol, the Manchu homeland and site of the Imperial family’s summer palace, and sent off to ‘cool his heels’ there.
Another Privy Councillor named Ku Shan protested the transfer, noting Sung is widely respected throughout the civil service but such advice from another experienced Councillor only served to anger the young King. He has told his Council that they may speak their minds and, if he likes the advice, he will follow it; if not, he will not. He has reminded Ku Shan that the prerogative for appointing and transferring officials rests with Him alone and has ordered an enquiry into Ku Shan recent acts to see what failures of duty can be discovered.
6/ Kwang, the official who led Amherst to Peking, has been appointed a Judge of that city.
7/ Yu Tsin, the new Emperor’s uncle, raped a 13 year-old palace serving girl during the mourning period for the Ka Hing Emperor. The child committed suicide and her father complained. The Imperial Family itself sits in judgment on its own family members but had difficulty dealing with this case. It was felt inappropriate to either punish him corporally or send him to the frontier. Yu Tsin has been told to remain in his house for three years.
8/ During Ka Hing’s reign the tomahawk exercise by the Manchu army was discontinued but To Kwong is skilled at it and it has now been restored.
9/ Canton reports of 24th March note a numerous armed criminal gang operating at Whampoa. They killed a pawnbroker whilst robbing his shop and have also robbed money changers (the silver refiners who act as banks in China). Wang, the Whampoa magistrate reported their depredations to the Governor who sent soldiers to seize the culprits.
10/ Trade between China and Russia is greater than thought. A report of July 1819 from the Siberian frontier says Russia annually imports 66,000 half-picul chests of tea (worth £1½ million at Canton prices) and pays for it in furs.
Sat 5th Jan 1822
The latest arrivals from China (Partridge, Lord Castlereagh and Charlotte) say the American who dropped the wine-jar on the sampan-lady has been executed. A report dated 23rd Sept says the man bought a jar of wine from the woman but thought she had cheated him and threw it back to her. It hit her head, she fell overboard and was eventually pulled-out of the water dead.
The officials demanded he be surrendered for trial. The Americans countered that he sailed under the protection of the American flag and, if he was forcibly removed, they would haul down their flag on the Amelia (the sailor’s ship) and protest to their government. Over the ensuing few days the Captain fired a gun every evening and kept his national flag flying day and night. In the meantime the American traders tried the man themselves and adjudged him ‘not guilty’ but they nevertheless kept him gaoled in irons.
On 4th Oct, by prior agreement, a judicial official came on board Amelia with some Hong merchants and linguists and held a trial on deck. He declined to hear any evidence from foreign witnesses and received only the testimony of another Chinese woman who had seen something of the incident. On her testimony, he found against the seaman and demanded he be surrendered for punishment. The Americans again said they would abandon the ship before surrendering the man. This astonished the judge and it began to appear that he had been misled into assuming the man would be voluntarily surrendered once his judgment had been issued. He ordered the security merchant for the ship and the Linguist to be chained and took them away.
After this, the Americans somewhat resiled from their earlier robust defence of the seaman. This was assumed from the subsequent cessation of the evening gun-firing and pulling down of the flag each night.
The timing of the event was unfortunate. The Americans had brought silver for trade but had not then commenced, nor were subsequently permitted, to buy or sell anything until the matter was resolved. On the one hand they had this large supply of funds and all sorts of valuable Chinese products available to buy, and on the other there was this old seaman who was not even American.
The community of Americans at Whampoa, although small, was divided by the event and ultimately, under the pressure of traders from other American ships whose trade was likewise stopped, and upon the assurance of the Hong merchant that no molestation of the sailor would occur, they surrendered the man. He was removed from the ship on 24th Oct after nearly a month in irons and was severely emaciated when handed-over. The Americans escorted him to Canton that day but did not see him thereafter. Indeed the main concern evinced for him was from the Company’s Select which was anxious about the precedent which this surrender introduced. They formally applied to witness the seaman’s trial and were refused.
The seaman was tried by the Chief Judge of Canton at the Consoo House (Kung Sor – the office of the combined Hong merchants) three days after his arrival in Canton. The proceedings lasted about 90 minutes. One foreigner managed to get into the back of the Consoo House and saw the chap on his knees before the Judge vigorously protesting his innocence. The linguist said afterwards that the seaman had acknowledged his guilt but claimed the death was unintended and accidental. The Judge did not publish his award and the Hong merchants continued to be optimistic of a favourable outcome but at 6 am the next morning the seaman was taken out to the execution ground and strangled on the cross (a quick and efficient means of strangulation used in China). The Americans were called to remove the body and that was how his fate became known. He leaves a wife and children in Boston and is said to be one of the many European emigrants who fled to America to start a new life after the Great War.
Canton Register Vol 3 No 20 – Sat 2nd Oct 1830
Letter to the Editor - A British resident in China has sent a letter to England which has been published and concerns the death of Terranova in 1821. This Italian sailor on an American ship was accused of murdering a Chinese woman.
The letter-writer said Terranova threw down a piece of wood for the woman to place between her sampan and the ship as a fender, but it struck her and her boat. She fell overboard and was drowned. The American captain bravely said that so long as the Stars & Stripes flew over his ship the man would not be surrendered. When the Chinese stopped all American trade until the culprit was surrendered to them, the Captain’s support amongst the American trading community fell away. Terranova was kept in irons by the Captain throughout. This was understood by the Chinese as an indication of his guilt.
Then an understanding with the Hong merchants was reached. The Hong merchants were told that if they attended the ship, they might take Terranova but he would not be ‘surrendered’. Terranova was told by the American officers and supercargo that he merely had to tell the Chinese authorities what he had told them, and the Chinese would recognise his innocence and eventually he would be returned to the vessel. He was taken to the Hong merchants’ Hall (the Consoo) and a 2-3 day trial occurred behind closed doors. British and other foreigners who speak Chinese were refused entry. The Court incrementally discovered areas of agreement in Terranova’s evidence with the requirements for establishing murder in Chinese law. Eventually Terranova agreed to sign his statement by inking his hand and impressing it on the foot of the paper (he was more or less illiterate in English). He was then sentenced to death in Chinese but the decision was not translated. He was awakened early next morning ‘to see the governor’. He did not know the road to the governor’s yamen passes the execution ground into which he was bundled as they passed it. On seeing the cross prepared for his strangulation, he mistook it for a Christian crucifix, lowered his head and crossed himself. He was bound to it and strangled at dawn under the ‘life for a life’ principle that guides Chinese jurisprudence in cases of murder. The American Consul was informed later that morning to collect the body. The Governor reported to the Emperor that greed motivates foreigners and only by stopping their trade could they be brought to consent to justice. The matter was reported to the American government but it raised no complaint.
The Canton Register correspondent says ‘Had this British resident acquainted himself with the true facts of the case, he would have known that Terranova did not throw down a fender. It was an amphora that had previously contained Spanish olives which he threw from the forecastle of the ship for the woman to fill (with unidentified goods). The woman’s body was examined in the presence of the American consul Wilcocks and a hole in her hat was said to match the shape of the amphora’s pointed end - there was no doubt what had occurred. A trial was then held in the ship but Terranova suspected the worst and refused to agree to be handed over. Then American trade was suspended and after three weeks of this, on the traders being given solemn assurances by all members of the Co-Hong that he would receive an open and fair trial, Terranova was persuaded to surrender himself. A slight complication was the fact that the ship had brought a cargo of Turkish and had been lying many months at Whampoa gradually disposing of it (the opium trade was based at Whampoa at that time). Terranova left the ship voluntarily and no-one suggested to him that he would undergo a merely formal examination and be returned. I know the whole business and can identify many witnesses with similar knowledge. There is no benefit to the Company in blaming the American traders for this precedent. We acted in what appeared to be the best interests of all concerned. Our government requires us to comply with the laws of the country in which we reside. Others may take a different view and their governments may uphold their resistance. That is their business. So far as we are concerned the Terranova affair is a matter for Americans alone.
Sgd - An American.
(in the next issue the Editor asserts that Terranova had bought something from the woman and lowered the money to her on receipt of which she started to row off. Some unidentified person then threw the jar at her.)
Sat 19th Jan 1822
Crommelin’s large collection of Chinese books was presented at the Asiatic Society’s meeting of 13th Dec. He has just returned from China. Dr Marshman produced a catalogue of the books which are mostly artistic. Crommelin also presented two copies of Morrison’s Chinese Dictionary, a copy of his Chinese Grammar and his View of China.
A short account of the origin and nature of the Portuguese Government at Macau was also included in the collection. This shows the censuses for 1810 and 1813 totalled just over 4,000 Portuguese residents. The figures exclude the military garrison and the clergy. The majority of Portuguese residents are listed as merchants, seafarers and a good many ‘unemployed’ people.
The slave population of Macau is sourced from Mozambique (via the market at Goa) and from Timor. The text indicates the Portuguese pay an annual ground rent to China for their occupation of Macau. No structures (ships or houses) may be built or repaired without Chinese approval. It appears Macau is leased solely as a trading base.
Sat 9th Feb 1822
Madras Courier, 22nd Jan - The Cornwall left Canton on 2nd Dec and has just arrived at Madras. She reports the Merope and Eugenia, two of the four ships ordered out of the river for selling opium at Whampoa, have now left. The other two - Hooghly and Emily - were delayed departing only because they had to first offload the cargo they had taken-on, Hooghly for New South Wales and Emily for Europe. They left the river in ballast which will be a considerable commercial set-back for their owners / masters.
The principal Hong merchant was demoted to commoner for his role in the matter as Security Merchant of some of the ships. Hong merchants buy official degrees but the Viceroy took his button for this offence. He will have to pay 200,000+ Taels to renew his degree.
The upshot of this is that the foreign merchants are fearful they will have difficulty obtaining Security Merchants for their ships on next arrival.
Meanwhile other trade is depressed. The finest Tinnevelly cotton could be sold only on long credit terms at 10 Taels a bale. Cutchara cotton sold slowly at 7 Taels. The only commodity in demand is opium and prices have held-up well notwithstanding the government’s actions. The difficulty since the Viceroy’s act is in getting the Drug landed – we were selling over the side at Whampoa but no boats will come alongside anymore. The foreign shipping at Whampoa has taken defensive precautions – armed sentries patrol the decks and boarding nets are taken-up at dusk. Asian traditional produce – pepper, betelnut, rattan, tin - still sells well. Ceylon pearls are at a discount. The Cornwall took some Chinese emigrants to Penang on the way back.
Sat 9th Feb 1822
The Sussex (Trill) arrived Penang 29th Dec from Canton via Singapore. She brought a letter from Canton to a local merchant dated 18th Nov which reports on the Whampoa opium dispute.
It says the intermediaries who pay our regular bribes to the Whampoa magistrate for distribution to his colleagues, withheld some part of the payments that were routinely expected. The magistrate’s financial dependants sent him back to the intermediaries to demand payment. They in turn abused him physically. His wife then shaved her head and sat before the Viceroy’s yamen demanding justice. The Viceroy interviewed the Whampoa magistrate and discovered all the details of opium distribution, both at Macau and Whampoa, including a list of 50 of his officials in receipt of our regular payments and the amount that each received – generally $8,000 to $10,000 per annum.
With this detailed information of our smuggling trade formally before the Viceroy, all the intermediaries have run away and we have no-one to get the opium from the store ships to the consumers. We have not sold a single chest since 1st Dec. Worse, the ships that imported opium have been peremptorily ordered out of the river within five days. Fortunately the magistrate was not familiar with all the ships bringing opium and only identified the two that stored it at Whampoa for sale – Merope and Eugenia. The Captains of both ships have been told they will be boarded and searched if they do not forthwith depart. If opium is found aboard it will be confiscated and burned, so the Viceroy says. This is the reason for the arming of the ships and placing the sentries – it is to resist the Viceroy should he use force.
It is feared that this confrontation, if proceeded in by the Viceroy, will escalate to a complete cessation of foreign trade. Consequently, there was pressure from other foreign merchants on the owners of Merope and Eugenia to remove their ships from the river and devise some new means to distribute their goods.
Sat 16th Feb 1822
The Glenelg (Glover) has returned to Bombay from China bringing Wm Jardine. She carries some letters to local merchants, dated about 26th Dec., which report the then situation:
The Company’s trade has been stopped due to a death at Lintin village and the Hong merchants have come to Whampoa to visit every ship and explain why.
The trade stoppage extends to the shopmen with whom we have formerly done our (non-tea, non-silk) business. Foreign goods left for sale with shopmen have been seized by government on the grounds that all foreign trade should be with Hong merchants. An American resident who had goods from a shopman in his warehouse had them seized as well.
The restriction of Security Merchants to just the four rich ones has facilitated their cartelisation of our goods. Cotton cannot get 6 Taels a bale on 180-days terms and we have 150,000 bales on hand.
We have about 600 chests of Malwa and 400 of Bengal at Whampoa but dare not sell because the Hong merchants have promised a 600 Teal reward for every chest discovered. Informers are everywhere. Malwa is nominally $1,200.
The Select opened the Company’s Treasury at Macau on 14th Dec for receipt of silver in exchange for Bills on London at 4/8d per dollar at 8-month’s Sight or 5/- per dollar at 730-days Sight. These are unexpectedly good rates and suggest the Select was doubtful of its ability to get enough silver. Contrarily, the stoppage of trade has encouraged many merchants to remit their capital and the Company received over $1 million in just a few days.
Everything we can buy from the Chinese is highly priced and is only bought as a means of remitting funds. Had the Company declared its intentions earlier they could have filled the Treasury at a lower exchange rate and that would have reduced the prices of Chinese exports.60
Sat 16th Feb 1822
A report of the death mentioned in the preceding article:
There has been another confrontation with the Chinese, this time at Lintin. HMS Topaze (Richardson) was anchored off the island whilst the Captain was doing business at Canton. (This business is presumably carriage of silver back to India.) The warship sends parties ashore from time to time to get fresh water and wash dirty clothes.
The villagers object to foreigners taking water without permission, particularly in the dry winter months, as the island is small and the supply limited. Several altercations have occurred until a mutually satisfactory arrangement was made. This required inter alia that only one boat from the ship should land at any one time.
On 15th Dec a boat crew was ashore when a party of villagers attacked them and drove them back to the beach. Fourteen of the boat crew were injured. The officer-of-the-watch on HMS Topaze saw the fight and fired off 2-3 rounds of grape-shot into Lintin village. This satisfactorily ended the affray on the beach but killed one man and injured thirteen others in the village.
The Chinese have demanded that the responsible man be surrendered for judgement. Richardson was still at Canton when the affray occurred and only returned on board on 24th Dec after the Canton government had stopped foreign trade.
Sat 16th Feb 1822
On the opium dispute at Whampoa, How Qua sent a copy of the Imperial Edict to the President of the Select on 17th Nov. It seems the Emperor may not have been advised in detail how the Whampoa opium market was exposed to officials.
The Edict says Keih the magistrate of Nam Hoi and Wang the magistrate of Poon Yu (from whence Whampoa is administered) have received an official letter from the provincial Treasurer Ching disclosing he in turn had received an official document from Viceroy Yuen who got it from the Emperor in response to Yuen’s report on opium smuggling at Whampoa (as originally revealed by the assaulted magistrate).
Viceroy Yuen says the Hong merchants have identified three ships at Whampoa with opium on board. “Opium is made by foreigners and brought to China to poison the people. The Emperor has repeatedly prohibited the importation of opium and I and the Hoppo likewise - it is not just two or three times. Now I have found the foreigners continue to bring opium:
“I, the Emperor, have personally ordered the Hong merchants to investigate and report. They say the country ships Parkyns, Hogg and Coupland61 all contain opium. In the 20th year of the previous reign, the Ka Hing Emperor ordered that ‘if one ship brings opium it will be expelled and not permitted to return; if all the ships bring opium, they will all be expelled and not permitted to return.’ This was notified to the Hong merchants for the instruction of the foreigners.
“It is reasonable to reject the cargoes of these ships and expel them but, of these ships, some have landed cargoes and others have loaded cargoes and it would be proper to distinguish their offences. Of the three ships that have landed cotton, putchuck and tin, the Security Merchant will discover their cost in the country of origin and confiscate one half of its value. The goods will remain warehoused here until three months after the ship’s departure when they will be released to the President of the Select (honoured with the title Taipan or chief merchant) to be taken away. It is not permitted to reload them on the original ship. The goods which have not been landed are rejected. The opium will be removed from the ships by How Qua and burned. The ships that brought the opium are expelled and must leave within five days.
“Coupland says the Chinese goods loaded into the Emily belong to a Dutch merchant. There may be collusion. Those goods may not be freighted in Emily. The Nam Hoi magistrate will order the Security Merchant for Emily to unload the ship and warehouse those goods until three months after Coupland departs. They may then be loaded to some other ship for export.
“The smuggling of ordinary goods entails confiscation. How can the masters of these ships suppose that bringing a prohibited substance to China can not entail punishment? This is to regulate the greed of the foreigners. China sells useful products to foreigners whilst they secretly smuggle opium to harm us. This is not in accordance with the Celestial principle.
“On this occasion, the three ships are merely disallowed their trade for this season. The Hong merchants are ordered to manage this business without delay.
In future, if a Hong merchant secures a ship containing opium he should be punished and his licence cancelled. As they have themselves revealed this plot, I allow them clemency.62 All foreign ships entering the river in future will be secured by the four leading Hong merchants – Howqua, Mowqua, Punkiqua and Chunqua – who will assume personal responsibility for the foreigners. They are each substantial merchants who, out of regard for themselves and their families, should feel awe and dread. This order is copied to the Governor and Hoppo.”
Dated - 1st year 10th month 23rd day of To Kwong.
Canton Register Vol 12 No 19 – 7th May 1839
Letter from an American trader in Canton to his Calcutta agents, dated 10th December 1821:
The Chinese have expelled all opium ships from the port. Only the Eugenia (consigned to James Matheson) remains at Whampoa and she should leave soon. All these opium ships are expected to resume their business once outside the river. The Hong merchants securing foreign ships were initially very strict. Five American vessels had to give bonds they brought no opium before they could trade but since then four more have arrived and been secured in the usual way. Half the import cargoes of the four opium ships Merope, Hooghly, Emily and Eugenia were to have been confiscated but the requirement has been withdrawn. It seems likely that no rigorous measures will be taken. This expulsion of the opium ships from Whampoa is no different to what occurs every year, it just happened earlier this year.
Letter from the Hongs to Wilcocks, American consul, 12th November 1821:
The Viceroy has issued many orders against opium. It has long been prohibited. You have repeatedly been warned that disobedience will provoke a severe prosecution of the trade. Now an Edict has been published concerning the foreign ships that bring opium. If we do not act against them we will be punished. If they come into port they will not be allowed to trade. We do not know if your ships at Whampoa carry opium. Please tell us if they have as we must report them to government. It is illegal and they must sell none but leave immediately. We cannot be involved in it. Sgd How Qua, Mow Qua, Chun Qua, Consequa and Yen Qua.
How Qua to Wilcocks, 17th November 1821, forwarding the Viceroy’s Edict:
The Hong merchants have reported three ships at Whampoa carry opium. This foreign mud poisons China. Many proscriptions have been issued but still the foreigners smuggle it in. Now the English Captains Hogg (Eugenia) and Parkins (Merope) and the American Coupland (Emily) have brought it in their ships.
In 1816 the Ka Hing Emperor ordered that any opium ship should be expelled with its entire cargo and its future trade proscribed. If all the ships bring opium they must all be expelled. These ships should be expelled and their trade stopped. But, unlike new arrivals, they have partly discharged or partly loaded. Accordingly the Hong merchants will value their cargoes and pay half price (in goods, not money) and the other half will be paid to government as a fine.
These three foreigners may not take the exports they have bought but the Select after three months may load these onto other ships for the foreigners’ account. Any opium in their ships will be taken out and burned. The ships are to be expelled within five days.
Coupland says the cargo he has bought belongs to a Dutch principal. This sounds like a conspiracy. The cargo will be discharged and sent on another ship. If ordinary goods are smuggled they are liable to seizure, how can Coupland et al bring opium and expect preferential treatment. These three ships are forever debarred from trade at Canton.
Hong merchants who secure ships containing opium should be heavily punished but as they have themselves discovered these crimes they may be forgiven on this occasion. Hereafter all foreign ships will be secured by the four leading Hongs – How Qua, Mow Qua, Chun Qua and Punkequa. These are opulent men who, out of regard for their families and property, may be trusted.
How Qua to Wilcocks, 17th November 1821 forwarding another Edict:
The Hong merchants report Robinson (Hooghly) has brought opium but they do not say if he has discharged or loaded any cargo. They should clarify this first.
Viceroy Yuen to the Hongs:
Consequa reported Parkins (Merope) brought opium and cotton. The ship has been expelled and has employed a pilot to leave. She has four cannon and 12 muskets. The crew of forty must leave with the ship. A Port Clearance Certificate has been issued her and the government boats will escort her out. The Hong merchants will maintain lists of the merchants and ships smuggling opium so they may never again be permitted entry.
Hongs to Select, 8th December 1821 forwarding the Viceroy’s Edict:
Please advise your national authorities that the Eugenia, Merope and Hooghly are smuggling ships and are forbidden to trade to China. Please tell them no ship may bring opium here in future.
Viceroy’s Edict - Four ships brought opium and were fined half the value of their cargo. Now several foreign merchants have begged for remission of these smuggling penalties. What the foreigners value is money. They commit crime for profit. The appropriate punishment for commercial crime is heavy fines so they do not profit by it. By punishing one or two, I send a message to hundreds. These four ships brought 200,000 Taels of goods. Their smuggling will cost them 100,000 Taels.
Now these foreigners say they have partners who are innocent of offence and they say they never heard before that smuggling would be met with confiscation. In humble imitation of the Emperor's clemency, and in consideration of it being a first offence, I now remit the fines. But the Emperor has already ordered that ships bringing opium must have their entire cargo rejected. These four ships have long been in port and sold part of their cargo. The Imperial order cannot precisely be obeyed. Accordingly the Hong merchants will calculate and agree the cargo costs with the foreigners and credit half the amount to their accounts for purchase of goods, except tea. The other half will be confiscated. They may not take the purchased goods away but after three months they may be sent after them in another ship. This meets the Emperor's requirements and confers clemency on first time offenders. The Hong merchants will obey this and maintain their precautions against smuggling.
Now Coupland's ship carried half a ton of tin and all the other cargo was opium. This is detestable. Rightly did Heaven require the life of Francisco Terranova. This ship should be punished more severely but as the other three ships have had their fines remitted, I shall extend clemency to Coupland as well.
We supply tea for millions of your people but you feel no gratitude and smuggle opium instead. You know it is unreasonable and in your hearts you should feel ashamed.
Sat 16th Feb 1822
The Hong merchants later added the English ship Hooghly (Robson or Robinson) to the list of opium ships. On 8th Dec the Hong merchants wrote to the President of the Select indicating Merope, Eugenia and Hooghly were all banned from China-trade. They asked the President to report the ban to his superiors.
Consequa was Security Merchant for Merope (Parkyns). He reported Parkyns had employed a pilot preparatory to taking the ship out of the river. The Hoppo then issued a Port Clearance certificate for Merope. Pakqua was Security Merchant for Emily. He reported similarly with the same result.
The foreigners then petitioned the Hong merchants for remission of the fines. They in turn commended relief to the Viceroy.
He said the foreigners come here for profit. The appropriate means of obtaining their respect for the law is fining which reduces the profit they seek for. This award is not simply punishment of the involved cargo owners but a warning to other foreigners who might be tempted to emulate them.
However the foreign merchants plead that confiscation threatens them with bankruptcy. They say the three ships brought goods worth 200,000 Taels and the loss of half is insupportable. The ship masters say they are not owners of their cargoes but partners in a joint venture. Their own capital is small. And they note no previous confiscation of goods has occurred. They were unprepared.
China is governed by justice and mercy. As this is a first offence the order of confiscation will be remitted. But we have an Edict of the last Emperor requiring that if any ship brings opium, its whole cargo should be rejected. These foreigners have sold part of their cargo and this Imperial order cannot be performed in their cases. Neither can I order payment be made to them for the cargo they have already sold as it breaches the spirit of the Emperor’s order. I conclude the whole of their cargoes must be rejected and the Hong merchants are ordered to calculate the costs and profits of the foreigners and permit them to buy goods with that part representing their costs. They may not buy tea or rhubarb. They may not load the goods they buy but must send another ship after three months to take the purchases away. The profits on those landed goods that have been sold are alone confiscated to government. This equates the result, whether the goods are sold or unsold, and gives effect to the Emperor’s order.
There will not again be any clemency shown. The ships of all the foreign nations are on notice their illegal goods will in future be confiscated.
As for Emily (Coupland) from Baltimore, she carried only 10 piculs of tin but paid Port Entry fees of 1,400 Taels. Clearly she entered port solely to sell opium. Detestable. But as the others have received clemency, it shall be extended to Coupland as well.
The conduct of the foreigners is unreasonable. They should reflect on their actions, repent their conduct and reform themselves. Then they will always be welcome to share in the bounty of China. The Hong merchants are ordered to instruct the foreigners and inculcate responsible behaviour in them.
Sat 16th Feb 1822
Since the events described above the Bogue Customs House has been reporting the arrival of foreign ships to Canton. An express message is sent from the river mouth to Canton requiring the Hong merchants to repair to Whampoa to meet and inspect the ship for opium. The Viceroy instructs “If they certify the ship opium-free, they and the master or consignee give bonds to the Canton Governor, and may commence trade. If Hong merchants really detest the opium trade, they will be pleased at this support from government, and do their duty well. If they do not, we will know what they feel in their hearts.”
Sat 23rd Feb 1822
Madras Gazette, 5th Feb – the David Clarke (Miller) has arrived at Madras from China which she left on 4th Jan. She brings G J Hadow of the Select and a party of 14 Chinese emigrants.
Another affray has occurred on Lintin Island over the use of the water supply – this time between a watering-party from a country ship and the villagers. One man was killed and 4-5 injured but trade had not been stopped at the time of the David Clarke’s departure.
Sat 9th March 1822
The Barretto Junior (Fernandes) arrived Calcutta 10th Feb. She left Macau 29th Dec. She brings back to India the Baron Joseph de Porte Alegre, Miguel da Souza, M L de Silva and J E Hector.
Sat 9th March 1822
Calcutta – The last arrivals from China say Capt Richardson of HMS Topaze has sought to reverse liability for the dispute at Lintin by commencing the concatenation with the assault on his watering party by the villagers. He has demanded the surrender of the village headman who led the attack.
Sat 30th March 1822
The Select at Canton has told the Viceroy of the Two Kwang it has no authority over the acts of HM officers, specifically the officers of HMS Topaze. The Viceroy was unimpressed and trade continued stopped.
The Select then ordered a withdrawal from Canton to the ships at Whampoa, the removal of all their silver and property from the British factory to the fleet which was then to sail away (actually to Lintin but supposedly to Manila). The ships remain in the estuary at the time of this report.
The action was intended to create agitation amongst the Canton officials and induce their proposals for amicable settlement of the dispute. That does not seem to have occurred. We must impress our importance upon them. Without the Company, Canton’s foreign trade would be insignificant.
Vol 8 No 28 – Tues 14th July 1835
Captain Richard Alsager commanded HMS Waterloo during the Lintin affair of 1821-22 when the Select Committee was obliged to spend 6 weeks on his vessel at Chuen Pi.
Sat 20th April 1822
The Rei do Reino Unido arrived Calcutta from Macau which she left on 29th Jan. She reports that the controversy over the two incidents of fighting on Lintin, which each caused the death of a Chinese villager, continue to prevent trade resuming. The effect of the Select moving their treasure and property from the Canton factories to the shipping and sailing down to 2nd bar was reportedly to make the Viceroy more consensual. The foreign community is in expectation of a resumption of trade.
Sat 27th April 1822
Private letters from Canton dated 22nd Feb say the stoppage of trade has been ended and the Select and the Canton government are again in harmony.
John Bull in the East, 6th April, reports the Macauley arrived Penang from China in mid-March. Her Captain says the Select has returned to Canton, the Company’s shipping returned to Whampoa on 25th Feb and is being loaded. They should depart for England by mid-April.
The magistrates of Poon Yu and Tung Kwoon, M/s Kwang and Chung, have published an Edict on 22nd Feb to the Hong merchants in accordance with the instructions of the high provincial officials and in response to the English Taipan Urmston’s letter to the Hong merchants.
Urmston reported that the British warship had taken the murderers away and he has no means of delivering them to justice (HMS Topaze arrived Madras 6th April from Trincomalee). Urmston agrees to send all the details of the affrays home so the responsible crewmen can be punished. He entreats that trade may re-opened. In consideration of all the facts, the high officials agree to indulge Urmston. He and his colleagues may return and trade their produce. They should be grateful.
Cotton remains low in price with a huge stock overhanging the market. Company opium is selling at $2,040 – 2,050 and Malwa is $1,340. The high prices are due to distribution of the Company’s product now being necessarily through the cartel at Macau.
Two of the Company’s Indiamen (General Harris and another) were unable to obtain tea cargoes so late in the season and sailed in ballast. This is a serious penalty which the Company has to pay as a result of the Lintin fighting. It is a commercial reverse to the Company and a severe embarrassment to Urmston.63
Sat 18th May 1822
Notice – the Glorioso (Paterson) will sail from Bombay for China immediately after the Company’s forthcoming sale of Malwa opium. It will carry no other cargo. For freight apply to the owners M/s Roger d’ Faria & Co
(NB – the first auction is unsuccessful and sailing is delayed to the first Spring tide of July)
Sat 18th May 1822
The Heroine has returned to Bombay from China and Penang bringing Charles Palmer, William Boyd and L Magniac of the Company’s civil service and the latter’s family. They completed the China/Penang leg on General Harris (George Welstead), the Indiaman that could not get a tea cargo.
They confirm relations with the Canton government are restored but the dispute with the Macau authorities (over control of the opium distribution) continues. Opium is selling at $2,050 the chest.
Sat 18th May 1822
Henry Wright is the Purser of Castle Huntly (Henry A Drummond) for the 1821/22 season. The ship is one of the Indiamen on the Bombay and China route.
Sat 25th May 1822
Wm Jardine has kindly donated 8 Guineas to A Society for the Education of the Poor in the Scottish Highlands which was recently started at Bombay.
Jardine is presently involved as a Grand Juror in a tedious case in the Recorder’s Court of The Company v William Brown Hockley. It is expected to take many days.
Sat 22nd June 1822
The failure to sell Indian cotton in the China market and the disruption of opium distribution in the Canton river, has deranged part of the Company’s usual source of funds for tea and the Company’s Canton Treasury was opened for sale of 1- and 2-year Bills on London at 4/8d and 5/- per silver dollar respectively.
Holders of cotton are unable to remit until their stock has been sold off and there is consequently reduced demand for Bills on Calcutta.
A total of $600,000 was collected on London Bills. This will create difficulties for the Company’s Treasury in London which is seldom asked to meet such large commitments.
It is potentially doubly embarrassing as the tea supply this year was markedly reduced (with lower quality and lower prices owing to adverse weather in the harvest season) and the Company was unable to complete its intended purchases. The Indiamen General Harris and Marquis of Camden were unable to load a cargo this year and sailed to Penang in ballast.
Sat 29th June 1822
The Charles Forbes (Thomas Bryden) has arrived from China and reports Patna opium on 15th April was selling at $2,500 per chest; Company Malwa at $1,500 and Damaun (smuggled) Malwa at $1,200 per picul.
The Company sold the last of its Bengal cotton in China at 7½ Taels.
Sat 13th July 1822
The Glorioso finally sailed for China on 7th July taking Mansfield Forbes and William Jardine as passengers.64
Sat 20th July 1822
The restraint of smuggling by the Viceroy of the Two Kwang, is continuing, according to recent arrivals from China. No opium is entering the river.
Sat 17th Aug 1822
Much of the blue, black and scarlet broadcloth sold in China is made in Stroud, Gloucestershire and sold wholesale at 24/- to 35/- per yard.
With the opening of new markets in South America and better access to Asia, the weaving factories of England are busy. Products from Stroud no longer travel on the slow weekly wagons but go by daily ‘flying vans’.
Sat 7th Sept 1822
J C Plowden has arrived Calcutta from China on the Mellish.
Sat 21st Sept 1822
A third atrocity at Lintin has caused another cessation of British trade with China.
(NB – this is from the Editor’s summary of contents. The page containing the actual report is unavailable)
Sat 21st Dec 1822
The Charlotte (Stevenson) arrived Bombay 18th Dec from China, which she left on 18th Sept. She reports all the Company’s and country ships from Bombay had arrived safely prior to her departure. Relations with the Canton government were tranquil but trade was slow. Bombay cotton was slightly improved but hardly profitable at 9 Taels a bale; Patna opium was handsomely, if nominally, priced at $2,400 a chest and Turkey $1,300 the picul. There are large stocks on hand and prices were expected to decline.
Note:
At this time of year, there are English people arriving in the Indian Presidencies from China. Some of these people arrive on Portuguese ships from Macau. Some are army officers returning from sick leave and other Britons are identified as ‘in the country service’. Their arrival evokes no apparent concern on the part of the Company although it asserts a complete control of access to China. One must suppose these are the traders holding the Company’s licence to trade in China. The Company’s opium auctions commence in December/January each year.
Sat 18th Jan 1823
The Sullemany returned to Bombay from China 11th Jan and reports a fire broke-out on 1st Nov outside the western wall of Canton city and spread throughout the suburbs. According to a letter from a Canton trader dated 18th Nov, it consumed 12,000 – 15,000 houses under the influence of a strong north easterly wind.
The European factories are built more of brick and less of wood but were no better able to withstand the heat. Part of the Creek factory was spared, due to its proximity to a water source with which to dampen the structure, and part of the Company’s factory was saved too. The Imperial, French, Dutch, Spanish, Danish and Swedish factories were all burnt down. Five of the Hong merchants’ factories were also damaged but only one (Mow Qua) occasioned great loss. The likely loss of goods in Chinese warehouses was not more than 10,000 each of cotton bales and chests of tea. All the other Chinese exports and foreign imports in the Hong merchants’ care have generally been saved. The Company’s stock of cloth and camlets in its own factory was destroyed.
The foreign community became aware of the fire long before it arrived at the factories and a considerable amount of property was moved into the boats and onto the seawall before it became too hot.
The immediate effect on us has been the temporary loss of accommodation. The Select and their writers have been housed by one of the Hong merchants. They sent their Treasury (about $300,000) to How Qua for safe-keeping. He was reluctant due to the risk of robbery and it was afterwards transferred to the shipping. Law and Order has diminished as looters for miles around have been attracted to the fire scene. About 50,000 people have temporarily lost their jobs. The Company’s ships officers assess their loss of goods and property jointly at £500,000. Mowqua has lost £150,000 and every other Hong merchant has suffered but to a lesser extent.
From a commercial point of view, the fire has been beneficial. We were grotesquely over-stocked in cottons and even piecegoods were selling only slowly. The reduction of stock in these articles has firmed-up prices and piecegoods have already advanced. Only a small amount of the opium stock is kept at Canton but all that part of it that had been retailed to consumers in the western half of the city may have been destroyed. There should be a slight increase in demand but the costs of rebuilding and recovery will reduce discretionary spending. We may find the willingness of this market to continue paying the former high prices has reduced and some traders are talking of $1,500 for Bengal and $700 for Malwa next season.
The Company’s offered exchange rates for Bills are 204 Calcutta (Sicca) or 220 Bombay Rupees per $100 silver and 4/6d per dollar (nominal).
Sat 18th Jan 1823
Bombay 27th Dec – the brig Eugenia (A Hogg), one of the expelled ships, left China on 1st Nov and arrived Calcutta via Singapore today. She brings J Russell of the country service as passenger from Macau.
Sat 15th Feb 1823
Mr Goddart, the Imperial (Austrian) Honorary Consul at Canton has sent us a copy of the Governor’s (Fu Yuen) recent Edict of 14th Nov 1822:
“The fire that spread uncontrolled throughout Canton over two days has destroyed most of the city. People have died, property has been lost and we are all reduced to sadness.
“This judgement of fire was due to the influence of the Pearl River. We must all submit to righteous destiny - it is useless to grieve. Merely recognise the warning from Heaven, repent your former sins and always recall the four characters – ‘heavenly principles, good heart’ – to avoid shame and enjoy the bounty of Heaven.
“When rebuilding your houses, do not encroach on your neighbour’s land. For those without a home, the magistrates are commanded to give rice and show compassion. If any looters are discovered they are to be severely punished. Extra police and troops are patrolling the streets to ensure good order. I invite civic-minded volunteers to join them.
“As for the foreigners who come far across the sea for trade and have no place to roost, I require the Hong merchants to settle them tranquilly and ensure each has a place to live and is not destitute.”
Sat 1st March 1823
The Editor has received another fascinating example of the Chinese style of government – an Edict dated 9th Dec 1822:
“Yuen the Governor and Ta the Hoppo instruct the Hong merchants as follows. When the Indian and American merchants petitioned against Pak Qua, we ordered that Hong to be closed and the merchant prosecuted.
“Then Howqua and others petitioned again on behalf of those complainants that Pak Qua be permitted to trade-through his difficulties, that he might amass the capital with which to pay-off his debts. Pak Qua’s share of the Company’s trade was said to ensure his profits and enable him to settle his creditors.
“There is a long-existing law that prohibits Hong merchants from becoming indebted to foreigners. This law was doubtless broken by Pak Qua. It appears that the initial petition of the Indians and Americans was rash and hasty.
“In order to placate the foreign community and give effect to their desires as far as possible, and in reliance on the advice that Pak Qua will in time be able to pay-off his debts, we agree to liberate and restore him to his Hong that he may trade as before. The senior Hong merchants How Qua, Mow Qua, Chun Qua and Poon Ki Qua must maintain a vigilant surveillance on his trade to ensure the foreign debts are paid-off.
“The foreign merchants are cautioned to avoid dealings with enfeebled Hong merchants. They should repudiate the apparent chance for windfall profits that might follow their support of a feeble merchant. They should observe the balances due to them and not allow them to accumulate to hundreds of thousands of Taels before making complaint. On the other hand the Hong merchants are reminded of the law and cautioned to avoid assuming debt to foreigners.
“We expect the foreigners and Hong merchants to not trifle with our directions or do as they please. In the event of a recurrence, the involved Hong merchant will be de-licensed and the foreigner’s debt will be capped at 100,000 Taels.”
Sat 15th March 1823
The Eugenia (Hogg) is leaving Calcutta with 454 chests of Patna opium for China. The average price at the recent sale was 3,300 Rupees per chest, indicating the cargo is worth about 1,500,000 Rupees (say £150,000 in revalued Rupees).
If they sell at an average $2,500 per chest they will produce $1,135,000 (say £283,750). This is the 2nd similar voyage of the Eugenia. She was formerly an opium store ship at Whampoa.
Sat 22nd March 1823
The Ranger (Clark) left China on 30th Jan and has just arrived Calcutta. She reports Bengal and Bombay cotton are nominally 8½ Taels a bale with few sales. Bengal opium is $2,350 nominal whilst Bombay Malwa is selling briskly at $1,380 (this includes the Remington/Jardine shipment on Glorioso which ship has just returned to Bombay 21st March – see the Asia 1813 – 1823 chapter) and Turkey is doing a little business at $1,150.
The foreign merchants at Canton suspect another Hong is about to fail but they dare not petition the Canton government again.
Sat 24th May 1823
Private letters from Canton dated 6th March say Company’s Malwa is selling at $1,460 and smuggled (Damaun) Malwa at $1,300. The demand for cotton has slightly revived since the fire destroyed many thousands of bales. Bombay cotton is quoted at 10 Taels but there is only light buying. There is still some stock over-hanging the market.
Sat 12th July 1823
Opium prices in Singapore in mid-May 1823 were Patna $1,850 and Malwa $1,055. This is sufficiently below Macau/Lintin asking prices to be worth re-exporting but Singapore is full of Chinese who engross the coastal trade.
Sat 15th Nov 1823
The Milford has arrived at Calcutta from China which she left on 7th Aug. The stock of Bombay cotton was 20,000 bales before the arrival of the ships with this year’s crop and sales were few at 8 Taels. Opium has fallen considerably and a few chests of Malwa sold at $1,160. About 5,700 chests were in storage.
Sat 6th Dec 1823
Bengal Hurkaru, 14th Nov - The Hoppo Ta has proclaimed against foreign opium ships at Canton, June 1823:
Early this month Capt Grant (Kei Lau) anchored his ship at the eastern side of Lintin. A pilot was sent to his assistance but was rejected and no explanation of Grant’s actions was given. A guardship was posted nearby to observe. Another English ship of Capt Gover was also seen to be anchored there. The ships neither enter port for trade nor sail away.
The Hong merchants will tell the Taipan of the English (President of the Select Committee) to order these ships away.65
Sat 6th Dec 1823
Bengal Hurkaru, 14th Nov - Viceroy Yuen has advised the Hong merchants he has learned that Capt Parkyns ship (Merope), which was expelled from the river for opium smuggling last year, sailed to Macau (Taipa) roads and has remained there since last July.
The Viceroy also complains Capt Howard’s ship which arrived last December with a reported cargo of rattans and other Asian goods. He was ordered to come into the river and trade but declined to do so and remains in Taipa roads.
Parkyns and Howard sail their ships back and forth between Lintin and Macau. They neither enter the river to join the formal trade nor sail away. They are clearly smugglers and have collected the opium of all the other ships in order to provide a monopoly service for maximum profit. The Hong merchants appear well aware of the purpose of these ships yet neither complain nor oppose. The Viceroy wonders if they connive.
We already have the Emperor’s command to maintain a strict watch for opium all along the coast and to seize it wherever we find it. There may be no neglect by the civil or military officers.
The country ships of India come here under the licence of the Taipan. The Hong merchants will instruct the Taipan to send these two ships away. There may be no pretexts for continued loitering.
Sat 13th Dec 1823
Bengal Hurkaru of 21st Nov has a Letter from Nepal of 20th Oct 1823:
In June 1822 the Rajah of this country sent two representatives (Dilbunjun Pandee and Divee Bhughut) to Peking to ask for help against the Company’s invasion. They took 8 months to arrive and remained at Peking for 55 days.
The letter describes the Emperor and brief details of Chinese society but nothing about their mission.
Sat 27th Dec 1823
The Snipe arrived at Calcutta from China recently with accounts of trade at Canton to 8th Oct. Old Malwa is selling very slowly at $1,050 and new Malwa at $1,000. There are 6,000 chests in storage and 4,000 in the ships on their way there. That is about two year’s supply. Cotton is slightly increased in sale price.
Vol 1 No 1 - 8th November 1827
The capture of a smuggling boat with 21 chests for Canton a few days ago has dampened the eagerness of the local opium dealers.
Vol 1 No 2 – 23rd November 1827
The military operations in Turkestan have ended and the Chinese army recalled. The Muslim rebels have been driven back from Aksa to beyond Kashgar. Yarkand and Khoten have been recovered but the chief rebel was not caught.
There is speculation in the foreign community that Russian troops are supporting him. It is said that poverty has become unbearable and people throughout the Empire are rebelling.
Imperial finances are in trouble and the court has reluctantly opted on the sale of offices for one year which has so far produced 6 million Taels of new revenue.
Vol 1 No 2 – 23rd November 1827
A fire commenced in the square adjoining the Hong merchants’ warehouses at 3.30 am yesterday and was brought under control at 7am by the efforts of the resident traders and the ship’s officers and their boat crews.
Vol 1 No 2 – 23rd November 1827
16th November will be the last day of the month-long celebration to the Fire God. Yesterday a company of actors from Hou Kwang performed in China Street in Mandarin.
Vol 1 No 2 – 23rd November 1827
An example of Chinese judicial punishment was seen a few days ago when three thieves were driven through the streets near the factories. Their hands were tied together and the rope end held by a officer who beat each man on the stroke of a gong thus urging them forwards at a trot. They appeared faint and exhausted and their backs were lacerated and suppurating.
Vol 1 No 2 – 23rd November 1827
Opium prices - Patna $1,230, Benares $1,210, Malwa (Co & Smug) $1,420 – 1,430, Turkey $800-810
Delivered at Lintin 1st – 11th Nov Patna 58 chests, Benares 7, Malwa 79
Vol 1 No 3 – 30th November 1827
A recent government seizure of opium is to be burnt at the gate of the Governor’s yamen on 8th and 9th days of this moon. One of the staff tried to substitute other goods for the opium. The Governor was persuaded to send him to the Nam Hoi Yuen (magistrate) and the employee killed himself by overdose. The Governor was concerned that the Manchu General would report the death to Peking and called upon him in which meeting both officers agreed the deceased was the author of his own misfortune.
Vol 1 No 3 – 30th November 1827
The natives are concerned that frequent droughts and floods in recent years indicate something inauspicious is about to happen to the Empire. In the 3rd 5th and 6th years of the To Kwong Emperor’s reign the Poyang Lake has flooded. The dykes have eroded. The lower they get, the more reluctant the local governor is to repair them (more costly). This neglect facilitates more flooding.
Vol 1 No 3 – 30th November 1827
Absolute governments depend on the character of the sovereign. In mixed governments, the Constitution controls the will of the governors. In the government under which we live here, no man other than the monarch can do as he pleases and he himself must act according to Law.
Local rumour has it that the present Governor Lee of Canton is a mild man wishing for a peaceful rule. The Hoppo Wan is also mild when sober but, being a Manchu, drinks heavily and is liable to become violent. Hoppo Wan is expected to be relieved at year-end as his kinsman Ying Ho, a friend of the heir apparent, has outlived his friends and supporters and, having no group at Court, been sacked. It was Ying Ho who got Wan the job.66
Vol 1 No 3 – 30th November 1827
Delivered at Lintin 1st – 24th Nov Patna 95, Benares 19, Malwa 165
Opium prices in Dollars - Patna 1,220, Benares 1,200, Malwa (Co & Smug) 1,400, Turkey 800-810
Vol 1, No 4 – 14th December 1827
Official papers from Peking, which arrived on 24th Nov, say the Imperial army lost some men to the Muslim rebels. The Chinese troops pulled back from Kashgar and could not retake the place. The Emperor is anxious.
The Imperial army contained 2,000 convicts who had earlier been transported to Ili but permitted this chance to redeem themselves in battle.
Vol 1, No 4 – 14th December 1827
On 22nd Nov a new Hoppo Ya arrived at Canton from Ningpo. His late brother was a member of the Emperor’s inner council of six.
Bandits in Shantung have become so numerous that the local Governor has been allowed to exercise summary powers to avoid the expense of imprisoning so many culprits.
Vol 1, No 4 – 14th December 1827
Opium sales (wholesale) in China - April to November 1827 (8 months):
|
Month |
Drug |
Chests |
Sub-Total $ |
Total $ |
|
April |
Patna/Benares |
710 |
575,100 |
|
|
|
Malwa |
320 |
310,400 |
885,500 |
|
May |
Patna/Benares |
850 |
726,800 |
|
|
|
Malwa |
260 |
247,000 |
973,800 |
|
June |
Patna/Benares |
750 |
677,800 |
|
|
|
Malwa |
480 |
489,600 |
1,167,400 |
|
July |
Patna/Benares |
330 |
310,500 |
|
|
|
Malwa |
600 |
612,000 |
922,500 |
|
August |
Patna/Benares |
440 |
439,600 |
|
|
|
Malwa |
460 |
547,400 |
987,000 |
|
September |
Patna/Benares |
380 |
447,000 |
|
|
|
Malwa |
210 |
281,400 |
728,400 |
|
October |
Pat/Ben |
490 |
578,500 |
|
|
|
Malwa |
470 |
658,000 |
1,236,500 |
|
November |
Pat/Ben |
240 |
192,120 |
|
|
|
Malwa |
280 |
344,400 |
536,520 |
Vol 1, No 4 – 14th December 1827
Opium report in chests:
|
Delivered at Lintin 1st – 10th Dec Stock remaining at 11th Dec Opium prices |
Patna 47, Benares 18, Malwa 81 Patna 1343, Benares 173, Malwa 1446. Patna $1,220, Benares $1,200, Malwa (Co & Smuggled) $1,400, Turkey $800-810. |
Vol 1, No 4 – 14th December 1827
On 4th Dec the US Ship Maria (Evans) sailed from Whampoa for New York taking back the US Hon Consul J H Grosvenor
Vol 1, No 4 – 14th December 1827
On 13th Dec HCS Buckinghamshire (Glasspoole) sailed for London taking back Mr Mrs H H Lindsay
Vol 1 No 5 – 15th January 1828
Sir William Fraser, Taipan of the Select, died on 22nd Dec and was interred in the Company’s Protestant cemetery at Macau on Christmas Day. Dr Morrison officiated. Fraser was about 40 years old and very rich.
Vol 1 No 5 – 15th January 1828
On 23rd Dec the Macau Governor Sr Joaquim Mourao Garcez Palha and the ex-General Joao Cabral d’Estifique left on the ship Conde for Goa.
The bishop Francisco de N S da Luz Chacim will act as Governor in consultation with the new judge Pires da Costa and the new commandant Alexandre Joaquim Grand-Pre. These three enjoy greater respect than any Macau administration for many years.
The municipal officers are :
Procurador - Jose Joaquim Ferreira Veiga (he deals with the Chinese officials)
Senators - Antonio Gularte da Silveira, Joaquim Vidigal, Manuel Francisco Marques, Antonio Joaquim da Costa Bastos, Simao Vicente Rosa.
Vol 1 No 5 – 15th January 1828
41 Buddhist priests from a temple at Shao Kuan (northern Kwangtung) have been brought in chains to Canton. Thieves have been robbing passing traders travelling the land route to the tea districts and they were traced to this monastery. The monks were all convicted. The temple will be destroyed.
Vol 1 No 5 – 15th January 1828
The Canton Hoppo has reportedly in some way displeased the Emperor who has ordered him to hand over his seals to the Viceroy and go immediately to Peking.
Vol 1 No 5 – 15th January 1828
The removal of the great heap of debris that has lain so long in front of the factories has commenced.67 This shows that when we exert ourselves with the officials we can get things done. We should apply this knowledge to the other onerous restrictions that characterise our lives here.
Vol 1 No 5 – 15th January 1828
4th Jan the Danish ship Norden (Burd) sailed from Whampoa for Hamburg.
Vol 1 No 5 – 15th January 1828
Passenger arrivals and departures:
Mr Mrs George Best Robinson and two children, H H Lindsay, John R Reeves and Dr Sims arrived 20th Dec per HCS Larkins from London.
Thomas T Forbes arrived per US ship Milo on 28th December from London
Lancelot Dent left on the Cornwallis 6th Jan for Bombay.
Vol 1 No 5 – 15th January 1828
There has been a big increase in the quantity of opium consumed in the past nine months and in the value obtained per chest. The good quality of the Patna this year (compared to the very inferior supply last year) is part of the reason. Nevertheless we expect the boom will be followed by a bust as in previous cycles. Chinese speculators have pushed prices up.
The improved price is due to a new marketing strategy. We take a small deposit on opium sold for future delivery whilst retaining the Drug itself until the balance is paid-off. These forward sales are under-pinning prices. Eventually the market will turn. Malwa is a safer investment as there is little stock but high prices have previously reduced consumption and traders should take care.
|
Consumption |
1.4.27 – 31.12.27 |
Patna/Benares |
4,410 chests |
$4,211,420 |
|
|
|
Malwa |
3,490 chests |
$4,055,800 |
|
|
1.4.26 – 31.12.26 |
Patna/Benares |
2,115 chests |
$2,236,440 |
|
|
|
Malwa |
4,507 chests |
$4,300,720 |
Prices Current, Opium - Patna $1,180, Benares $1,200 Malwa $1,380-1,400 Turkey $760-770
Vol 1 No 6 - 4th February 1828
Portuguese trade is restricted to Macau; other Europeans trade only at Canton but the Spanish can trade at both these places and enjoy the exclusive advantage of trade at Amoy. Amoy has a fine harbour but there is no big river giving access to the interior so it will probably never become a great mart. Fuk Chow to the north, the other big city of Fukien, has a great river from the Bohea Hills. According to Chinese geographers, Amoy’s hinterland produces native silks, cloth, iron, salt, tea, lychee, long-an, oranges and various spices. A military officer and a deputy magistrate run Amoy and another Amoy military officer is stationed on the Peng Hu islands.
No Spanish ship has gone to Amoy for 20 years allegedly because the costs of trade were too high.68
A long-time Canton resident tells us that on one of the last Spanish voyages there, the Amoy officials abandoned the tariff and negotiated a special rate with the captain of $750 for the measurement duty whilst the capital he imported for trade was taxed at 5½%. All the Chinese merchants who bought from or sold to the ship were also taxed. The effective response to heavy exactions is invariably to prepare the ship for departure. This caused the official’s representative to offer new more tolerable terms.
In 1823 a Spanish ship visited without intending to trade. When she left, the Mandarin followed in his own boat for a considerable distance, entreating her return but declining to discuss the level of duty until the Governor’s opinion was known. He lived far away it was said. Both officials and merchants at Amoy are very friendly and invited the ship’s officer to smoke and take tea.
Several Amoy merchants have dealt with Manila and speak Spanish. Some of them profess the Catholic faith as all Chinese residents at Manila are obliged to profess Christianity as a term of residence. The foreigners were allowed to go everywhere although always attended by some runners. They were told they should have the freedom of the city once the Governor’s advice was received. They stayed 3-4 days. Trade was said to be listless but the forest of junk masts in harbour belied that advice.
Any attempt we make to recommence trade at Amoy should be done on a small scale. The people are willing but they receive only a limited supply of foreign produce through the coasting junk trade and have little capital for its purchase. The town has an adequate number of translators.
The English had a factory there in 1676 but it was destroyed when the Ching armies swept down the coast securing Fukien to their dynasty. They expelled the China traders. The English fled to Tongking and Bantam. The factory was re-established in 1686 and continued until the Imperial edict of 1760 restricted all foreign trade to Canton. At the last visits a few years ago the tombs of the foreigners who had died there were still visible in the cemetery.
Vol 1 No 6 - 4th February 1828
Peking Gazettes:
The Emperor’s younger brother has been caught intriguing with eunuchs. He was banished from the palace and dismissed from all his offices. The Emperor says he is idle and profligate. It used to be said that the previous Emperor intended his younger son to succeed him but To Kwong obtained the position for himself. The profligate brother is now 37 years old.
An official named To Lung Woo has been appointed Imperial Resident at Khotan and ordered to proceed there at once.
Vol 1 No 6 - 4th February 1828
It is said the small Dutch community at Nagasaki is collecting material for a new book on Japan.
The Japanese are apparently translating Morrison’s Chinese Dictionary into Japanese. They liked the alphabetical part of the dictionary so much it has since become fashionable to decorate fans with columns of characters together with their definitions, like a page of the dictionary.
Vol 1 No 6 - 4th February 1828
Senators Costa Basto, da Silva and Marques are away from Macau and Pedro Feliciano de Figueredo, Raimondo Nicolao Vieira and Dr Francisco Antonio Ciabre will act for them temporarily.
Vol 1 No 6 - 4th February 1828
The Canton Hoppo’s wife died a few days ago. It was announced she has gone to ”ramble with the genii”. The great officers of the province express their vexation
(Editor - in China it seems death causes anger and indignation not grief or sorrow)
Vol 1 No 6 - 4th February 1828
Peking Gazettes - A Manchu officer bought a slave girl but discovered she had leprosy. He complained to the police but they could not find the seller. The girl has been sent to a leper colony. The middleman who arranged the deal has had his face judicially slapped and been ordered to find the seller and get back the soldier’s money.
Vol 1 No 6 - 4th February 1828
Another fire occurred on 15th January in the timberyards on the north bank of the river near the factories. Several warehouses containing oil, salt, rattans, firecrackers and other combustibles were destroyed.
The tide was out and water for extinguishment could not quickly be had so the damage was worse than usual.
On 28th Jan night two men carrying incendiary materials were arrested north of the factories in Yung Kwong Street
Vol 1 No 6 - 4th February 1828
Long-term residents will recall the pirate Cheung Po Chai who surrendered to Viceroy Yuen years ago on condition he could join the Chinese Navy. He died two years ago. Well, his son is now aged 20 years and is serving ably under the Kwang Chow Heep (the chief military officer of Kwangchow) at Canton.69
Vol 1 No 6 - 4th February 1828
Now the trading season is over and most vessels have departed it is timely to review the last year’s business.
Few can remember such uniform low prices for cottons throughout a year. Although they did increase marginally it was only enough to defray the interest due. Bombay supplied the same quantity as last year but Bengal sent only one shipment (apart from the Company’s supply). The remaining stock is now less than 70,000 bales.
All Straits produce except rattans has been disastrous. Betel nut and pepper, formerly reliable sellers, have become a drag. It may be that the civil disturbances in the north have affected trade distribution channels.
There were large exports of bullion this year. The low exchange rate (silver dollars for Sicca Rupees or Sterling) has induced many traders to ship return cargoes of iron, lead and steel to the European markets, i.e. to take their profits in Europe as cargo rather than exchange silver for Bills from the Select in China.
Several vessels this year were trading on the new Hawaii/Canton route and the increase of trade there is pleasing.
Vol 1 No 6 - 4th February 1828
Our comments on opium in the last issue were timely. Transactions are very limited and the slow trade is due to want of money and some interruptions in the local distribution
Vol 1 No 6 - 4th February 1828
Passengers – W C Hunter left 2nd Feb on the American ship Mary Lord for New York.
Vol 1 No 6 - 4th February 1828
Prices Current:
Patna $1,160, Benares $1,170, Malwa $1,370, Turkey $740
|
Consumption January 1828 - Stock 1.2.1828 - |
Patna/Benares 148 chests, Malwa 259 Patna/Benares 1,400, Malwa 890 |
Vol 1 No 7 - Monday 11 Feb 1828
Kwolifunga, the Manchu General of Hangchow, has died and on 14th December the Emperor ordered that he be honoured with burial within the precincts of Peking city. The Chekiang Treasury will pay 300 Taels for the ceremony
(Editor - No corpse may enter Peking without Imperial consent because a rebel once entered the city that way during the Kien Lung Emperor’s reign. No corpse is permitted into any city via the southern gate as the Emperor faces that direction when he sits)
Vol 1 No 7 - Monday 11 Feb 1828
The Emperor has been in the eastern hills burying his mother and inspecting his own mausoleum which was recently completed. The owners of the lands through which the Emperor passed to view his auspicious site (his retinue is extensive) have been compensated with 50% off their land tax this year
Vol 1 No 7 - Monday 11 Feb 1828
On 31st January 1828 six Chinese from Tung Kwoon visited Marjoribanks, Jackson, Lindsay and Astell, members of the Select Committee, to give thanks for their deliverance. Their junk sank in the river and they were rescued by a Company boat. Jackson handed over $270 which had been collected for their relief as their junk and cargo had both been lost. A document proposing the brotherhood of man and international co-operation in typhoons was given to the headman of the village from whence the junk crew came. He said he will have its contents etched in stone in the village.
Tung Kwoon extends from First Bar to Chuenpi and contains many junk-owning, seafaring families. Copies of the thanksgiving document were presented by old Wong Yam Ting to each of the Select. The document says we Wong Hei Tik, Leung Shing Tsin, Lai Chong Yip and Lai Man Tsun are natives of Sung Wan Chai and Yo Mo Sha in Tung Kwoon. We went to Chin Chu Nei in Shun Tak for trade and on returning home, as we passed the 2nd bar, a great gust of wind overturned our boat and threw us in the water. Then Jackson and others came in three small boats and saved us. They resuscitated us and gave money for us to get home.
We widely published the virtue of Jackson etc at home and our elders Wong Tau Yeung and Wong Yam Ting led the four of us to Canton to kow-tow a hundred times to the foreigners and return thanks. When we get home we will erect a gold-lettered tablet with the names of our deliverers to honour them. And we will tell others of their good deed.
Vol 1 No 7 - Monday 11 Feb 1828
Keating, the first (American) Editor of the paper, has resigned. He publicly requested articles about India for publication but we don’t agree. We think this paper should be about China. Our paper is small and we publish infrequently – we can only report China news. Everyone has different ideas and we don’t want to encourage a schism in our community of English and American traders.
“The opium trade, which occupies considerable space in the commercial department, is still, as a moral question, one on which different persons form different opinions. The late Marquis of Hastings (if we remember rightly) when as Governor General of India he was contemplating an increase in opium manufacture for the sake of revenue, hesitated whether, morally considered, it was desirable or not.
The Chinese Government thinks opium pernicious to the people and prohibits its importation. The question of commerce in things easily abused to the hurt of mankind must be left to every man’s conscience. The Canton Register will offer no opinion.”
Vol 1 No 7 - Monday 11 Feb 1828
The Company’s China investment last year and for some time past has been solely in tea. Their ship commanders and officers however trade in tea, raw silk, nankeens, silk piece goods and some spices. Silk export is reduced and shipments to third countries are fewer. Nankeens have been scarce. Prudence has regulated the investment in silk piece goods. Cinnamon has been cheap but camphor is in short supply.
The Americans have been importing Turkish opium and quicksilver. They have long monopolised the import trade in furs. They export tea, nankeens and silk piece goods. They have been doing well and three American ships were consigned to Europe this season. Most trade at Canton is done by British and Americans. The Netherlands Company sent out 6 ships this season and took chiefly tea in return. One Danish and two French ships also visited.
Vol 1 No 7 - Monday 11 Feb 1828
Prices Current:
Patna $1,120, Benares $1,130, Company Malwa $1,350, Turkey $740
Vol 1 No 8 – Monday 18th Feb 1828
Imperial Edict - All the criminals scheduled for autumn execution have had their cases reconsidered. Several provincial government decisions have been reversed and all the officials involved in those decisions are themselves to be subjected to enquiry. Governors and Judges must act without prejudice - they may not mitigate nor be too severe. There can be no injustice and no indulgence. Every criminal must receive what his crime deserves. Respect This.
Vol 1 No 8 – Monday 18th Feb 1828
The army at Urumchi in Tartary has been fighting the Muslim insurgents for over a year and requires funds for repair of saddles and shoes and clothes and replacement of some horses. The Emperor orders a half-year’s pay to be advanced which is to be recouped after the war is concluded.
Repairing the walls of Muslim towns after their re-capture from rebels is costing more than expected. The Emperor allows a supply of copper to be mined and the detachment of several officials to supervise its coining.
Vol 1 No 8 – Monday 18th Feb 1828
Some soldiers have been caught conniving with local natives in killing a special type of deer for its horns which have medicinal qualities. This species of deer is a monopoly of the Emperor. They are ordered to desist.
Vol 1 No 8 – Monday 18th Feb 1828
Peking Gazettes:
Several government gunboats which patrol the Chekiang coast to deter piracy have been lost in a storm.
Woolungo, the third member of the military triumvirate ruling Turkestan, is sick. The Emperor orders him to rest and recover.
Southerners sentenced to transportation are sent to Ili, a freezing place on the Russian frontier in the north west. Nomadic tribes called Hassacks bring horses and cattle to Ili to trade for cloth from Kashgar and Khoten. This year there was insufficient cloth owing to the Islamic rebellion in Turkestan.
Vol 1 No 8 – Monday 18th Feb 1828
A big-character poster has been published by Wang, the Judge of Canton, and posted on house walls and in the streets:
“Canton is crowded and vagabonds take advantage of the press of people to cut away purses from pedestrians in daytime and to break through walls at night. No-one is tranquil. Local blackguards (known popularly in Cantonese as Tak Wan and Larn Tsai) saunter idly in the streets, gambling and swindling to obtain their clothes and food. Some rough soldiers and officials assist these Larn Tsai. They congregate at ferry piers and markets and prey on the hard-working people.
Now it is the end of the year (when debts have to be settled), people will be hurrying and perturbed and these bad men will have an easy time. I command all civil and military officers to arrest the Larn Tsai. All people should pursue their own trades and obey the law. Do not descend into banditry for you will be caught and punishment will follow. Repent and reform now. Repentance after the fact is useless - like a man trying to bite his own navel.
All you people who see vagabonds should seize them and drag them before the magistrate. If officials connive with Larn Tsai they will be flogged until they are dead. There will be no indulgence. Tremble and obey. Oppose not.”
Vol 1 No 8 – Monday 18th Feb 1828
There have been frequent recent cases in Canton of people stealing bundles from pedestrians and handing them to an accomplice to escape whilst they themselves remain to obstruct pursuit and delay the victim with words.
One culprit has confessed to having 60 accomplices. Another was caught together with one of his accomplices but the case was kept from the magistrate by soldiers who are accordingly suspected of licensing those crimes.
Vol 1 No 8 – Monday 18th Feb 1828
At Nim Chou in western Kwangtung a triad gang attacked a village, harvested its rice, and took off with both the crop and the cattle after wounding several farmers who tried to stop them. The governor has called on the army to capture the gang.
Vol 1 No 8 – Monday 18th Feb 1828
Lam Ah Low was beheaded on 1st Feb for coastal piracy. In the last 12 months 202 men have been executed for murder, robbery and rape. Some two thirds of the awards were not referred to Peking for confirmation.
Slicing is a terrible punishment. The culprit is bound to a cross. The forehead is cut horizontally and the facial skin pulled down. He is then dismembered joint by joint, distal to proximal. It is called ling chee, meaning ignominious and slow.
It is reserved for crimes against superiors – officials or parents - and for treason.
Vol 1 No 8 – Monday 18th Feb 1828
For the accommodation of the foreign trade, the seals of the Customs House at Canton will be locked up for only 3-4 days at Lunar New Year.
The Hoppo is sending 1,900,000 Taels to Peking. Civilians are being co-opted from the villages around Canton to escort the silver. 38 men have been selected so far.
Vol 1 No 8 – Monday 18th Feb 1828
The Bishop of Macau died on 31st Jan. Macau Bishops are appointed by the Court in Lisbon.
Vol 1 No 8 – Monday 18th Feb 1828
On 10th Feb a European was surrounded by about 40 Chinese boatmen and hustled through the streets. A Parsee saw the event and intervened. The Englishman was in dispute with the Chinese and both parties had agreed to refer the matter to the Select Committee only half an hour before the harassment. The Select has complained. The sailors have disappeared.
Vol 1 No 8 – Monday 18th Feb 1828
Advertisement : The Widow Payva and Sons (the largest Macau business house) announce that their current partnership agreement will expire on 20th December 1828 and will not be renewed. All accounts will be liquidated by the current managing partner, Jaoquim Joze Ferreira Veiga, on expiry of the partnership, dated 8th Feb 1828.
Vol 1 No 8 – Monday 18th Feb 1828
The Jamesina Grant left Whampoa on 10th February carrying Marjoribanks, Clarke, Ravenshaw and Matheson to Bombay.
Vol 1 No 8 – Monday 18th Feb 1828
Prices Current:
Patna $1,120, Benares $1,130, Co Malwa $1,380 all per chest;
Turkey $740 per picul.
Vol 1 No 9, 26th February 1828
Cotton imports for the 1827 season:
|
Bengal (7 Company and country ships) Bombay (in 5 Co & 22 country ships) Madras in 3 India Company ships |
37,631 bales 108,023 bales 12,356 bales |
Bullion Exports for the 1827 season -
to Bengal:
$2,159,837 coins; sycee $19,210 and South American silver $55,273
to Bombay:
$3,143,840 coins; sycee $251,819 and South American silver $28,000
Import of silver we hear totalled $2,304,800.
Company Bills on Bengal totalled $1,700,000
Most of the exported treasure is in defaced and broken coin. The Chinese prohibit the export of bullion generally but licence each vessel to export up to 1/3rd of the value of its import cargo in coin (i.e. non-Chinese silver - all sycee and anything made of silver except foreign coins is prohibited for export. The entries for non-coin silver exports are exclusively the profits of smuggled goods).
This 1/3rd licensed quantity is not always taken up by ships but the Hoppo permits accumulation so a large shipment can be immediately exported by combining the licensed but unused allocations of previous ships.
Some South American silver, minted supposedly by the newly independent Republics, has been found to be adulterated.
There are many types of sycee. Revenue (or Hoppo) Sycee is the unit for tax on foreign trade; Salt Sycee is for the gabelle; Fanfoo Sycee is highly refined to 99%+ purity and is for land tax and land-use tax. This last pays the army and civil service establishments and is seldom available in the market. Another sycee weighing 50 Taels per piece (all the others are one teal pieces) is brought from Nanking and Chuan Chow and exported by the Parsees to India where it can sometimes be seen in the bazaars of Bombay.
Interest is normally 12% p a but a 1st class Hong merchant will not pay that rate for deposits from foreigners unless some exigency arises, in which case rates can go very high.
Vol 1 No 9, 26th February 1828
Pawnbroking is a very extensive trade in China. There are two types:
A small loan pawnbroker deals with the villagers and small farmers. The amounts of money involved are small. Security is often clothing or small household items.
The other deals with more wealthy customers and receives jewellery from individuals but is mainly concerned with trade finance. They make advances on cargoes and other large deposits of goods. The loan period is generally for a maximum of 3 years with 3 months grace added.70
Vol 1 No 9, 26th February 1828
Explanation of our Prices Current:
Duties on foreign trade are paid by the Chinese buyers and sellers. The figures in our Prices Current state the prices of export commodities with duty included and of import commodities with duty excluded. The export prices include every charge until the cargo is in the ship’s hold. The import prices do not. Goods we import to China are sold on board. The Chinese buyer attends weighing on the ship and arranges his own junks, coolies and tallymen to remove the cargo. All of those charges are excluded in our Prices Current.
Vo