Wednesday, 18 April 2018


The East India Company

This piece was inspired by a walk I did around Limehouse and Poplar a year or so ago, and a recent episode of Michael Portillo’s ‘Great Indian Railway Journeys’. The East India Company, the world’s richest and most powerful corporation enjoyed a royally sanctioned monopoly on trade between London and the Far East for over 250 years, and left an indelible mark on London’s East End.

The origins of the East India Company go all the way back to 1600, when Elizabeth I granted a charter to the ‘Company and Merchants of London trading with the East Indies’. The Company was originally focused on bringing back spices from South Asia - the first voyage left in 1601 and returned two years later with 500 tons of peppercorns – but towards the end of the 17th century it turned its attentions to India and its cotton. As early as the 1700s, the East India Company had come to dominate the global textile trade.

An East India warship destroying Chinese vessels in the First Opium War
From 1699, the Company also began shipping goods from Canton: silk, textiles, porcelain and, of course, tea. To pay for these, the East India Company introduced large numbers of opium plants into China, which they imported from their territories in India. This led to widespread addiction and social breakdown in that country and eventually Britain and China became embroiled in what became known as the Opium Wars.

The newly-built East India Dock at Blackwall 1806
Until the construction of the East India Docks in 1803, East India ships moored at the fishing hamlet of Blackwall, where the cargoes were loaded onto barges before being taken in secure wagons (always under armed guard) along Commercial Road to warehouses in the City - notable the vast Cutler Street complex.
East India Company warehouses were of high quality to reflect the kudos of the company and the high value of the goods being stored. A huge staff was needed to operate the warehouses and these were much sought-after posts offering fair wages and a welfare scheme. To weed out inevitable attempts at pilfering, warehousemen coming off shift were ‘rubbed down’. The more wily, however, got round this by sewing special pockets into their clothes into which tea could be secreted! Punishments for theft ranged from public whipping to transportation.

The emergence of the East India Company transformed several East End communities and countless
'Lascars' in Limehouse
local businesses relied on its activities for survival. There was an influx of foreign sailors to the area, including large numbers of Chinese seamen and ‘lascars’ who accompanied ships on the home voyage to London in place of any English sailors too sick to survive the journey. Once the ships had docked, these foreign seamen were left to fend for themselves in Poplar and Limehouse.



Main hall of the Stranger's Home in Limehouse
By the 1820s, there were so many destitute Chinese on the streets that a law was passed compelling the East India Company to provide lodgings for Chinese and ‘Asiatic’ sailors waiting to sign on with a vessel. In 1857, the government opened the ‘Strangers’ Home for Asiatics, Africans and South Sea Islanders’ on West India Dock Road in Limehouse.

But the East India Company did not remain a purely commercial enterprise. By the mid-18th century, its remit has widened considerably. It gradually took over full administrative powers over its
Map showing East India Company territories
territories, including the right to collect taxes, and was supported in this by a military presence. The Company had always had its own armed security service to defend its ships and warehouses, but this soon evolved into a fully-fledged private army. By 1803, the Company had 260,000 soldiers to do its bidding. 
With power bases in Madras, Bombay and Bengal, the East India Company soon took over the role of agent of the British government in India, the vehicle through which control of the sub-continent was coordinated before the days of the Raj.
But as the 19th century progressed, concerns grew about corruption and mismanagement. Added to this, the Indian Mutiny of 1857 brought the Crown to the realisation that direct control was the way forward. It removed the Company’s taxing powers, and seized its possessions and armed forces. By 1874, the East India Company had been dissolved.

Restored lock gates at East India Dock basin


Once capable of holding up to 250 ships at a time, the East India Docks are now mostly filled in (they ceased to be operational in 1967). Only the Grade II-listed lock gates are a reminder of the commercial activity that used to take place here.
Local names, however, provide a nod to the past: Clove Crescent, Oregano Drive, Nutmeg Lane and Saffron Avenue being just a few.






East India House on Leadenhall Street
The Company’s wharves and warehouses are also long gone, and East India House, the Company’s grand headquarters on Leadenhall Street has been replaced by Lloyds of London.













But St Matthias Old Church, sponsored by the East India Company, still stands in Poplar - its many nautical-themed graves a testament to this area’s history.



References:
The London Encyclopedia ed. Ben Weinreb et al. (2008)
Artists’ London David Piper (1982)
East End Chronicles Ed Glinert (2005)


No comments:

Post a Comment