Category: History

the advent of machinery - continued

Tuesday, May 27th, 2008 by James Norwood Pratt


One day in 1871, a side-paddle riverboat steaming lazily down the Brahmaputra slid to a stop in midstream. It had run aground on one of the shifting sandbars for which the river is notorious, forcing the captain to tell his passengers it would be some while before they could go further, as the boat [...]

the advent of machinery - part one

Tuesday, May 20th, 2008 by James Norwood Pratt


It was an industry off and running by the time George Williamson retired from Assam in 1859. Scores of private entrepreneurs had learned the best tea to plant and the right way to grow and harvest it. The Honorable East India Company had surrendered its Indian prerequisites to the Crown the year before, forcing all [...]

a tea martyr

Tuesday, May 13th, 2008 by James Norwood Pratt


A tea man stood at the Pearly Gate,
his face was worn and old.
He meekly asked the man of fate
for admission to the fold.
What have you done, St. Peter asked,
to seek admission here?
I ran a tea estate on earth for many and many a year.
The gate swung open sharply as Peter
touched the bell.
Come in, he said, [...]

the assam company - continued

Tuesday, May 6th, 2008 by James Norwood Pratt


Alas, the Assam Company was in no position to buy, being already insolvent. Less than two years after the Honorable Company had informed the world India’s tea industry was an established success, Assam Company shares bought at twenty pounds were being hawked on the market at half a crown. [...]

the assam company

Tuesday, April 29th, 2008 by James Norwood Pratt


. . . altogether a fairer judgement would be that the Assam company undertook all the risks of a new venture and that the experience so dearly bought by them was of great value to those who began later.
-Sir Percival Griffiths, KBE (1898 - 1992), The [...]