For close to 160 years,
Trinidad was a part of a global phenomenon: the British Empire. The creation of
this worldwide expansion of a small nation-state off the coast of Europe can be
compared with the earlier empires that were of importance to the then known
world: Egypt, Greece, Rome and Byzantium.
For those of us born in the
1930s, Empire Day was a holiday that you got up early for, and put on your
uniform: Police Volunteers, Cadets, Red Cross, Prisons, Post Office or school
uniforms. Then we would go to the parade. You were given a flag, told where to
stand and you obeyed all instructions. Afterwards, in the blinding light of
midday, you were given a bun and a cup of tepid tea, courtesy of His Majesty
King George VI, and then dismissed! Life was so simple in the days when Great
Britain ruled the world.
Sir Winston Churchill, writing in
his ‘History of the English-speaking peoples’ (Thomas & Hudson) said:
“Occupation of the empty lands of
the globe was violently accelerated by the fall of Napoleon. The long struggle
against France had stifled or arrested the expansion of the English-speaking
peoples, and the ships and the men who might have founded the second British
Empire had been consumed in twenty years of world war.”
The first British Empire had been
essentially a New World creation, carved out of the wilderness of North
America’s eastern sea board. Won from Spain in the Caribbean by the privateers,
Sir Henry Morgan and Sir Francis Drake, it was immediately challenged by the
French, losing the American colonies by the 1780s by gaining Canada in the
following decades and drawing even in the Caribbean.
Great Britain was able to cripple
the French battle fleet at Trafalgar and win the battle of Waterloo. “A near
run thing,” remarked the Duke of Wellington in the fading light after the
Prussians had come.
“Once again the oceans were
free,” wrote Churchill. For all intent and purpose Britain ruled the waves.
“News began to spread among the masses that fertile, unoccupied and habitable
lands still existed in which white men could dwell in peace and liberty and
could perhaps even better themselves.”
Trinidad and Tobago in the
British Caribbean was a port of that first British Empire - Tobago, Barbados
and Jamaica perhaps more so than Trinidad.
The mindset of victorious Great
Britian after twenty years of war is well expressed in Churchill’s words. The
idea that ‘lands’ were out there for the taking by ‘white men’ who were in
pursuit of peace, liberty and self-improvement was the concept that underpinned
the next empire. That these lands were already inhabited by the original owners
at that point in time must have been incidental to these would-be colonists.
Might was not just right, it was also white.
Canada, the Caribbean, parts of
the South American Mainland, most of Africa, Australia, New Zealand, all of
India, Burma and innumberable islands all around the globe became the British
Empire. Vast, multi-cultural, multi-lingual, it combined peoples who ranged
from highly complicated monarchic societies to the stone-age people in the
Tasmanian Sea, to the fossilized remnants of advanced civilisations in the high
Himalayas.
This world expansion of a
relatively small island off the coast of Europe was driven by several important
developments. Firstly, the process that had produced England’s system of
government was unique for its time. The parliament, the king, the city of
London’s banking and other concerns created a liberal self-interest that
augured well for Britain’s early entry into the industrial revolution. This was
underpinned by the world’s only ocean-going battle fleet. Secondly, a
population explosion in England from 11 million people in 1800 to close to 40
million sixty years later sped things up. And thirdly, with England’s
traditional foes France and Spain vanquished, the outward flow of people
commenced. More than 250,000 people migrated to the colonies in 1820, and more
than half a million by 1830. 1.5 million people had left England by 1850, and
by 1870, that number had risen to 8 million people. Canada was the easiest
choice and seemed most familiar. Shipping lines to Canada were well established
and the fares relatively cheap. Once there, the immigrants discovered how vast
the continent was. The maritime provinces that breasted the Atlantic thrived.
Problems only arose as settlers pushed into lower Canada, the province of
Quebec. Churchill notes:
“In Lower Canada, the French were
deeply rooted, a compact, alien community, led by priests and seigneurs
uninterested and untouched by the democratic ideals of liberal or revolutionary
Europe, and holding stubbornly, like the Boers in South Africa, to their own
traditions and language.”
Many of these French would later
make their way to the French Antilles and then to Trinidad. The de Gannes
family as an example, have their New World origins in Canada.
Canada’s population rose from
about half a million in 1815 to 1.25 million in 1838 - a very low number
considering that vast area! In 1846, the Oregon Treaty with the United States
extended the 49th parallel right across the continent as the border between the
two great countries, and gave Van Couva island to Great Britain.
The arrival of the steam-driven
trains on steel rails - all products of the industrial revolution - opened up
both North American countries. With the defeat and virtual starvation of the
native people, white men could develop the country ‘in peace and liberty’.
Africa, however, was a different
story. Its story leads us to Woodbrook in Port of Spain, which has a collection
of street names that come from a time when Great Britain sought through force
of arms to bring order and establish peace in South Africa. The ultimate aim
was to gain for the Empire itself vast wealth in gold and diamonds that lay
beneath the surface of Africa’s southern cape.
In the early days of Britain’s
first expansion, South Africa had scant attractions. It was largely a stop-off
point on the way to the east. Not many people from Europe wanted to stay there.
In the case of North America, the great Gulf of St. Lawrence made it easy to
enter the interior, but the coastline of South Africa, washed by powerful
currents and towering cliffs, barred the way.
In the 1670s, Dutch adventurors
made use of the Cape as a watering spot. They called it the ‘Tavern of the
Seas’. A young doctor from Amsterdam, Jan van Riebeeck, took possession of a
bit of coast and called it Table Bay. By the 1760s, there was something of an
establishment of Europeans in the Table Bay region: Dutch, Germans and Swedes
had settled on frough forms. Mostly protestant, they had escaped religious
persecution in Europe. Cape Town was then called ‘Little Paris’, so bright was
it with its 5,000 inhabitants! The insland plateau was taken from the local
tribes by the frontiersmen, described as ‘restless, hard, self-reliant,
narrow-minded, isolated from society and impatient of the restraints of
civilized government. They were the forerunners of the Transvaal Boers of a
century later. Holland had exercized some control over this wildland, but with
a collapse in its banking system and its subsequent defeat by the French the
British seized the colony in 1814 in return for an indemnity of 6 million
pounds.
It is interesting to note that
this was a case of a party of people taking over a large part of an entire
continent and then reselling it to another country with the local inhabitants
having no say.
There were, however, other
players. As the British pushed north and east from South Africa, they came into
contact and later conflict with the great southward migration of the Bantu
peoples from central Africa. This extended right across the continent from
Hereros in the west to the Ngumi coast in the east. The Kaffer wars lasted for
almost 100 years and coincided with the Ashanti wars and the wars in the
Gambia. In those wars, West India regiments, comprised of black troops with
white offiers, took part. Their descendants, families such as the Hodges and
the Warners, still live on in Trinidad.
Later, the conflict known as the
Boer war was to capture the imagination of the British people. The generals of
this conflict, in which Trinidadians served as well, are remembers today in
Woodbrook’s street names: Buller, Kitchener, Roberts, Baden Powell, Gatacre,
Methuen, White, MacDonald and Colville.
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