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The Tea Industry in India
A Review of Finance and Labour, and a Guide for Capitalists and Assistants
First published in 1882, this tour of the Indian tea plantations was originally intended for potential workers and investors.
Samuel Baildon (Author)
9781108046244, Cambridge University Press
Paperback / softback, published 8 March 2012
258 pages
21.6 x 14 x 1.5 cm, 0.33 kg
The origins of tea-brewing in India and China are still lost to history. In this 1882 guide to the Indian tea industry, Samuel Baildon (a tea-planter about whom little is known) describes some of the earliest theories and legends surrounding it, including both botanical speculations and the Chinese stories of Bodhidharma, the Indian monk said to have introduced tea to China and Japan. Well-versed in the investment opportunities of the Indian plantations, Baildon also provides a frank tour of the nineteenth-century industry. He includes advice for investors, who he insists must not try to assist the managers of their plantations, and for potential tea-planters, who he strongly discourages from the profession if they enjoy free time, reading, or friends. With specific and anecdotal accounts of the plantations written for newcomers to the trade, this candid guide now represents an invaluable resource for students of colonial history and agriculture.
1. Introduction
2. India the home of the tea-plant
3. The superiority of Indian over China teas
4. India and tea-planters
5. The planter on leave
6. The financial aspect of production and disposal
7. The labour question
8. The social phase of tea-drinking
Appendix
Glossary.
Subject Areas: Asian history [HBJF]