Published online by Cambridge University Press: 22 January 2009
One of the responses of the Transvaal gold mining industry to the economic crisis after the South African War of 1899–1902 was to import Chinese indentured mine labour. To facilitate this process and to integrate it with the overall demands and requirements of the industry, the mining companies established a recruiting and shipping company in 1904, known as the Chamber of Mines Labour Importation Agency. This short-lived company, which was characterized by a high degree of vertical integration, operated as recruiting and shipping agency in China, receiving agent in Natal and co-ordinating and advising agent in the Transvaal. Despite complex arrangements designed to exploit the Chinese labour market, the company was, generally speaking, successful in securing the requisite labour force of suitable size and quality for the Transvaal mines. However, it showed a longer-term susceptibility to competitive pressures in the northern Chinese labour market. The company was amalgamated with WNLA in 1908.
2 For an elaboration of some of these points see Newbury, Colin, ‘Labour Migration in the Imperial Phase: An Essay in Interpretation’, J. of Imperial and Commonwealth Hist., iii, 2 (01 1975).Google Scholar
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5 Articles of Association of CMLIA, 15 July 1904, ATCM, Ch. 60. Minutes of the Representatives of Mining Groups, 10 Oct. 1903, ATCM, Ch. 14. The following groups resolved to guarantee £100,000 for preliminary expenses, which was actually found by Wernher/Beit, London, and were represented by the Committee of Agents: H. Eckstein & Co.; Rand Mines Ltd.; Consolidated Gold Fields; Farrar Brothers/Anglo-French Exploration Company; Barnato Brothers; J. B. Robinson; A. Goerz & Co.; G. & L. Albu; S. Neumann & Co.; Transvaal Goldfields; B. Kitzinger; Lewis and Marks; Compagnie Française de Mines d'Or et de l'Afrique du Sud.; Memorandum of Agreement between WNLA and CMLIA, 3 Feb. 1908, ATCM, Ch. 63; Articles 3 and 7 of Memorandum of Agreement between WNLA and CMLIA, 3 Feb. 1908, op. cit.
6 For a general discussion of these points see C. Newbury, op. cit., and Newbury, C. ‘Historical Aspects of Manpower and Migration in Africa South of the Sahara’, chapter 13 of P. Duignan and L. H. Gann, Colonialism in Africa, 1870–1960: volume IV. The Economics of Colonialism, (London, 1975).Google Scholar
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8 Monthly production totals of the Witwatersrand declared in ARSARCM for 1899; ARTCM for 1902–5, Shipping returns of the CMLIA, 1904, in CMLIA Circular no. 1029, 8 Feb. 1907; ATCM, Ch. 65.
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11 Johnstone, Frederick A., Class, Race and Gold, (London, 1976), 19Google Scholar. See 17–20 for an excellent discussion of the problems affecting the realization of the accumulation of profit through the investment of capital in, and operation of, the South African gold mining industry. See also Jeeves, A., ‘The Control of Migratory Labour on the South African Gold Mines in the Era of Kruger and Milner’, J. of Southern African Studies (JSAS), ii, 1 (Oct. 1975), 3–29CrossRefGoogle Scholar; and Wilson, F., Labour in the South African Gold Mines, 1911–1969, (London, 1972), 39–40Google Scholar for discussions of the pay limit and determinants affecting it. Contrary to the expectations of neo-classical economists, the grade of ore in the Witwatersrand mines showed a continual decline in this period, indicating that falling production and rising costs could not even be temporarily offset within the tightly determined productive process of the Witwatersrand mines. See Frankel, op. cit. 21–8 for an elaboration of the neo-classical argument; for a critique, see my review article, ‘South and Central African mining, c. 1900–1933’, African Affairs, forthcoming.Google Scholar
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13 Report of the Committee on White and Coloured Labour, 2 Dec. 1902, ATCM, W6(c); for an elaboration of these points see also the Report of H. Ross Skinner presented to the WNLA, 22 Sept. 1903, ATCM, Pte. Chinese Labour; speech by Sir George Farrar in the Leg. Co., 28 Dec. 1903, encl. in Milner, to Lyttelton, , 5 Jan. 1904, CO. 291/68/2494Google Scholar. For a similar ‘shortage’ of labour related to its costs see Van Onselen, C., Chibaro: African Mine Labour in Southern Rhodesia, 1900–1933, (London, 1976), 75–91.Google Scholar
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16 See for example Chamber of Mines support for the repression of the Liquor Trade after the war—Van Onselen, C., “The Randlords and Rotgut, 1886–1903’, History Work-Shop, no. 2 (Autumn, 1976)Google ScholarPubMed. This paper was first presented to the I.C.S. (London) Seminar on Southern Africa, in 1975.
17 Jennings, Hennen, Chinese Labour on the Rand, Imperial South Africa Association Pamphlet (3 Feb. 1904)Google Scholar, ATCM ‘H’ Series Pamphlets; Cd. 1895, Evid. of Jennings, S. to the Transvaal Labour Commission, 8 Sept. 1903, no. 9,958, pp. 454.Google Scholar
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23 The number of Mozambique Africans in the Rhodesian mines might have had some effect on the absolute numbers distributed by WNLA between 1902 and 1004: see Onselen, Van, Chibaro, 86–90Google Scholar; Annual Report, WNLA, 1902Google Scholar: Table Showing Geographical Origins of Africans distributed by WNLA. This figure includes Africans from Portuguese East African territories north of Lat. 220 S. Annual Report, WNLA, 1903Google Scholar; Annual Report, WNLA, 1904Google Scholar. The number of short-term contracts also showed an alarming tendency to rise, posing a threat to the quota system and raising the prospect of increased turnover rates: the average of ‘locals’ in the numbers distributed by WNLA between 1902 and 1907 averaged out at 27.08 per cent of all Africans distributed annually; Annual Reports, WNLA, 1902–1907Google Scholar: Tables of Geographical Origins of Africans Distributed by WNLA. British Central Africans accounted for 0, 1–10 and 1.31 per cent of Africans distributed by WNLA between 1902 and 1904. Locals, including a significant number of non-British South Africans, offset this decline somewhat, but the unreliability of local numbers meant that a shortage in recruited Africans in Portuguese East Africa was still very serious. See Jeeves, op. cit. 17–18.
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25 For an elaboration of the complementary roles of Chinese and Portuguese East African Labour, see Perry, F., The Transvaal Labour Problem, a paper read before the Fortnightly Club, Johannesburg, 1 Nov. 1906Google Scholar, in the Archives of the University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg.
26 Ross Skinner Report, op. cit. 6, 12; for discussions of the development of British and Chinese government positions on the Coolie traffic, see P. C. Campbell, op. cit. 86–216; Irick, Robert L., ‘Ch'ing Policy towards the Coolie Trade, 1847–1878’ (unpubl. Ph.D. thesis, Harvard 1971), passimGoogle Scholar. For full English and Chinese texts of the 1904 Emigration Convention, 13 May 1904, see Imperial Maritime Customs Service, Treaties between China and Foreign States, (Shanghai, 1917), ii, 643–51.Google Scholar
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29 Articles 2 and 63 of the Articles of Association of CMLIA, op. cit.; Praagh, L. V. (ed.), The Transvaal and Its Mines, (London, 1906), 534Google Scholar. For the appointment of expert advisers, see for example the appointment of A. W. Child as Chinese Advisor to CMLIA, Brazier, to Bagot, 4 May 1905Google Scholar, ATCM, ‘G’ Letters from China: ‘For seventeen years he [Child] has been at Sir Robert's [Hart] beck and call at Peking—his “fidus achates”— and his knowledge of the Northern people, their ways, customs, manners and spoken language is unequalled’. Report by Mr Raleigh on Landing Facilities at Durban and Delagoa Bay, 1903, in Barlow-Rand Archives, H. Eckstein Papers, HE65B. For examples of travel arrangements see Principal Immigration Restriction Officer, Port Natal, to Superintendent of FLD at Natal, 5 Jan. 1907; Bagot, W. L. to Chief Traffic Manager, Central South African Railways, 16 Dec. 1906, CMLIA Circular No. 1007Google Scholar; Bagot, W. L. to Chief Traffic Manager, CSAR, 5 Jan. 1907, CMLIA Circular No. 1007aGoogle Scholar; FLD 124, file 16/34; also FLD Annual Report, 1904–1905, appendix IV of Cd. 3025.Google Scholar
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31 Complete Staff List of the CMLIA in China, encl. 1 in Brazier, to Bagot, , 29 June 1905Google Scholar, op. cit.; Brazier, to Bagot, , 5 Aug. 1905Google Scholar: encl. 1 in Bagot, to Jamieson, , 14 Oct. 1905, FLD 131, file 20/-Google Scholar; Annual Report of the FLDfor 1905–1906, Pretoria 1906, 4056–12/9/06–600Google Scholar; Brazier, to Bagot, , 7 Apr. 1905Google Scholar; and Moorhead, to Perry, , 19 Sept. 1904Google Scholar, encl. 3 in Brazier, to Bagot, , 7 Apr. 1905, ATCM, ‘G’ Letters from China.Google Scholar
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46 Memo re Importation Costs, probably Jan. 1904 in ATCM, Ch. 16 as to the possibility of an average importation cost for African and Chinese labour. This was a matter of considerable debate: see Minutes of the Representatives of Mining Groups, 16 Feb. 1904 on the appointment of a sub-Committee to determine whether members should be groups or companies, op. cit.; CMLIA Statistical Return of Chinese Labourers in Employment of Members for July 1907, in ATCM, Ch. 66. The following is the group breakdown:
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