Hostname: page-component-8448b6f56d-gtxcr Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-18T07:20:49.976Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

‘Rich flames and hired tears’: sugar, sub-imperial agents and the Cuban phoenix of empire

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 March 2009

Jonathan Curry-Machado
Affiliation:
Caribbean Studies Centre, London Metropolitan University, 166–220 Holloway Road, London N7 8DB, UK E-mail: j.currymachado@londonmet.ac.uk

Abstract

This paper analyses the importation of foreign steam technology into Cuba in the course of the nineteenth century, and the experience of the migrant workers employed to operate it, in order to focus not on Cuba as an isolatable entity, but existing in the context of transnational networks that were involving the island in processes of globalization. This was, at the outset, a ‘sub-imperial’ globalization, operating independently, and implying liberation, from empire. The search for new technologies to enable improvements in sugar production necessarily took the Creole elite beyond the restricted possibilities of the Spanish empire to the industrial centres of the United States, Britain, and France. Such new links helped fuel the emergence of an independent Cuban identity; however, the same globalizing tendencies that were eroding the Spanish empire led Cuba into new forms of imperial domination. The increasing expense of the new steam technology necessitated a growing dependence upon investment from foreign merchant banks, which gradually assumed control over much of the island's production and trade. The same migrant engineers who had begun by assisting Cuban planters took on the role of agents for foreign companies. Rather than contributing their skills, as one more group of migrants in a nation formed out of multiple migrations, these engineers asserted their foreign identity and guarded their privileged position. They came to be seen as symbolic of the process by which Cuba shook off the Spanish yoke only to replace it with another.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2009

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

1 Museo de la Ciudad, Havana, Fondo Moreno Fraginals (henceforth MC, MF) 234/28/5.

2 Jonathan Curry-Machado, ‘Indispensable aliens: the influence of engineering migrants in mid-nineteenth-century Cuba’, PhD thesis, London Metropolitan University, 2003.

3 MC, MF 234/27/1.

4 Ely, Roland T., Comerciantes cubanos del siglo XIX, Havana: Editorial Librería Martí, 1960; Philip D. Curtin, Cross-cultural trade in world history, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1984.Google Scholar

5 Herminio Portell Vilá, Historia de Cuba en sus relaciones con los Estados Unidos y España, 4 vols., Havana: Jesús Montero, 1938–41; Jorge Ibarra, Nación y cultura nacional, Havana: Editorial Letras Cubanas, 1981; Manuel Moreno Fraginals, Cuba/España: España/Cuba, Barcelona: Crítica, 1995; Schmidt-Nowara, Christopher, Empire and antislavery: Spain, Cuba, and Puerto Rico, 1833–1874, Pittsburgh, PA: University of Pittsburgh Press, 1999.Google Scholar

6 y Sánchez, Ramiro Guerra, Azúcar y población en las Antillas, Havana: Editorial de Ciencias Sociales, 1970 [1927].Google Scholar

7 Zanetti, Oscar and Garcia, Alejandro, eds., United Fruit Company: un caso de dominio imperialista, Havana: Editorial de Ciencias Sociales, 1976.Google Scholar

8 Benítez, José, Las Antillas: colonización, azúcar e imperialismo, Havana: Casa de las Américas, 1977.Google Scholar

9 Martínez-Fernández, Luis, Torn between empires: economy, society and patterns of political thought in the Hispanic Caribbean, 1840–1878, Athens, GA: University of Georgia Press, 1994.Google Scholar

10 Curry-Machado, Jonathan, ‘Sin azúcar no hay país: the transnational counterpoint of sugar and nation in nineteenth-century Cuba’, Bulletin of Hispanic Studies, 84, 1, 2007, pp. 1821.Google Scholar

11 Bush, Barbara, Imperialism and postcolonialism, London: Pearson Eduction, 2006, p. 45.Google Scholar

12 Ruy Mauro Marini, ‘Brazilian “interdependence” and imperialist integration’, Monthly Review, 17, 7, 1965, p. 21. Marini appears to have first employed the term ‘sub-imperial’ to describe such processes in ‘Brazilian sub-imperialism’, Monthly Review, 23, 9, 1972, pp. 14–24. The term was more recently resurrected as the Brazilian economy grew, along with its regional influence (Daniel Zirker, ‘Brazilian foreign policy and subimperialism during the political transition of the 1980s: a review and reapplication of Marini's theory’, Latin American Perspectives, 21, 1, 1994, pp. 115–31; Matthew Flynn, ‘Between subimperialism and globalization: a case study in the internationalization of Brazilian capital’, Latin American Perspectives, 34, 6, 2007, pp. 9–27.

13 Bush, Imperialism and postcolonialism, p. 45. See also Ross, Robert, Adam Kok's Griquas: a study in the development of stratification in South Africa, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1976Google Scholar; Warhurst, P. R., ‘Smuts and Africa: a study in sub-imperialism’, South African Historical Journal, 16, 1984, pp. 82100CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Keegan, Timothy, ‘The making of the Orange Free State, 1846–1854: sub-imperialism, primitive accumulation and state formation’, Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History, 17, 1, 1988, pp. 2654CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Strachan, Hew, The First World War in Africa, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2004.Google Scholar Patrick Bond has more recently shown how the term can also be applied to post-apartheid South Africa: ‘The ANC's left turn and South African sub-imperialism’, Review of African Political Economy, 31, 102, 2004, pp. 599–616; idem, ‘Bankrupt Africa: imperialism, sub-imperialism and financial politics’, Historical Materialism, 12, 4, 2004, pp. 145–72.

14 Blyth, Robert J., The empire of the Raj: India, eastern Africa and the Middle East, 1858–1947, Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, 2003.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

15 See, for example, Schmidt-Nowara, Christopher, The conquest of history: Spanish colonialism and national histories in the nineteenth century, Pittsburgh, PA: University of Pittsburgh Press, 2006.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

16 Trotha, Trutz von, ‘Colonialism’, in Stefan Berger, ed., A companion to nineteenth-century Europe, 1789–1914, Oxford: Blackwell, 2006, p. 439.Google Scholar

17 Curry-Machado, ‘Indispensable aliens’, pp. 209–13.

18 Curry-Machado, Jonathan, ‘Privileged scapegoats: the manipulation of migrant engineering workers in mid-nineteenth century Cuba’, Caribbean Studies, 35, 1, 2007, pp. 207–45.Google Scholar

19 Benítez, Las Antillas, pp. 136–8; Julio Le Riverend, Historia económica de Cuba, Havana: Editorial de Ciencias Sociales, 1967, p. 161; Sherry Johnson, Social transformation of eighteenth-century Cuba, Gainsville, FL: University Press of Florida, 2001.

20 Mintz, Sidney W., Sweetness and power: the place of sugar in modern history, New York: Penguin, 1985, pp. 74–150.Google Scholar

21 Louis A. Pérez Jr, Cuba: between reform and revolution, 2nd edn, New York: Oxford University Press, 1995, pp. 71–4.

22 Harrison, Michelle, King Sugar: Jamaica, the Caribbean and the world Sugar economy, London: Latin America Bureau, 2001, p. 107Google Scholar; Green, William A., British slave emancipation: the sugar colonies and the great experiment, 1830–1865, Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1976.Google Scholar

23 y Sánchez, Ramiro Guerra et al., Historia de la nación cubana, Havana: Editorial Historia de la Nación Cubana, 1952, p. 78Google Scholar; Knight, Franklin W., Slave society in Cuba during the nineteenth century, Madison, WI: University of Wisconsin Press, 1970, p. 24.Google Scholar

24 Manuel Moreno Fraginals, El ingenio: complejo económico social cubano del azucar, vol. 3, Havana: Editorial de Ciencias Sociales, 1978, pp. 35–7; Dye, Alan, Cuban sugar in the age of mass production: technology and the economics of the sugar central, 1899–1929, Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 1998, p. 27.Google Scholar

25 McCulloh, Richard, Reports of the Secretary of the Treasury of scientific investigations in relation to sugar and hydrometers, Washington, DC: Wendell and Van Benthuysen, 1848.Google Scholar

26 Levi Marrero, Cuba: economía y sociedad, Madrid: Editorial Playor, 1973–86, vol. 10, p. 278; Moreno Fraginals, El ingenio.

27 Pérez, Cuba, p. 75.

28 Benítez, Las Antillas, p. 200.

29 Marrero, Cuba, vol. 12, p. 115.

30 Bergad, Laird W., Cuban rural society in the nineteenth century: the social and economic history of monoculture in Matanzas, Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1990.Google Scholar

31 Jeremy, David J., Transatlantic industrial revolution: the diffusion of textile technologies between Britain and America, 1790–1830s, Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 1981.Google Scholar

32 See, for example, Hills, Richard L., Power from steam: a history of the stationary steam engine, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1993Google Scholar; and Mokyr, Joel, Lever of riches: technological creativity and economic progress, New York: Oxford University Press, 1990.Google Scholar

33 On the general development of the sugar industry, see Noel Deerr, The history of sugar, 2 vols, London: Chapman & Hall, 1949–50; and Galloway, J. H., The sugar cane industry: an historical geography from its origins to 1914, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1989.Google Scholar

34 ‘Proyecto sobre mejorar la máquina de exprimir caña’, Biblioteca Nacional ‘José Martí’, Havana (henceforth BNJM), C.M. Sociedad Económica 15/21.

35 BNJM, C.M. Pérez Beato, legajo 12; Marrero, Cuba, vol. 10, pp.158–9.

36 Moreno Fraginals, El ingenio, vol. 1, p. 87.

37 Portell Vilá, Historia de Cuba, vol. 1, p. 199.

38 y Lobo, Jacobo de la Pezuela, Diccionario geográfico, estadístico, histórico de la isla de Cuba, vol. 1, Madrid: Imprenta del Establecimiento de Mellado, 1863, p. 58.Google Scholar

39 Anales de las Reales Junta de Fomento y Sociedad Económica de la Habana, 4, 1851, p. 247.

40 Archivo Nacional de Cuba, Havana (henceforth ANC), Fondo Gobierno Superior Civil (henceforth GSC) 372/14200.

41 Butel, Paul, The Atlantic, London & New York: Routledge, 1999, pp. 223–33.Google Scholar

42 Ramos Mattei, A. A., ‘The role of Scottish sugar machinery manufacturers in the Puerto Rican plantation system, 1842–1909’, Scottish Industrial History, 8, 1, 1985, p. 21Google Scholar; Moreno Fraginals, El ingenio, vol. 1, pp. 207–8.

43 The Engineer, 12 November 1858, p. 376.

44 Ramos Mattei, ‘The role of Scottish sugar machinery’, p. 20.

45 Jeremy, David J., ‘Innovation in American textile technology during the early 19th century’, Technology and Culture, 14, 1, 1973, pp. 4076CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Jeremy, David J. and Stapleton, Darwin H., ‘Transfers between culturally-related nations: the movement of textile and railroad technologies between Britain and the United States, 1780–1840’, in David J. Jeremy, ed., International technology transfer: Europe, Japan and the USA, 1700–1914, Aldershot: Edward Elgar, 1991, pp. 31–48.Google Scholar

46 Pursell, Carroll W., Early stationary steam-engines in America: a study in the migration of a technology, Washington DC: Smithsonian Institution Press, 1969.Google Scholar; Hunter, Louis C., A history of industrial power in the United States, 1780–1930, Vol. 2: steam power, Charlottesville, VA: University Press of Virginia, 1985.Google Scholar

47 Ramos Mattei, ‘The role of Scottish sugar machinery’, p. 21.

48 Martínez-Fernández, Torn between empires, p. 84.

49 Ibid.

50 Manuel Moreno Fraginals, The sugarmill: the socio-economic complex of sugar in Cuba, 1760–1860, New York: Monthly Review Press, 1976, p. 117.

51 Fairrie, Geoffrey, Sugar, Liverpool: Fairrie & Co., 1925, p. 168.Google Scholar

52 BNJM, Lobo 108, vol. 3, file 2.

53 Martínez-Fernández, Torn between empires, p. 98; Bergad, Cuban rural society, p. 90; Marrero, Cuba, vol. 10, p. 159.

54 Moreno Fraginals, El ingenio; Dye, Cuban sugar; Curry-Machado, ‘Indispensable aliens’.

55 Zanetti, Oscar and García, Alejandro, Caminos para el azúcar, Havana: Editorial de Ciencias Sociales, 1987.Google Scholar

56 Bergad, Cuban rural society, pp. 121–2.

57 Fé Iglesias García, ‘The development of capitalism in Cuban sugar production, 1860–1900’, in Manuel Moreno Fraginals, Frank Moya Pons, and Stanley L. Engerman, eds., Between slavery and free labor: the Spanish-speaking Caribbean in the nineteenth century, Baltimore, MD: The Johns Hopkins University Press, 1985, p. 58.

58 Francisco de Paula Serrano, in Memorias de la Sociedad Económica de la Habana, 11, 1840, p. 240.

59 British Parliamentary Papers 1841, I, vii, pp. 88–9.

60 Archivo Histórico Nacional, Madrid (henceforth AHN), Ultramar, Cuba/Fomento (henceforth UCF) 35/2, no. 35.

61 Diario de la Habana, 24 November 1839.

62 ANC, Real Consulado y Junta de Fomento (henceforth RCJF) 131/6412.

63 Hobsbawm, Eric, Industry and empire, London: Penguin, 1969, p. 117.Google Scholar

64 Crossick, Geoffrey, An artisan elite in Victorian society: Kentish London, 1840–1880, London: Croom Helm, 1978, pp. 110–3Google Scholar; Belchem, John, Industrialization and working class: the English experience, 1750–1900, Aldershot: Scolar Press, 1990, p. 156.Google Scholar

65 Hobsbawm, Eric, Labouring Men: Studies in the History of Labour, London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 1986.Google Scholar

66 ANC, Comisión Militar (henceforth CM) 51/1, pp. 416–29.

67 National Archives, London (henceforth NA), FO 72/830, no. 6; NA, FO 72/830, no. 24.

68 ANC, Miscelénea de Libros (henceforth ML) 11080 and 11910; also AHN, UCF 30/2, no. 2.

69 Curry-Machado, ‘Indispensable aliens’.

70 Rebello, Carlos, Estados relativos a la producción azucarera de la Isla de Cuba, Havana: publisher unknown, 1860.Google Scholar

71 BNJM, Sociedad T.34, no. 1a.

72 BNJM, Lobo 111, vol. 3.

73 Barings Archive, London (henceforth BA), LB 22, no. 231.

74 BA, HC 4.6.10, no. 65.

75 Modern Records Centre, Warwick, MSS 259/2/1/1, Amalgamated Society of Engineers, Quarterly reports, September 1853, and Annual branch reports, 1853.

76 Fraginals, El ingenio, vol. 1, p. 213.

77 Bodleian Library, Oxford, Henry E. Emerson Papers (henceforth BL, HEE), MSS Span c. 3, ‘La Palma’ Estate Book 3.

78 NA, FO 72/664, no. 19, letter from Theodore Phinney to British Consul, Joseph Crawford, Havana, 29 June 1844; Bergad, Cuban rural society, p. 203.

79 ANC, CM 63/9.

80 ANC, CM 51/1, pp. 260–2.

81 Ibid., pp. 84–5.

82 Louisiana Planter and Sugar Manufacturer, 7 February 1914 and 11 September 1915.

83 BNJM, Lobo 111/1.

84 Glasgow University Archives and Business Records Centre, UGD 118/1/2/3.

85 ANC, CM 51/1.

86 BNJM, Lobo 109/3.

87 Ely, Roland T., Cuando reinaba su majestad el azúcar, Havana: Imágen Contemporánea, 2001 [1963], p. 317.Google Scholar

88 Ibid.

89 MC, MF 235/1/24.

90 Ely, Comerciantes cubanos, pp. 83–140.

91 BA, HC 4.6.1, nos. 4–5.

92 BA, HC 4.6.12, no. 141.

93 BA, HC 4.6.1, no. 1.

94 BA, HC 4.6.8 (part 3), no. 307.

95 BNJM, Lobo 113/1.

96 BA, HC 4.6.12.

97 BNJM, Lobo 113; BA, HC 4.6.8 (part 1), no. 19; BA, HC 4.6.2 (part 2), nos. 216–8.

98 Greenock Sugar Trade Review, 2 April 1873.

99 Ely, Cuando reinaba, p. 300; Fernández, Susan J., Encumbered Cuba: capital markets and revolt, 1878–1895, Gainesville, FL: University Press of Florida, 2002.Google Scholar

100 BA, HC 4.6.8 (part 2), no. 185.

101 BA, HC 4.6.8 (part 3), no. 333.

102 Fernández, Encumbered Cuba.

103 BA, HC 4.6.2 (part 1), no. 26.

104 BA, HC 4.6.2 (part 2), no. 213a.

105 Ibid., no. 239.

106 Ely, Cuando reinaba, p. 301.

107 Pérez Jr, Louis A., Winds of change: hurricanes and the transformation of nineteenth-century Cuba, Chapel Hill, NC: University of North Carolina Press, 2001, p. 96.Google Scholar

108 Martínez-Fernández, Torn between empires, p. 106, citing Moreno Fraginals.

109 Cited by Martínez-Fernández, Torn between empires, p. 128.

110 Guerra y Sánchez, Azúcar y población.

111 Zanetti, Oscar and García, Alejandro, Sugar and railroads: a Cuban history, 1837–1959, Chapel Hill, NC: University of North Carolina Press, 1998, p. 193.Google Scholar

112 Allahar, Anton L., ‘Slaves, slave merchants and slave owners in 19th century Cuba’, Caribbean Studies 21, 1–2, 1988, p. 174.Google Scholar

113 Ely, Cuando reinaba.

114 BNJM, Lobo 109/3.

115 Memorias de la Sociedad Económica, 9, 1840, p. 240.

116 BNJM, Lobo 135/2.

117 Curry-Machado, ‘Indispensable aliens’.

118 Memorias de la Sociedad Económica, 1843 (2), pp. 7–9.

119 ANC, GSC 1608/81938.

120 ANC, ML 10789.

121 AHM, UCF 16/1.

122 James H. Dod, ‘Reminiscences of Cuban engineering’, Louisiana Planter and Sugar Manufacturer, 7 February 1914.

123 BL, HEE, MSS Span c.5, ‘La Palma’ Estate Book 4.

124 Casanovas, Joan, Bread, or bullets! Urban labor and Spanish colonialism in Cuba, 1850–1898, Pittsburgh, PA: University of Pittsburgh Press, 1998, p. 67.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

125 BNJM, Lobo 111/1.

126 BNJM, Lobo 109/3.

127 Curry-Machado, ‘Privileged scapegoats’.

128 Martínez-Fernández, Torn between empires.

129 Curry-Machado, ‘Privileged scapegoats’, p. 237.

130 Curry-Machado, Jonathan, ‘Catalysts in the crucible: kidnapped Caribbeans, free black British subjects and migrant British machinists in the failed Cuban revolution of 1843’, in Nancy Naro, ed., Blacks and national identity in nineteenth-century Latin America, London: ILAS, 2003.Google Scholar

131 Sarracino, Rodolfo, Inglaterra: las dos caras en la lucha cubana por la abolición, Havana: Editorial Letras Cubanas, 1989Google Scholar; Paquette, Robert L., Sugar is made with blood: the conspiracy of La Escalera and the conflict between empires over slavery in Cuba, Middletown, CN: Wesleyan University Press, 1988.Google Scholar

132 ANC, GSC 1285/50277.

133 ANC, Miscelánea de Expedientes, 75/Ai, Orden del Capitan General, 8 December 1851, La Aurora de Matanzas, 3 January 1852. The exclusion of foreign sugar-mill engineers from the matriculation of trades appears to have been maintained at least until the outbreak of the first war of Cuban independence in 1868.

134 El Faro Industrial de la Habana, 10 April 1845.

135 Memorias de la Sociedad Económica, 36, 1848 (1), pp. 31–4.

136 Memorias de la Sociedad Económica, 33, 1846 (2), p. 359.

137 Memorias de la Sociedad Económica, 36, 1848 (1), pp. 31–4.

138 ANC, ML 11080, 11397, and 11910.

139 Memorias de la Sociedad Económica, 36, 1848 (1), pp. 31–4.

140 AHN, UCF 30/2, No.32.

141 AHN, Estado 8044/7.

142 Memorias de la Sociedad Económica, 46b, 1855–9.

143 Curry-Machado, ‘Privileged scapegoats’.

144 ANC, GSC 1594/81606.

145 ANC, RCJF 207/9310.

146 Jeremy, Transatlantic industrial revolution.

147 Wallerstein, Immanuel, The capitalist world economy, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1979Google Scholar; and The modern world system, 3 vols., New York: Academic Press, 1974–89. Also Hopkins, Terence K. and Wallerstein, Immanuel, World systems analysis, theory and methodology, Beverley Hills, CA: Sage, 1982.Google Scholar

148 Hobsbawm, Eric, Nations and nationalism since 1780: programme, myth, reality, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1990.Google Scholar

149 Mazlish, Bruce, ‘An introduction to global history’, in Bruce Mazlish and Ralph Buultjens, eds., Conceptualizing global history, Boulder, CO: Westview Press, 1993, pp. 1–24.Google Scholar

150 Marks, Robert B., The origins of the modern world: a global and ecological narrative, Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield, 2002, p. 155.Google Scholar

151 O’Brien, Patrick Karl, ‘Colonies in a globalizing economy, 1815–1948’, in Barry K. Gills and William R. Thompson, eds., Globalization and global history, London: Routledge, 2006, p. 275.Google Scholar

152 Jeremy, David J., Artisans, entrepreneurs and machines, Aldershot: Ashgate, 1998, p. 19.Google Scholar