The Heritage of Plants in Tobago
The Indigo Project exhibition opens at the Scarborough Library on Monday July 15. It starts as a fascinating modern expedition, in search of the seventeenth and eighteenth century indigo production sites and plantations around Tobago, delves into the island’s history as it passed from British to French to Courlanders, and leads back to the wild diversity and the botanicals in the rainforest. Go to the Scarborough Library July 15-27; and visit the Tobago Library Services on their Facebook page.
The blue dye for blue jeans came originally from indigo, the
extract of a particular family of plants, the indigofera. The name comes from
the place where the dye was first recorded in use, India. The Greek
word for the dye, indikón - means Indian. The Romans called it indicum. It
eventually came into English as the word “indigo.” (It is worth noting that the
identical dye was developed in Britain – woad is the colour that early wild
Britons used to colour their skin - from the plant, Isatis tinctoria.) It is likely that other Asian countries – China, Japan –
got their indigo from India whose climate was ideal for the species of
indigofera, tinctoria and suffruticosa, from which the colour was extracted.
Marco Polo is said to have written about indigo from India in the
13th century. Herodotus (around 450 BC) also wrote about indigo. By
the end of the 15th century, Portuguese explorer Vasco da Gama had opened the
sea way to India, and trade routes were established from Europe to the east, India,
the Spice Islands, China, and Japan. Demand for indigo grew in Europe, with
Portugal, the Netherlands, and England the major importers. Indigo plantations were
developed in the tropical colonies; including large plantations in Jamaica (as
well as other Caribbean islands including Tobago) and South Carolina. Labour on
these plantations was provided primarily by African slaves. Easily obtainable
indigo threatened the British woad industry so France and Germany banned indigo
imports in the 16th century. Natural indigo was replaced with the invention of
synthetic indigo (by German chemist Adolf von Baeyer) and production in
commercial quantities around 1900.
The Spanish, Dutch, French, English, all cultivated indigo in the
Caribbean region. The Spanish from the 1500s; other colonial powers typically
in the 1600s and 1700s. Early settlers cultivated other crops as well, before
sugar became dominant. Although indigo was a minor crop, it still played a role
in the region's history.
In Tobago, research indicates indigo was cultivated in the 1600s
by early British, Dutch and Courlander settlers - using African slave labour -
exporting product to Europe. Many of these settlements were short-lived as the
island was fought over and newcomers driven out. In 1650, the settlement
founded by James, Duke of Courland (1642) – planting tobacco and indigo – was
driven out by the native Amerindians.
In 1699, the British Crown again claimed Tobago; over the next two
decades, cocoa and indigo were cultivated. Courland made an attempt to reclaim
Tobago in 1731; and the French again in 1748. The British were restored in 1763
by the Treaty of Paris. By 1777, exports were rum, cotton, indigo and sugar.
By 1780, with a population over 11,000, exports were recorded as
cotton, 2,619,000 lbs, and indigo, 27,000 lbs. 1789 is the last year of any
statistics for the indigo crop.
In April 1781, the French raided and captured Lt Governor
Ferguson; they destroyed the plantations and Tobago again became French through
the Treaty of Versailles. Population plummeted to 800. The mutiny of French
troops in 1790 destroyed Scarborough; and in 1793, the British recaptured the
island. By the time the sugar plantations were replanted in 1798, indigo and
cotton were no longer seen as important to the island economy.
In January 2019, the Tobago Library Services, Scarborough Library
in particular, undertook a research project to find the remains of some of the
indigo factories that existed in Tobago. It was thought that some eight
processing plants or pits once operated on the island: ruins were located at
Courland, Parlatuvier, Crown Point and Cove; but Bloody Bay, Mason Hall may
also have supported this product. The Indigo Project diaries (five parts on video)
may be found on the Tobago Library Services Facebook page; it records
expeditions to Parlatuvier, Courland, Crown Point and Cove. See the five part
series at this link: https://www.facebook.com/tobagolibraryservices/videos
Follow #Projectindigo
Indigo plant grown from seed in Tobago, for the Indigo project: Leaves should be harvested before the plant flowers for highest concentration of dye (Photo courtesy Pat Ganase) |
Indigo suffruticosa with flowers, courtesy Australian National Botanic Gardens |
According to Librarian Gabrielle Fernandes, “In this region,
varieties of the Indigofera genus were used. We don't have a record of exactly
which species was cultivated in Tobago, we can only extrapolate from the plants
we find today: Indigofera suffruticosa
and Indigofera hirsuta. We have had
good results extracting pigment from I suffruticosa. According to the
literature, I hirsuta is a minor source of indigo. We did not pursue trying to
work with that variety. There is another Indigofera species, Indigofera tinctoria that is said to be
here as an ‘exotic.’ This is an excellent source of indigo but we just haven't
seen it yet in our expeditions around Tobago. There are said to be over 700
species in the genus Indigofera, but only a few are used to produce dye.” It
belongs in the plant family Fabaceae, with pigeon peas.
Fernandes and her team also experimented with the process. They
picked leaves and stems of mature plants – which grow to three to six feet tall
– fermented them in water, oxidized and extracted the dye which was stabilized
with lye (sodium hydroxide). Cotton or denim may be dipped up to 20 times for
the colour to be transferred.
The Indigo Project Exhibition will be mounted in the Scarborough
Library, available to be visited and viewed by the public from July 15 to 27. For
more information, call 639-3593. If you are in Tobago, make time to visit the
Indigo Project. Here is a crop that has not been cultivated in Tobago for more
than two centuries, but the plant remains in the biodiversity of our wild
spaces. (Pat Ganase)
Indigofera
suffruticosa grows in
dry conditions: here are seeds on a plant in Arizona, photo courtesy SEINet
portal http://swbiodiversity.org/seinet/collections/individual/index.php?occid=12742252
|
REFERENCES
Gabrielle Fernandes, Tobago Library
Services, Scarborough
History of Tobago on-line: https://www.mytobago.info/history.php
https://www.lib.umn.edu/bell/tradeproducts/indigo
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