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Letters relating to the Tahiti Cotton and Coffee Plantation Company, 1869 - 1870

documentary heritage
  • Kupu whakaahua

    Two letters: one in English (on Tahiti Cotton & Coffee Plantation Co. Ltd. letterhead) and the other in French, both from Tahiti, concerning a John Brander and William Stewart.

  • Tohu Tuakiri Kē

    14846 (Presto content ID)

    MS-2019-14 (Reference Number)

  • Wāhanga

Mātātuhi me ngā tuhinga

Rārangi

  • Momo Taonga
  • Ingoa/Taitara
    Letters relating to the Tahiti Cotton and Coffee Plantation Company, 1869 - 1870
  • 1869-1870
  • Whakaahuatanga ā-Kiko

    1 folder (2 items)

  • Reo
    French
    English
  • Taumata o te Mauhanga o Nāianei
    Parent
  • Ngā Taipitopito Tātai Takenga
    Provenance: Unknown. Previously housed with MS-266.
  • Kuputuhi e Wātea Tūmatanui ana

    [Keywords: Stewart, William. c.1766-1875, Atimaono, Plantation]

  • William Stewart was responsible for the introduction of Chinese labourers to Tahiti. In an effort to capitalise on the rise in world prices of Cotton, during and after the American Civil War, Stewart established a plantation known as "Terre Eugenie" at Atimaono, which ran successfully from 1865-1870. When cotton prices declined sharply after 1870 the business quickly went bankrupt and was abandoned.
    John Brander, who owned the first business house of Papeete in 1860, was the son-in-law of Alexander Salmon, a prominent figure in the Salmon-Brander clan who dominated the social, commercial and, to some extent, also the political scene in Tahiti between the 1840s and 1880s.
  • Whakahounga o Mua
    07 Jul 2023
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