-.# aV./>. ' 'I S^;^ HBfW" A^^^'V '\ •^^ •'«»)."♦ ,\ « ,. .%, ^' :A^h,^. %,<^ 1^ ^^' .\M * f* a~ 1\\\ • "^ //'I e » ft 1- a, ."■•; \r © .0 win. .^^><.. ^;^ j^«o^ •^/>. .'1 // . (^,> '" '^' a\' ,.on„ 'V^'.>Vs\.<;- „.,„ C '"-^" a'^ Digitized by tine Internet Arciiive in 2011 witii funding from Tine Library of Congress Iittp://www.arcliive.org/details/danisliwestindies01west THE DANISH WEST INDIES ' How the colonies were actually governed; what the colonists did at work and play; how the mother country stamped her image upon them, and to what extent the lineaments of that image were modified by contact with local forces — these are matters that interest the reader of to-day." — W. R. Shepherd. ^ _/: --; - -C ft ^ - ~ •_ — p. ^ «. C: — t^ C ;- — >--i > -^ - ri ;: ^ ^ <, <^ ^■ ^ -t f> ^, ^; "§ ^-^ -s" c 'a o C3 O fc e .=' ^ o CJ ■a Oi O 5 ^ :S 1 C ;: -T- e- i5 J^ r~^ it ■^i ^ Ti o » S > u. ^ a s 60 a — ■ THE DANISH WEST INDIES UNDER COMPANY RULE (1671-1754) WITH A SUPPLEMENTARY CHAPTER, 1755-1917 <^ I) , , iw ' BY WALDEMAR WESTERGAARD, Ph. D. ASSISTANT PEOFESSOR OF HISTORY AT POMONA COLLEGE WITH AN INTRODUCTION BY H. MORSE STEPHENS, M. A., Litt. D. (Harv.) SATHER PROFESSOR OF mSTORY AT THE XTNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA MAPS AND ILLUSTRATIONS Nfw fork THE MACMILLAN COMPANY 1917 All Tights reserved , v\/S^ COPYBIQHT, 1917 By the MACMILLAN COMPANY Set up and printed. Published June, 1917. JUN21 1917 / ©C1A470023 PREFACE Since the opening of the Panama Canal, the attention of the United States has been drawn more and more to those Caribbean and Gulf regions, which were, until comparatively recent times, the economic center of the New World and the source of a considerable part of that wealth which kept the wheels of industry running in the Old. If Tobacco was King in the seventeenth, and Cotton in the nineteenth, then Sugar surely held the scepter in the eighteenth century. This book was written before the United States began the negotiations that have resulted in the transfer of the Danish West Indian islands to the United States. The increased in- terest of Americans in Caribbean lands, and the scarcity of authoritative historical books upon the subject will it is hoped justify its appearance now. It assumes a certain curiosity on the part of the reader, first, as to how the Diinish-Norwegian state became interested in the islands off the Spanish Main, and second, how so small a state has managed to retain its hold for nearly two centuries and a half. The pages which follow record an episode in the time when Sugar was King. They are the result of an attempt to identify and appraise a number of official and other papers found in the Bancroft Collection at the University of California. These documents had come from the Danish West Indian islands, and were first brought to the writer's attention by Professor Henry Morse Stephens under whose inspiration and guidance the subsequent investigations were carried on. The paucity of the printed material dealing with the history of Danish colonization in America led to a search in the Danish libraries and archives for further light: The entire archives of the Danish West India and Guinea Company were found substan- tially intact in their repository in the state archives building of Denmark near Christiansborg castle. Except for the labors of [v] VI PREFACE a few scholars in search of genealogical and biographical in- formation, the collection had to all appearances scarcely been touched. With such a wealth of material to go through, the writer cannot claim to have exhausted his subject, but he hopes to have made more intelligible than hitherto the story of one of those commercial joint-stock companies that were so closely associated with the seventeenth and eighteenth century ex- ploitation of New World resources. Treated by itself, colonial history is well-nigh meaningless. Only when considered as part of European history — indeed, when related somehow to universal history — does it become vital. It is obvious that the political and economic development of American colonies cannot be adequately followed without giving considerable attention to the forces that prompted, and largely guided, commercial ventures. The present work is the history of a company composed mainly of Danish business men intent upon embracing such commercial opportunities as the New World seemed to offer them. Their headquarters were in Copenhagen, their factories, or trading centers, in the West Indies and on the Guinea coast. Business was the chief aim, the establishment of a colony an incident, of their en- deavors. Yet one cannot be understood apart from the other. The r61e played by Denmark-Norway in tropical coloniza- tion was indeed not large and not infrequently the interest of the English — or American — reader will center in what the men of the North saw and heard in the West Indies, rather than in what they did there. Yet, there was enough of what might be called economic solidarity in the Western commercial world to lend the Danish occupation a genuine interest. Despite local differences, the experiences of the Danes were fairly typical of those of the Dutch, the French, the English, and even the Spanish merchants and administrators. The physical condi- tions with which all had to contend were nearly identical. The political and economic ideas which the Europeans who sought to earn their livelihood in the West Indies brought with them had many points of similarity. In fact, the population of many of the islands was surprisingly cosmopolitan. PREFACE Vll In the eighty-four years of its existence, the Company led a varied and interesting life. During its early years it sur- vived the competition of Dutch, French, English, and Branden- burg business, whether private or corporate. With the opening of the new century it experienced the welcome, if rather hectic, glow of a period of prosperity induced by a general European war, that of the Spanish Succession. In the era of speculation and depression that followed the return of peace, the Danish Company had its experience with paper money expedients as a cure for hard times. In the history of the slave trade and of that tropical agri- culture which it was calculated to promote, and in the growth of the idea of self-government, the experience of the Danish colonies is suggestive. Though St. Thomas has been popularly associated with buccaneers and pirates, some of whose exploits are recorded in the following pages, it has scarcely been sus- pected heretofore that a considerable part of Captain Kidd's "treasure" found its way to the warehouses and ships of Danes and Brandenburgers on the island. But what was after all far more important than random calls by pirates was the fact that the Company helped to supply Europe with sugar, cotton and what are still known in Danish shops as colonial wares. Moreover, it served as a training school for statesmen who after this experience found the transition from the business of the Company to affairs of state less dif- ficult to compass. The writer has not hesitated to let the actors tell their own story, but to obviate needless obstruction to the narrative, and for the benefit of those readers who may care to probe deeper into the subject, such illustrative and statistical ma- terial as could not well be included in the body of the text has been incorporated into the appendix. Many names of char- acters and places not familiar to English readers in their Danish form have been anglicized where possible. The following list of Danish equivalents for the rendering of proper names given in the text is offered in the hope of preventing undue confusion for such as may care to consult the original records. Chris- tian = Christiern; George = Jorgen; Peter = Peder, Pieter; Vili PREFACE John = Jan, Johan, Johannes, Jens; OHver = Oliger; WilHam = Willem, Wilhelm; Severin = Soren; also Unicorn = Enhiorn- ingen; Unity = Eenigheden; Electoral Prince = Churprinz; the Peace = Freden; the Gilded Crown = den Forgyldte Krone; the Red Cock = den Rode Hane. To friends who have assisted him in numerous ways, the ( writer wishes to express his gratitude. Chief among these is Professor H. Morse Stephens, Sather Professor of History at the University of California, to whose generous encourage- ment this work owes its inception. He has followed the progress of the investigations with a never-flagging interest, and has always been ready to place his great store of knowledge at the writer's disposal. To Professor Charles H. Hull of Cornell University for patient guidance and valued instruction during a year at that institution as Fellow in American history, to Professor Herbert E. Bolton of the University of California for constructive criticism, to Mr. Herbert I. Priestley for valuable bibliographical hints, to Professor W. R. R. Pinger and Miss Florence Livingstone for suggestions as to style, sincere thanks are due. To the officials in the Danish archives and libraries whose services were generously placed at his dis- posal, the author takes pleasure in acknowledging his debt, and especially to former Rigsarkivar, Dr. V. Secher and his staff at the state and provincial archives. Dr. V. Christensen of the Raadstuearkiv, Professor Knud Fabricius, Dr. Ove Paul- sen, the officials of the Royal and University Libraries, and to Fru Anna Backer, Their uniform courtesy and helpfulness are among the writer's pleasant memories of his year in Copen- hagen. To His Excellency Dr. Maurice Francis Egan, American minister to Denmark, the writer desires to express his gratitude for assistance in securing access to materials. To the Regents of the University of California for aid in making possible the procuring of needed transcripts, grateful acknowledgment is due. The difficulty of correcting proof and checkmg up references to manuscript sources when archives are thousands of miles removed from the scene of writing may serve to explain, though PREFACE IX not to excuse, textual errors. The writer is indebted to Pro- fessor Hull for generous assistance in reading the final proofs. The present work, submitted as a thesis in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy at the University of California in May, 1915, is the first volume of three which the writer hopes to devote to the history of the Danish West India Islands. The second will follow the for- tunes of the colonies down to the end of the Napoleonic Wars, and the third will bring the story down to the present time. In view, however, of the current interest aroused in the islands as a result of their purchase by the United States, a supplementary chapter has been added to this volume, summarizing their more recent history. Pomona College, Claremont, California, April 15, 1917. CHRONOLOGICAL TABLE 1660. Couj) d'etat of Frederick III. 1671. Establishment of West India Company. 1673. West India and Guinea companies united. 1685. Brandenburg treaty concerning St. Thomas. 1690. Arff takes over Guinea factory. 1690. Thormohlen lease of St. Thomas begins. 1694. Company receives back St. Thomas. 1696-97. Arfif gives up Guinea trade. 1697. Company begins slave trade in earnest. 1706. Planters send first delegation to Copenhagen. 1715. Planters send second delegation. 1717. St. John occupied by Danes. 1726. Drought and famine on St. Thomas. 1733. Negro insurrection on St. John. 1733. St. Croix purchased from France. 1734. New charter granted by king. 1747. "Union plan and convention" enlarging Company. 1748. Planters send third delegation to Copenhagen. 1754. Company's shares sold to king; Danish islands become royal colonies. [xi] TABLE OF CONTENTS PAGE PREFACE v-ix CHRONOLOGICAL TABLE xi INTRODUCTION BY H. MORSE STEPHENS xvii AUTHOR'S INTRODUCTION : Geographical and Historical 1 Chap. I. The Establishment of the Company 31 II. The Critical Period (1680-1690) 45 III. The Brandenburgers at St. Thomas 71 IV. The Leasing of Guinea and St. Thomas 95 V. The Governorship of John Lorentz 105 VI. St. Thomas and St. John as Plantation Colonies (1688- 1733) 121 VII. The Slave Trade in the Danish West Indies 137 VIII. The Slave and the Planter 157 IX. The Planter and the Company 179 X. The Acquisition of St, Croix 199 XL The Company under the New Charter 213 BIBLIOGRAPHY 263 APPENDLKES A. Governors in the West Indies and in Guinea 285 B. Directors and Board op Shareholders in Copen- hagen 290 C. The First Charter of the Danish West India Com- pany 294 D. Charter of 1697 for the West India and Guinea Com- pany 299 E. Letter of Charite Esmit to Adolph Esmit 303 F. Report of Board of Police and Trade to King Fred- erick IV (1716) 306 G. Governor Erik Bredal to Directors, 1719, 1722 315 H. Statistics for St. Thomas: Population, Plantations. . . 318 I. Statistics for St. John and St. Croix: Population, Plantations 319 [xiii] XIV TABLE OF CONTENTS APPENDIXES PAGE J. List of Slave Cabgoes Abriving in Danish West In- dies 320 |K. Pbices on St. Thomas (1687-1751) 327 L. West Indian Sugar Exported from Copenhagen 328 M. Company's Receipts and Debts at St. Thomas 332 N. Company's Receipts and Debts at St. Crodc 334 0. Capital Invested at St. Thomas under Plan of 1747 .... 335 P. The Company's Business in Browtst Sugar 336 Q. The Company's Business in Cotton 337 R. Returns on Company's Capital 338 S. St. Thomas Statistics: Miscellaneous 340 T, St. Croix Statistics: Miscellaneous 341 U. List of Shareholders in the Year 1751 342 INDEX 351 MAPS AND ILLUSTRATIONS Chbistiansted, St. Croix, in 1815 Frontispiece ' FACING PAGE Map of the Danish West Indian Islands 8 ^ {Botanisk Tidsskrift. Bd. 29. F. Borgesen) Map of St. Thomas (.n715-1733) 122 (MS. Map, undated, Royal Library, Copenhagen) Map of St. John (1780) 127 ' (Published by P. L. Oxholm, Copenhagen, 1800) Map of Northeen Europe: Baltic and North Sea Lands . . 136 ' Christiansborg Castle, Guinea Coast 139 (Engraved by M. Rosier, Copenhagen, 1760) Map of St. Croix 202 (MS. Map, undated, Royal Library, Copenhagen) Sketch of St. Croix's Town 216 (Watercolor drawing. State Archives, Copenhagen) Map of St. Thomas (1767) 245 (Oldendorp's Geschichte der Mission, 1777) Map of St. Croix (1767) 245 (Oldendorp's Geschichte der Mission, 1777) Map of St. Croix (1754, 1766) 248 (Survey by J. M. Beck; engraved by O. H. de Lode, 1754; names of plantation owners filled in, 1766) St. Thomas Harbor (View to Westward) 257 Map of Caribbean Lands 262 [xv] INTRODUCTION In the month of December, 1916, the Danish Government solemnly transferred the sovereignty of the Danish West India Islands to the Government of the United States, and three months later the United States took possession of the islands of St. Thomas, St. John, and St. Croix. From one point of view, this was the natural development of the United States as a West India power. The island of St. Thomas closely approaches the island of Porto Rico, the first island of the Caribbean Sea of which the United States became possessor. All that will appear upon the map will be the extension of the American Govern- ment from Porto Rico a little to the southeast. From a stra- tegical standpoint, the chief value of the Danish Islands to the United States is the possession of the harbor of St. Thomas; from an economic standpoint, it signifies a little further territory producing tropical fruits for the states of the eastern seaboard; from a political standpoint, it means another step in the expan- sion of the United States. But from the historian's outlook, it means the ending of the colonial power of Denmark, and thereby marks an epoch in history. The history of the West India Islands has a particular signif- icance to all students of the history of America. It was in the West Indies that took place the most bitter and prolonged struggle in American waters during the seventeenth and eight- eenth centuries. It is generally pointed out, with a sniff of con- tempt, that through the lack of prophetic vision among the statesmen of the eighteenth century, it was proposed during the negotiations of the Treaty of Paris, in 1763, that the triumphant English Ministry should not take Canada from France, but one of the French West India Islands, so much more valuable did the commerce of the West Indies appear than the possession of Canada. It was in the West Indies that the most famous naval combats of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries were [ xvii ] XVlll INTRODUCTION fought, by the English against the Spanish in the seventeenth century, and by the Enghsh against the French in the eighteenth century. The struggle for the possession of the West Indies was, among the European nations of the seventeenth and eight- eenth centuries, both political and economic. To use a phrase of Doctor Westergaard's, those were the days when "sugar was king." The importance of the sugar trade overcame all other considerations, and the European nation that could grow its own sugar cane and import its own sugar in its own ships had an immense commercial advantage over other countries. The peculiar geographical formation of the West India Islands gave every one of the maritime nations of Europe a chance to grow its own sugar. The earliest of these nations in the West Indies, Spain, counted rather on other staples than sugar, and paid more attention to its mainland possessions than to its island possessions. Great Britain, by its settlement of Barbados and St. Christopher and by its conquest of Jamaica, definitely started its career as a planter and importer of sugar, and the French, the Dutch, the Danes, and even the Courlanders followed the example. ' One of the most interesting experiments in this direction was that of Denmark. Doctor Waldemar Westergaard, a scholar of Danish extrac- tion, though born in the United States, undertook, some years ago, to study the history of the Danish West India Islands. His knowledge of the Danish language from his childhood caused him to study with great interest certain Danish West India documents of primary importance which had been col- lected for Mr. H. H. Bancroft of San Francisco, and which now form part of the Bancroft Library, in the possession of the University of California. In his study of these particular docu- ments. Doctor Westergaard discovered that not even in the Danish language was there any reliable history of the Danish West Indies. He therefore resolved to go to Denmark, and there soon found that the Danish historians had neglected the history of their colonial possessions. He spent about a year working among the Danish documents, and was thereby enabled to obtain first-hand information as to the history of the Danish West India Islands, and to write a history of the Danish settle- INTRODUCTION xix ments based principally upon primary authorities. This in- troduction is not intended to be mere laudation of Doctor Westergaard or an account of his researches, which are described sufficiently well in his bibliography. The originality and merits of his book can be seen by the most superficial reader. Still less is this introduction intended to be a review of his book; it will be rather an attempt to set forth the results of Doctor Westergaard's labors as bearing upon the general history of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. Students of American colonial history know well enough the importance of the chartered companies, through which was made possible the early English settlement of the Atlantic seaboard of the present United States of America. But these companies which dealt with the mainland settlements only exhibit on a small scale the general principles by which com- panies were chartered for trade and plantation, not only by the English Government, but by other European countries as well. Some day it may be possible to bring out the likeness and un- likeness between the conditions under which companies were chartered in Great Britain, France, the Netherlands, and Denmark. M. Pierre Bonnassieux, in his Les Grandes Com- pagnies de Commerce, has given the outlines of such a study, and other French writers have dealt with phases of the French East India Company in particular. More interesting, if it could be made accessible from the primary sources, would be the history, and especially the early history, of the Dutch companies. The story of the English companies before 1720 has been written by Mr. William R. Scott, but their later history is scattered about in many different books dealing with India and America. On all of them is light thrown by Doctor Westergaard's elaborate study of the Danish company. In these modern days, an attempt is being made to revive the chartered-company idea in England, and the British North Borneo Company, under Sir Alfred Dent; the British East Africa Company, under Sir William Mackinnon; the British South Africa Company, under Cecil Rhodes; and the British West Africa Company, under Sir George Taubman-Goldie, have all of them been an adaptation of seventeenth-century ideas to nineteenth-century conditions. XX INTRODUCTION There have been two great principles of expansion and settle- ment of European nations in Asia, Africa, and America. The one, direct conquest and settlement by the governments of European nations, and the other the tapping of the financial resources of different countries through charters granted to companies of merchants who subscribed capital for settlement and trade beyond the seas, under the direct permission or license of their respective governments. Spain and Portugal were the two countries that beheved in direct expansion under royal authority. In some ways, the Portuguese experiment is more interesting, especially in regard to trade, than the far larger Spanish development of empire. The Portuguese Govern- ment, after the discovery of the direct sea route to India by Vasco da Gama, kept in its own hands as a government the entire trade of Asia. It was the Portuguese king's agents who purchased the cargoes for Portuguese royal ships in India and Ceylon, in China and Japan and Malacca, in Persia and Arabia. These cargoes of Asiatic produce were brought to Lisbon in the king's ships, and the goods were then purchased by individual merchants out of the king's warehouses. It would be possible to dwell at length upon the direct action of the Spanish and Portuguese Governments in the work of expansion, settlement, and trade in Asia, Africa, and America, but the illustration of the Portuguese Government's control of the Asiatic trade will serve to point out the chief characteristics of government direc- tion. Other countries, notably Great Britain and the Protestant Netherlands in the sixteenth century, and France and Denmark in the seventeenth century, did not, for the most part, work through direct governmental agency, but through chartered companies. The relation between these chartered companies and the governments of their respective countries is a matter of great interest, and much new light is thrown upon it by Doctor Westergaard's very careful presentation of the relation between the Danish West India Company and the Danish Government. It so happened that Danish expansion into the West Indies took place at the time when the government of Denmark- Norway was entirely in the hands of the Crown. The Revolu- tion of 1660 had put an end to any body of representatives in a INTRODUCTION xxi legislature, and the Crown took entire charge of all matters of administration. In Denmark, therefore, there was none of that interference on the part of the legislature which marks the history, in particular, of the English East India Company, which never quite knew, in the seventeenth century, whether it was under the Crown or under Parliament, while it knew very well in the eighteenth century that it must expect the interference of Parliament whenever an opportunity offered. The Danish Crown, therefore, played a considerable part in the history of the Danish Company, even more than that of the French Crown in the history of the various French companies. In France, as in the Protestant Netherlands, the main reliance of the respec- tive chartered companies was upon the various mercantile corporations, or rather organizations of the business interests of France; while in England it was the individual merchants that rallied together to form the first holders of stock in the great plantation and commercial companies. A point to be noticed is that the Danish Company was, at the same time, a plantation and a trading company. In the minds of the expansionists of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries there was no great distinction made between trade and planta- tion, and all students of English history will remember the important functions of the Board of Trade and Plantations, whose administrative powers extended over the varied interests of English colonial expansion. Doctor Westergaard has clearly distinguished between plantation and trade, and has shown how different were the problems presented by each of them. The staple product of the Danish West India plantations, as of the plantations in all the other islands, was sugar. Doctor Westergaard explahis at length the character of the sugar plantations, the working of the manufacture of sugar, and the intensive cultivation of the sugar cane followed by the inevitable exhaustion of the soil. But the chief problem of the sugar planters was labor. At first, the Danish Company tried to make use of the dregs of the white population of Copenhagen. But these first Danish immigrants died off like flies. They were unable to withstand labor in the Tropics. This had also been discovered by the English in the seventeenth century, and, xxii INTRODUCTION indeed, by all European planters in the West Indies. The natives of the islands could not work, and the labor problem, therefore, produced the negro slave trade. This meant the establishment by Denmark, as well as by the other countries owning plantations, of barracoons, defended by forts, on the west coast of Africa, where negro slaves could be collected for transport to the West Indies. Very carefully has Doctor Westergaard described these establishments, and shown their importance to the prosperity of the Islands. Indeed, a careful study of his book and of his appendixes will show what some may think a disproportionate amount of space devoted to the slave trade. On the other hand, it must be borne in mind that the negro slave trade was one of the most important phases of com- merce in the eighteenth century, and that the wise stockholder in a West India trading and plantation company would naturally endeavor to have the company import slaves for its own and the planters' use in company ships rather than to buy them at a big profit to slave traders of other countries. Denmark is a very small country compared to Spain, France, and Great Britain, and yet shows in the history of her West India Islands, it is possible to say, many illustrations of the mistakes that ruined the more extensive experiments of other nations. This is not the proper place to describe Doctor Wester- gaard's treatment of individuals, although he has made quite a picture gallery of governors, factors, captains, chaplains, states- men, and politicians. To some readers, his personal description of individuals will appeal more than any other feature, but to others the larger economic and political questions involved will seem of greater interest. One episode m particular might be here mentioned, the story of the Brandenburg Company. The Great Elector of Brandenburg is a figure to conjure with; from him started the larger growth of the House of Hohenzollern and its development into King of Prussia and German Emperor. Those who read the past in the light of the present have some- times wondered that neither Brandenburg nor Prussia had its part in the great movement of colonial expansion. Close stu- dents of HohenzoUern history know that Frederick the Great of Prussia deliberately resolved not to make his state into a naval INTRODUCTION xxiii or a colonial power, but comparatively few know that the attempt was made earlier, not in the direct fashion of sov- ereignty, but through an arrangement with the King of Den- mark, in the West Indies. It seems curious, at the present time, to think of the Hohenzollern Prince, and one as famous as the Great Elector, making arrangements with Denmark for a West India sugar experiment. The story of the Brandenburgers has been dealt with at considerable length by Doctor Wester- gaard, and doubtless, to some readers, this will prove the most interesting new fact brought to their attention. We have to remember that Brandenburg was a poor country in the seven- teenth century, and that it had not the capital or the means to develop a colonial power. We must remember also that it had no sea power, while Denmark-Norway was one of the great sea powers, on account of its extended coast line, its geographical position, and the efficiency of its sailors. During the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, the Danish West Indies passed through various stages of prosperity and failure, and were at times profitable to the Danish Crown and to the Danish people, and at other times a drain upon their re- sources. But the time at last came, in the nineteenth century, when there was no more profit to be made out of cane sugar, and the Danish Islands definitely declined. The abolition of the negro slave trade, the development of beet sugar, the building up of larger political and economic units, all played their part in decreasing the value of the Danish West Indies either to Denmark or to the inhabitants themselves. The same depres- sion from the same causes was to be seen in the West India possessions of other European countries. Ever since the aboli- tion of negro slavery, the English West Indies have been profit- less. But for pride, the Danes might have easily abandoned their West India possessions many years ago. But pride in their past is pretty strong in small nationalities that have once been powers in the world. Denmark, after losing Norway in 1814, and Schleswig-Holstein in 1864;, became a very small na- tion indeed, and the Danish West Indies became rather a burden than anything else. Only one nation in the world desired the possession of the Danish West Indies, and that not for economic xxiv INTRODUCTION reasons. I think that it can be asserted that neither Great Britain nor France would have taken them as a gift, but the United States of America has, for more than a half century, de- sired the harbor of St. Thomas for strategic reasons. Porto Rico, acquired after the Spanish- American War in 1898, had no naval base, and when the Panama Canal was finally undertaken and then built, it became worth while for the United States to look again towards the acquisition of St. Thomas. The only argument against the cession of the Islands was historic pride, and in these days of European crisis, historic pride could not stand further against actual need. So the Danes made up their minds to forget that they had been a West India power, and to the great delight of the inhabitants of the Islands, who, as Doctor Westergaard points out, are generally not Danes, and to sell their West India possessions to the United States of Amer- ica. It might be imagined that some patriotic Danes would feel deeply the loss of the Islands as signifying the passing of an historic relic of the Danish past, but the neglect which the Danish people have shown for the history of their West Indies, as shown in Doctor Westergaard's statement that no Danish scholar has written the history of the Islands, and that even the most valuable primary authorities have been utterly neglected, shows that the feeling of historic pride has not gone very deep among Danish scholars. At any rate, it should be noted as an interesting fact, that the first history of the Danish West Indies, written from primary sources, should be the work of the son of a Danish family which immigrated to North Dakota, and that he should have received his historical training at the University of California. H. Morse Stephens. THE DANISH WEST INDIES THE DANISH WEST INDIES UNDER COMPANY RULE (1671-1754) introduction: geographical and historical If Belgium has been described, and not inaccurately, as "the cockpit of Europe," the West Indies may be regarded as "the cockpit" of sea power. The islands and mainland of the Caribbean and Gulf regions have been among the prizes for which European states have contended in practically every war of consequence that has been fought during the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. Just why Spaniards, Frenchmen and Englishmen, Dutchmen and Danes, Swedes and Brandenburgers, and even Knights of Malta and Courlanders, should all at one time or another havie directed their energies to West Indian commerce and commer- cial exploitation is a question that very few, beyond a limited number of specialists, are able intelligently to answer. The heterogeneous character of the West Indian political map of to-day has behind it an interesting story, and one thoroughly worth studying, for those who wish to grasp understandingly the reasons for European interest in America before Spain lost her various American colonies on the mainland. So far as the immediate effects upon Europe were concerned, the beating back of the Spanish frontier in the Caribbean regions by Spain's commercial rivals was far more important at the time than the distant frontier struggles of Spaniards, Frenchmen, and Enghsh- men on the mainland of America. The present study is an attempt to separate from the tangled skein of West Indian history the single small thread that con- cerns the early efforts of Denmark-Norway to establish itself in those distant regions. It is an attempt to explain the strange [1] 2 THE DANISH WEST INDIES fascination that drew the blonde and hardy blue-eyed traders and sailors from the cold Baltic shores to distant tropical regions where the bounties of Nature — it must often have seemed — only served to lure the newcomer on to sickness and death. Denmark possesses three small islands in the West Indies; St. Thomas, St. John, and St. Croix. With the exception of a few months in 1801 and the period 1807-1815, when England seized them to prevent their being of use to Napoleon, with whom Denmark was to all intents and purposes allied, they have since remained continuously under Danish rule. St. Thomas was first permanently settled by Danes in 1672; St. John, although claimed as early as 1683, was not actually settled until 1716-1717; St. Croix was purchased from France in 1733, and settled by colonists from the other two islands early in 1735. Spasmodic attempts at occupation had taken place before by the Dutch and English on St. Thomas, and by French, Knights of Malta, and miscellaneous rovers on St. Croix. The total area of the three islands is but a trifle over one hundred and thirty-two square miles, or about three and a half townships. The acreage of St. Thomas is 18,080; of St. John, 12,780.8, and of St. Croix, 53,913.6.^ At its greatest length, St. Thomas extends about thirteen and three-fourths miles (22 km.), its breadth at the town of Charlotte Amalia is but one and one- half miles (2.3 km.), and its greatest width three and three- fourths miles (6 km.). The two northern islands form part of the Virgin island group, and all three belong to the group still frequently designated as the Leeward Islands.^ Together they form part of the northwestern extremity of that " bow of Ulys- ses" constituting the Lesser Antilles, stretching from Porto iElico to the east and then southward in a mighty sweep of seven hundred miles, ending at Trinidad off the South American main- land. With the Greater Antilles and the mainland, they enclose 1 Eggers (St. Croix's Flora, p. 33), gives 51,861 acres for St. Croix. The figures quoted are taken from The National Geographic Magazine for July, 1916, p. 89. * The Leeward Islands include the Virgin Islands, St. Christopher (St. Kitts), St. Eustatius, Antigua, Montserrat, Guadaloupe, Martinique, and their various dependencies. INTRODUCTION 3 the Caribbean Sea, which is separated from the Gulf of Mexico by Cuba and the peninsula of Yucatan. The spectator who stands in clear weather above Botany Bay in the west end of St. Thomas and looks westward beyond the little islands of Culebra and Vieques or Crab may plainly see Porto Rico. From the hills that command St. Thomas harbor, the observer may discern St. Croix on the southern horizon thirty -five miles away. St. John, near neighbor to St. Thomas and equally mountainous, is less than three miles from the eastern end of that island. The trip from Smith's Bay, St. Thomas, to Crux Bay, St. John, is but a matter of an hour by rowboat or sail. The British Virgin Islands lie immediately to the eastward, the nearest of them, Tortola, being but twenty minutes distant by rowboat from St. John. Like the rest of the entire archipelago, these islands are of volcanic origin, and sub- ject to frequent earthquakes,^ which are however rarely de- structive. The two islands, St. Thomas and St. John, rise out of the same plateau. Between them and St. Croix the Caribbean Sea deepens to 15,000 feet. Sail-boats plying between St. Thomas and St. Croix must be extremely cautious during the summer months, in the so-called hurricane season. The islands lie directly in the track of the tradewinds that blow down from southwestern Europe and Madeira. This was the reason why they were among the first lands to be sighted by Columbus on his initial voyage westward. The Spaniards devoted their attention to the larger islands, and, naturally enough, with the increasing importance of the Spanish trade, the lesser islands became desirable outposts for those nations whose traders were all, by lawful means or with- out, to gain a share in that trade. Of such islands few had more natural advantages than St. Thomas. Its harbor aflforded pro- tection to ships in all but the severest storms, its beaches were admirably suited to the careening and overhauling of sailing vessels,^ and it was easily fortified and defended. ^ During a period of five and one-half years. Dr. Hornbech noted not less than thirty-three quakes, none of them violent (Bergsoe, Den danske Stats Staiistik, IV, 579). ^ See Grigri or Gregerie on map facing p. 8, just west of harbor. 4 THE DANISH WEST INDIES Besides the harbor, St. Thomas has along its coast line nu- merous smaller indentations, usually referred to on the islands as "bays," although many are scarcely more than landing places. It is the existence of such bays in this and in many other West Indian islands that has made it practically im- possible in the past for officials to put an end to smuggling. Christian Martfeldt, a Danish economist who visited the islands about 1765, listed and described forty-five such "bays" in St. Thomas, and thirty-one in St. John. It is worthy of note that he considered Coral (Craal) bay in St. John as not only a better harbor than the one in St. Thomas, but the best in the entire West Indies. It is in fact about twice as deep, and can hold about twice as many vessels.^ But St. Thomas harbor has al- ways been quite large enough to accommodate such shipping as came to it; hence the harbor of St. John, with perhaps greater natural advantages, has been practically ignored in favor of that of St. Thomas, which after all was first settled and lay closer to Porto Rico. Ships sailing for the West Indies steered for the islands off the west African coast, whence they were swept on their way south- westward by the tradewinds. The journey usually occupied about seven or eight weeks, although under particularly favora- ble circumstances it might be made in four. On the return trip the vessel steered north and west of its outward course, passing as a rule about two hundred miles to the east of the Bermudas. The usual procedure for a ship from Copenhagen was to leave in September or October for St. Thomas, remain there until the ^ "In it [Coral Bay] 400 to 500 vessels large and small can ride at anchor. It has various suitable landing places for the plantations lying round about, separated from each other by out-jutting points which form the said bays. Beside the 6 English families mentioned in the [appended] table there are 16 others, [which he names], from which one may perceive its great extent. It is, besides, provided with a beautiful hurricane 'hole' on the east (north?) side, where 40 to 50 vessels and more may lie safe against storms and so close in to the shore that one may walk ashore on a board, not to mention those that can lie in the 'stream.' In this hurricane hole ... a number of careening places could [easily] be constructed . . . where vessels could conveniently be ca- reened." Martfeldt, Samlinger . . . Vol. III. Cf. Bryan Edwards, History of the British Colonies in the West Indies, I, 459: "St. John is of importance as having the best harbor of any island to the leeward of Antigua." INTRODUCTION 5 winter's sugar cane crop had been harvested, boiled down and put into casks, and then in April or May to sail for home with a completed cargo. Almost from the first, the chief product of the islands has been sugar, although tobacco and cotton have played an im- portant part in the economy of the islands at certain periods. Their prosperity as i^lantation colonies has always been pecu- liarly dependent upon the rainfall. St. Thomas in particular has ever been subject to severe and protracted droughts, and has not infrequently suffered from torrential downpours. "We have had no rain for six months, and the cane is drying up in the fields," is a plaint frequently found in the reports of governors. Nevertheless, St. Thomas and St. John are the most fertile of the Virgin Islands. The rains are on the whole fairly evenly distributed through the seasons, though the period from the beginning of May till the close of November is more subject to showers than the winter months. The showers are usually local and of short duration; hence it frequently happens that one plantation may have plenty of rain while its neighbor suffers from drought.® Dr. Hornbech's carefully kept meteorological journal shows an average annual precipitation for St. Thomas of 43+ inches for the decade, 1828-1838. On St. Croix, Major Lang made pains- taking observations at the plantation Eliza's Retreat, situated four hundred feet above sea level and just east of Christiansted, covering the period 1838 to 1861, and he found the annual rain- fall there to be but thirty-seven and six-tenths inches. Egger's calculations for the whole of St. Croix for the years 1852 to 1873 give an average downpour of forty-four and forty-eight one hundredths inches, indicating a fairly uniform rainfall on the smaller islands. '^ The species of calamity that strikes deepest terror in the heart of the West Indian is the hurricane, and St. Thomas is " In Bergsoe (IV, 571 et seq.) is given a thorough discussion of climatic condi- tions on the Danish islands based in part upon the observations of Dr. Horn- bech and Prof. Pedersen. See also Baron Eggers, St. Croix's Flora, pp. 41 et seq. ^ Eggers, p. 46, quotes A. S. Oersted's estimate for the precipitation in the southern part of Jamaica as forty-six inches. 6 THE DANISH WEST INDIES one of those islands that has suffered most from hurricanes. The custom that long prevailed on the Danish islands, of setting aside two days for prayer, one on June 25 and the other on Oc- tober 25, at the beginning and end of the "hurricane season," reflects the popular fear of these storms. They are not limited altogether to these summer months, for according to an author- ity whose work is dated 1853, one hundred and twenty-eight destructive hurricanes have visited the West Indies during the past three hundred and fifty-eight years, and of these, eleven occurred in July, forty in August, twenty-eight in September, and the remaining forty -nine during the other months.^ Besides being dangerous to human life on land and sea, they may when violent, pull the roofs off the houses, uproot trees, cast vessels in the harbors high up on the beach, and completely demolish the growing crops. On August 31, 1772, St. Croix was visited by a hurricane which was described in the local news- paper ^ as the "most dreadful Hurricane known in the memory of man." It began about nightfall and "blew like great guns, for about six hours, save for half an hour's intermission." The shipping in the harbor was driven ashore, houses everywhere were shattered, "the whole frame of nature seemed unhinged and tottering to its fall . . . terrifying even the just, for who could stand undisturbed amid the ruins of a falling world. . . . A few such events would ruin us in temporals, but help us in spirituals, and make us fit for the Kingdom of Heaven; for the Turk, the Jew, the Atheist, the Protestant, and Papist would join in unanimous prayer to appease the Lord of Hurri- canes." This catastrophe, which cost the lives of seven whites and nine negroes, was so eloquently described in a letter written by a young counting house clerk on the island, Alexander Hamilton, to his father, that attention was attracted to his ability and he was sent to King's College, New York, to com- plete his education. The letter ^'^ ran as follows: ^ Bergsoe, IV, 579, note. * Royal Danish American Gazette (St. Croix), Sept. 9, 1772. "' Ibid., Oct. 3, 1772. Mrs. Gertrude Atherton in A few of Hamilton's let- ters . . . (New York, 1903), pp. 261 et seq., quotes this letter in full. INTRODUCTION 7 • St. Croix, September 6, 1772. Honored Sir, I take up my pen, just to give you an imperfect account of one of the most dreadful hurricanes that memory or any records whatever can trace, which happened here on the 31st ultimo at night. It began about dusk, at north, and raged very violently till ten o'clock. — ^Then ensued a sudden and unexpected interval, which lasted about an hour. Meanwhile the wind was shifting round to the south west point, from whence it returned with re- doubled fury and continued till nearly three in the morning. Good God ! what horror and destruction — it is impossible for me to describe — or you to form any idea of it. It seemed as if a total dissolution of nature was taking place. The roaring of the sea and wind — fiery meteors flying about in the air — the prodigious glare of almost perpetual lightning — the crash of falling houses — and the earpiercing shrieks of the distressed, were suflBcient to strike astonishment into Angels. A great part of the buildings throughout the island are levelled to the ground — almost all the rest very much shattered — several per- sons killed and numbers utterly ruined — whole families roaming about the streets, unknowing where to find a place of shelter — the sick exposed to the keenness of water and air — without a bed to lie upon — or a dry covering to their bodies — and our harbors entirely bare. In a word, misery, in its most hideous shapes, spread over the whole face of the country. — A strong smell of gunpowder added somewhat to the terrors of the night; and it was observed that the rain was exceedingly salt. Indeed the water is so brackish and full of sulphur that there is hardly any drinking it. . . . Our General has issued several very salutary and humane regulations, and both in his public and private measures, has shown himself the Man. Notwithstanding these occasional stormy visitations, the is- lands are endowed with varied and interesting plant resources. Along the coast line, where the land has not been cleared, is a thick belt of well-nigh impenetrable bush and trees of which the manchilla tree, the mangrove and the cocoanut palm are among the most striking. The cultivated region is especially adapted to the growing of sugar cane, although the hilly eastern third of St. Croix has had in times past a considerable acreage devoted to cotton. The forest region on St. Croix lies mainly in the eastern third where croton brush covers nearly all of the moun- tains except an occasional patch suitable for cotton culture, and 8 THE DANISH WEST INDIES the belt on the north side of the ridge west of Salt River, where the most characteristic growth is the eriodendron, or silk cotton tree. On St. Thomas the croton and eriodendron are found chiefly on the southern slopes of the ridge. ^^ The northern slopes of St. Thomas and St. John are reputed to be better suited to plantation purposes than the southern. The former island, practically a submerged fragment of mountain ridge, varies in elevation from about one thousand two hundred and fifty feet (380 meters) near the west to about one hundred and fifty to two hundred and fifty feet (45 to 75 meters) at its broader eastern extremity. Settlers seeking plantation ground had first to find a piece of grassland, if possible, or ground not too thickly covered with bush or forest. Some fustic, pock- wood, or mahogany was not objectionable, for the dyewood often made a profitable ballast for a sugar and tobacco cargo, while cabinet and building woods found a ready market in the older English settlements to windward. Despite the fact that St. Thomas and St. John were but poorly adapted to plantation purposes as compared with St. Croix, which was the last island occupied by the Danes, St. Thomas had acquired a prosperous planting population before the close of the war of the Spanish Succession in 1713, and had one hundred and sixty-six planta- tions by the time St. Croix was purchased (1733); while St. John, the permanent occupation of which began in the latter part of 1716, had one hundred and three plantations surveyed or assigned and nearly three-fourths of them under cultivation at the same date.^^ The severest drawback, especially when the colony was new, was the inevitable fever, probably mainly malarial. The white inhabitants, governors, preachers, planters, seemed helpless when the fever was rife; and epidemics of smallpox frequently carried off great numbers of slaves. Newly arrived settlers, and particularly recently imported soldiers, of whose habitual drunkenness the governors constantly complained, were par- i^Eggers, pp. 51 fE.; Borgesen (Dansk Vestindien), pp. 601 ff.; Borgesen og Paulsen, Om Vegetationen paa de dansk-vestindinke Oer, pp. 69 £F. '- Land -Lister for St. Thomas og St. Croix. The usual size of a plantation was 3000 X idOOO feet. INTRODUCTION 9 ticularly liable to attacks of fever, which carried off many of them. It is quite likely that the hookworm took its toll of victims. A brief resume of that European overseas expansion in which Denmark-Norway played a small but rather interesting part, is necessary to the understanding of how that state came to be a colonizing power at all. The two great regions which became subject to European commercial and colonial expansion as a result of the age of discovery were, broadly speaking, America and the coasts of southern Asia with those East Indian islands lying to the southeast beyond the Straits of Malacca. To the first of these regions, excepting Brazil, the Spaniards claimed exclusive title, while the Portuguese laid claim to Brazil and to those East Indian localities to which their explorers had first discovered the sea route, and which were for a time to make Lisbon the commercial center of Europe. Of the two regions, the Far East offered at first far better opportunities for trade. The Portuguese merchants found there peoples of a relatively high degree of civilization, who produced a surplus of goods beyond their needs. The Spaniards on the other hand found a nearly virgin land peopled by savages who for the most part had only the most rudimentary ideas of trade. Until these new- found lands could be made to open their store of mineral and agricultural treasure, they would seem to be merely an obstacle that blocked the way to the real India. But colonization was promptly begun after the discovery, and by 1580, when Philip II of Spain became king also of Portugal, the Spaniards had made large settlements in the New World. The wealth of Peruvian and Mexican mines had begun to flow to Spain, and the news of that wealth to Spain's neighbors in Europe. The Reformation had divided Europe into two armed camps. Religious feeling intensified political and commercial rivalries. Protestant England under Elizabeth was ready to contest with Catholic Spain the supremacy of the sea; while the seven northern provinces of the Low Countries, which in 1579 had formed the Union of Utrecht and two years later had pro- claimed their independence from Spain, were ready to assist in 10 THE DANISH WEST INDIES breaking that commercial monopoly in East and West which was now made doubly dangerous through the union of Spain and Portugal. The Dutch continued, though with increasing difficulty, to carry Far Eastern goods from Lisbon to the ports of northern Europe. When, however, in 1595 Philip II caused the seizure of four or five hundred Holland and Zeeland ships then lying in Spanish and Portuguese harbors, it was clear to the Dutch that a readjustment of their commercial methods must take place before they could hope for good times. Jan van Linschoten had already published some of those geograph- ical and trade secrets long jealously guarded by the Portuguese, and on April 2, 1595, ten rich Amsterdam merchants sent out a fleet to the East Indies under Cornelis Houtman. Not until July, 1597, did Houtman return to Amsterdam with three of his four ships and only a third of his men, and with a small cargo for his pains. The enterprise cost more than it yielded, but it showed that with good fortune larger profits might be expected. The entering wedge had been driven into the Portuguese monopoly. Houtman's voyage was followed by the organiza- tion of other and competing Dutch companies, which were finally on March 29, 1602, merged into one great organization, the Dutch East India Company. Meantime Queen Elizabeth had followed up the English victory over the Invincible Armada in 1588, when the hollowness of the Spanish naval prestige had been decisively demonstrated, by sending an expedition under Captains Raymond and Lancaster in 1591 around the Cape of Good Hope to Cape Comorin, Ceylon and the Malay Peninsula. On December 31, 1600, the Queen granted a charter to "The Governor and Company of Merchants of London Trading to the East Indies," otherwise known as the London East India Company. ^^ The organization of these two companies, English and Dutch, was followed by that of French, Danish, and Swedish companies, and marked the beginning of the end of Portuguese monopoly in East Indian regions. ^^ ^* This is not to be confused with the English East India Company incor- porated in 1698 and amalgamated with the above company in 1709. C. P. Lucas, The Mediterranean and Eastern Colonies, p. 189, note. ^■^ A good working list of commercial companies organized in Europe from INTRODUCTION 11 In the West similar attempts were made to break the hold of Spain on the New World. Even before the destruction of the Armada, Sir Walter Ralegh had attempted the colonization of Newfoundland and Virginia. Not until the reign of Elizabeth's successor did the English found a permanent settlement, when the English Virginia Company sent out an expedition which, in spite of Spanish protests, settled on the James River. These successes emboldened the rivals of Spain and Portugal in East and West to fresh activities. The Dutch, encouraged by the success of their early expeditions, first established factories at Bantam, Amboyna, and other places, and in 1619 proceeded to the conquest of the province of Jacatra in Java. As early as 1612 they had begun the occupation of Ceylon (at Trinkomalee), though they did not finally drive the Portuguese from the island until 1658.^^ By 1641 they had gained control of the Straits of Malacca and had become supreme in the Malay seas.^^ The English had established their first settlement in India in 1611, and organized the Presidency of Madras in 1639. Mean- while the Danes, through their East India Company, organized in 1616, had founded one factory at Tranquebar in southern India in 1618, and others near the mouth of the Ganges, at Pipley and Balasor shortly thereafter, while Danish ships navigated as far as the Spice Islands in search of cargoes. ^'^ That part of the western world the settlement of which was calculated to affect Spanish trade monopoly most vitally was the West Indian archipelago. The Spanish treasure fleets which sailed from Porto Bello and Vera Cruz were obliged to pass some of these islands in crossing the Caribbean Sea or the Gulf of Mexico. The occupation of these islands was one of the surest means by which Spain's enemies could gratify their cupidity, and it gave them a base for other activities of a more strictly commercial nature. The Bermudas, situated near the route 1554 to 1698 is given by E. P. Cheyney in European Background of American History, 137-139. ^^ Lucas, The Mediterranean and Eastern Colonies, 102. ^^ Keller, Colonization, 416. " See Kay Larsen, De dansk-ostindiske Koloniers Historie (Kobenhavn, 1908), for a detailed account of Danish activities in the East Indies. The factory at Pipley was established in 1625. 12 THE DANISH WEST INDIES used for the return trip to Europe from the Spanish Main and the islands, were settled by the Enghsh in 1609-1616. ^^ The first footholds gained by the English in the West Indies them- selves were in Barbados, just east of the Windward Islands, and in St. Christopher (or St. Kitts) in the Leeward group. These two islands became centers of English influence and settlement in the West Indies. From St. Kitts, which was occupied jointly by French and English in 1625, English settlers went in 1628 to Nevis and Barbuda, and in 1632 to Antigua and Montserrat, all of them islands belonging to the Leeward group. The Dutch took joint possession of St. Croix with the English in 1625, and seven years later stationed themselves in St. Eustatius, a tiny island some half score miles to the northwest of St. Kitts, and in Tobago, near Trinidad. Pushing down closer to the Spanish Main and nearer to the isthmus of Panama, they occupied the island of Curagao, lying near the entrance to the gulf of Ven- ezuela, in 1634. Saba, an islet near St. Eustatius, was occupied in 1640.19 The outlook for profitable trade in the West Indies had led the Dutch to organize in 1621 a West India company which was to become an important factor in the struggle of the Dutch state with Spain. The next nation to found a West India company was the French, which, under the encouragement of Richelieu, formed in 1626 the Company of St. Christopher.^ This was reorganized in 1635 under the name of the Company of the Isles of America. In the latter year the company began the settle- ment of Guadaloupe, while a group of settlers from St. Kitts established themselves at Martinique at about the same time.^^ Tortuga, or la Tortue, a little island off the north coast of His- paniola (San Domingo) was likewise colonized by Protestant settlers from St. Kitts who in 1640 joined a few Frenchmen who had attempted settlement before but had been disturbed by Spaniards. Some Frenchmen who had been driven from St. Kitts by Spaniards in 1629 had settled on the north coast of ^* Lucas, II, 7 et seq. 19 Ihid., II, Sec. II. Ch. 1, -passim. ^^ Mims, Colbert's West India Policy, p. 15. 21 Ibid., 23, 26, 27. INTRODUCTION 13 San Domingo, where they remained a small buccaneering and filibustering colony until the time of Colbert.^^ During this first half of the seventeenth century, the sugges- tion for the formation of a West India company came up both in England and Denmark, but without tangible result in either case. English commercial companies were directing their chief attentions in America to the Atlantic and Caribbean main- land,^^ while Denmark, which had already entered the East India field, was forced to neglect that for a considerable period on account of more urgent affairs nearer home. Not until the century was nearly three-fourths past was the latter state able to devote itself seriously to American trade and coloniza- tion. But what was this Danish state, that could thus presume to seek a share of the world's newly opened commerce, that had won a Hapsburg princess for one of its kings, that could venture to send a prince to sue for the hand of Queen Elizabeth, that had furnished an asylum for Bothwell on the death of Mary Stuart and a queen for James VI of Scotland, and that had had a king who had become for a time the recognized leader of Prot- estant Europe.'^ After the great outburst of activity in the Viking Age, when the Northmen succeeded for a brief period in maintaining a North Sea empire, the Scandinavian lands had passed through a period of strife with north German princes and between local rulers. Out of this welter of conflict arose the Union of Kalmar (1397) with Queen Margaret as the sole mon- arch of the three kingdoms of Denmark, Norway, and Sweden. This union lasted with few interruptions until Sweden broke away under the leadership of Gustav Eriksson (Gustavus Vasa) in 1523. During this period of a century and a quarter, a desperate struggle with the Hanseatic League for the control of the Baltic and the North Sea had retarded the development of commerce and sea power in the three kingdoms. Denmark had long been the chief enemy of the League, and had been forced to see Bergen arise as a rival to Copenhagen, although Bergen was located in a land closely united to the Danish crown. Not until -2 Mixas, Colbert's West India Policy, p. 29. ^^ The Guinea Company was formed in 1609. 14 THE DANISH WEST INDIES the reign of King Hans ( + 1513), was Denmark able to meet the Hanseatic League in battle on an even footing and to curb its privileges in Scandinavian cities. It was King Hans' chief glory that he furnished Denmark with a fleet and made her once more a sea power. ^^ The last ruler to hold the scepter of the three kingdoms, Christian II, succeeded through the help of his uncle, Frederick the Wise of Saxony, in negotiating a marriage with the mighty house of Hapsburg. His queen, Elizabeth (Isabella) of Bur- gundy, whom he married on August 12, 1514, was a sister of the Archduke Charles, who ascended the imperial throne in 1519 as the Emperor Charles the Fifth. The king continued the fight which he had begun while prince, with Liibeck and the other Hanseatic cities, in his attempt to make Copenhagen a staple city for the Baltic trade. After the suppression of a Swedish uprising (1520) marked by the bloody "massacre of Stockholm," the king called certain Danish and Swedish mer- chants into a conference at Stockholm with the idea of estab- lishing a great northern commercial company with Copenhagen and Stockholm as the leading centers. It was planned to have smaller distributing centers in Finland and the Netherlands, after the fashion of the Hanseatic League, which it was Chris- tian's design to crush. The king was even intending to send one of his captains, Soren (or Severin) Norby, to Greenland and "India" (^. e., America) in search of a direct passage,"^ but be- fore he could bring his plans to fruition, Gustav Eriksson had led the uprising in Sweden which resulted in the breakup of the Union of Kalmar and the accession of the rebel leader in 1523 as King of Sweden under the title of Gustavus I {Vasa). In the general crash Christian lost his throne, and plans for American exploration were not seriously considered until nearly a century later. Meanwhile the feeling of nationality was gradually develop- ing in Denmark. During the reign of Christian II the humanis- tic movement had already gained considerable headway. The "^ Danmarks Riges Hisiorie (Kobenhavn, 1897-1907, 6 v.), Ill (a), 133 (cited hereafter as D. R. H.). 2" D. R. H., Ill (a), 192. 246. INTRODUCTION 15 university of Copenhagen (founded 1479) was reorganized in accordance with the new ideas . The introduction of the printing press into Denmark make possible the rapid spread of new ideas. The printing of the rimed chronicle of the Danish kings, den danske Rimkronike, in 1495,^® of Saxo's history and the like, stimulated national pride. In his triumphal visit to the Netherlands in July, 1521, the king had come in contact with Dutch culture, had met leading Dutch thinkers and workers, and in conversation with Erasmus of Rotterdam had shown a certain sympathy for Luther.-^ Christian Pedersen, a close personal friend of the king, became a leader in the humanistic movement and an exponent of Lutheranism. A history of Denmark from earliest times to 1474, when Christian I visited Rome, was partly finished by Pedersen, but was not printed un- til our own time. Its pages show that through this period of re- adjustment to new conditions, Denmark, or Denmark-Norway, as the state was properly called after Sweden achieved its in- dependence, was becoming conscious of itself. Of this new feeling of solidarity, of national consciousness, the Lutheran reformation was at once a phase and a symbol. The sixteenth century in Denmark-Norway was nevertheless an age of economic decline. That state had indeed gained com- plete control of the entrance to the Baltic, but its energies were spent in internal disorders, in feuds between the nobles, and in powerful peasant uprisings. This decline is strikingly shown in a negative way by the fact that the number of Netherlands ships that passed through the Sound increased from five hundred and forty-three in 1528 to two thousand eight hundred and ninety- two in 1563. But as long as Denmark retained control of the Sound it was a power to be reckoned with. In the reign of Frederick II (1559-1588), when Spain and England were pre- paring for their great naval duel, the Spanish ambassador to Sweden actually suggested to Philip II that he direct an attack against Elsinore and Helsingborg, in order to wrest the Baltic 2® This was the first printed Danish book, and came from the press of Gotfred of Ghemen, a Dutchman, who established the first printing shop in Denmark. D. R. E.. Ill (a), 224. 2? Ibid. 16 THE DANISH WEST INDIES trade from the English and the Dutch. ^^ Denmark's position in the North makes it possible to understand how Frederick II could venture to join the ranks of Queen Elizabeth's suitors, and how James VI of Scotland should be led there to seek his bride. By the time the young king, Christian IV, came of age,^^ Denmark was recovering from the turbulent fever of the Ref- ormation. Its resources were not strong enough, however, to enable it to take part with the Dutch and the English in break- ing the monopoly of the Portuguese and Spanish in the Far East. Denmark was destined to play but a secondary part in the history of those regions, but the fact that it was able to play a part at all was due very largely to the vigorous policy of Christian IV and his advisers, who knew how to make the most of the growing feeling of nationality in the Danish-Norwegian state. To be sure, the state still lacked in large measure two essentials for successful trade; the right kind of men, and plenty of money. This deficiency Christian IV hoped to supply from the Protestant Netherlands, which in the beginning of his reign, were still engaged in the struggle for their independence from Spain. As early as 1607 he sent a capable envoy, Jonas Charisius, to Amsterdam to encourage Dutchmen, artisans as well as capitalists, to come to Denmark to live.^° Despite their war with Spain, the Dutch did not flock to Denmark in very great numbers, but enough came to affect profoundly the commercial development of the country, as will presently appear. The king's keen interest in exploration and the development of trade led to the sending of three expeditions to Greenland in 1605, 1606, and 1607.^^^ The first two succeeded in landing on the west coast, but failed to find any trace of the lost colonies, 28 D. R. E., Ill (b), 222. 2' Christian IV was bom in 1577, was proclaimed king under a council of regency on the death of his father in 1588, and assumed the government in his own name in 1596. ^^ In 1521, Christian II had given over the little island of Amager near Copen- hagen to 184 Dutch families who were brought in to encourage gardening. D. R. H.. Ill (a). 245. " C. C. A. Gosch, Danish Arctic Expeditions, I (Hakluyt Soc). INTRODUCTION 17 which was part of their errand. These colonies had been planted in the Viking Age,^^ but Denmark had had no communication with them since the Black Death in the fourteenth century. It was the King's desire to reestablish the dominion of the Danish-Norwegian crown over these regions. In 1619 the search for the northwest passage to India, which had been proposed in the reign of Christian II, was actually attempted by the famous Jens Munk, whose Navigationes septentrionales has become one of the classics of North Atlantic exploration. Jens Munk had been suggested as captain of that fleet which the newly organized Danish East India Company sent out from Copenhagen on November 29, 1618, to sail around the Cape of Good Hope for the East Indies; but he seems to have been unable to come to terms with the company, in the establishment of which he had been interested. Instead he_ ventured out from the Danish capital on May 9, 1619, with two ships, the Unicorn with a crew of forty-eight and the Lamprey with sixteen men. After passing through the Hudson Strait, they sailed south- westward over Hudson's Bay, waters that had been crossed so far as is known only by the discoverer Henry Hudson, by Cap- tain Thomas Button in 1612-1613, and possibly by Hawkridge in 1617. They wintered at the mouth of the Churchill River and after fearful sufferings from cold and scurvy, the captain and two other survivors arrived on the Norway coast in the Unicorn on September 21, 1620.^^ After so severe a disappoint- ment, the expedition that had been planned for the following year was given up. The most lasting contribution of Christian IV to overseas commerce was the chartering of the Danish East India Com- pany in 1616. The prime movers, besides Jens Munk, were two Dutchmen, John de Willom of Amsterdam and Herman Rosencrantz of Rotterdam. The fact that the Danish factory at Tranquebar in India was kept alive at all during the early years of the company was due, more than to any other cause, to the skill and perseverance of the second governor, Roland Crappe, a Dutchman by birth, who directed the factory from ^^ Erik the Red discovered and settled Greenland in 985. ^' C. C. A. Gosch, Danish Arctic Explorations, II. 18 THE DANISH WEST INDIES 1621 to 1636.^^ In organizing this company the Danes were following closely in the footsteps of the Dutch, whose great company had already scored some conspicuous successes. So long as states did not possess navies strong or numerous enough to patrol distant as well as home waters, the plan employed to secure reasonable safety for trading vessels was for merchants to band themselves together in joint-stock companies under liberal charters from the crown and then send out, when neces- sary, whole merchant fleets, properly armed, to Muscovy or Turkey, to India or Cathay. These companies became the instruments by which states fought each other openly or by intrigue for the control of the foreign trade of alien lands. The custom of issuing letters of marque and reprisal had become prevalent in the wars of the sixteenth century. Privately owned vessels were thereby permitted to make seizures of enemies' ships. Hence trade by means of single private vessels became exceedingly unsafe. Danish merchants organized other companies for trade nearer home. A company organized in 1619 secured a monopoly of the trade with Iceland.^^ The salt and wine trade with Spain and France had suffered so severely from captures and lack of capital that the king, again taking his cue from the Dutch, decided to have the trade carried on by a large number of com- panies with seats to be located in the various cities of the king- dom, that should serve as distributing centers. It was hoped to produce a merchant fleet that would be of service in defence, but the plan failed, and with its failure the whole scheme of govern- mentally encouraged commercial companies received a serious setback.^® It is interesting to note that in this period of commercial activity, in which the king plays a leading part, we hear for the first time of proposals for a Danish West India Company. They come as one might expect, from a Dutchman, in fact from that John de Willom who had helped in the organization of the East India Company. On January 25, 1625, he received permission 8« K. Larsen, I, 14 et seq., 170. »s D. R. E., IV, 104. 36 Jhid., 105, 109. INTRODUCTION 19 to establish a company which should have for a term of eight years the privilege of trade with the West Indies, Brazil, Virginia, and Guinea.^'' Nothing is known to have come of the venture. The extent of Christian IV's commercial plans is strikingly illustrated by his foundation of cities. In 1616 he had begun the building of Gliickstadt, on the Elbe, with the intention of making it a rival of Hamburg, In 1624 he compelled the inhabitants of Oslo in Norway to move into the newly planned city of Chris- tiania, named in the king's honor, a city that was to become a rival to Bergen, which had lost its Hanseatic privileges in 1559.^® But just as conditions appeared to favor the rapid development of Danish commerce in new fields. Christian de- cided to take a hand in settling the religious strife in Germany. The intervention of the king as champion of the German prot- estant princes and head of the Lower Saxon Circle of the Em- pire came to an inglorious end (peace of Liibeck, May 22, 1629) and reacted unfavorably upon commercial conditions in the kingdom. The East India Company was reorganized in 1634 and a Greenland company formed in 1636, but the results seem to have been exceedingly meager. ^^ Peace with her neighbors, particularly with Sweden and the Netherlands, was the chief condition on which the prosperity of Denmark-Norway rested. Her selfish policy with regard to the navigation of the Sound drove the Netherlands into an alliance with Sweden (1640) which was to last for fifteen years. At the instance of Axel Oxenstierna, Sweden declared war against Denmark in 1643. As a result of aid extended by Dutch ships and the threat of Dutch intervention in Sweden's behalf, Den- mark was forced in 1645 to conclude a peace at Bromsebro in ^^ De Willom had in 1616 with the assistance of Jens Munk organized a com- pany to imdertake whale fishing on the Greenland coast; in 1623 he had taken over the royal silk weaving factory in Copenhagen from the king. He is buried in the cemetery of Nicolaj church, Copenhagen. D. R. H., IV, 104. V. Chris- tensen, HistorisJce Meddeleser om Kjobenhavn, II, 420. 38 D. R. H., IV, 97, 98. '' Two ships were sent out to Greenland in 1636, and mention is made by Thaarup of "an unfortunate voyage undertaken by Commander Kirk Albertz in the year 1639." Vejledning til det danske monarchies Statistik (Kjobenhavn, 1794). II, 365. 20 THE DANISH WEST INDIES which she made important concessions concerning the Sound duties. This was the beginning of Denmark's actual decline as a Baltic power. Immediately on the accession of Charles X as king of Sweden in 1654 began that series of wars which involved Sweden in struggles with Poland, Brandenburg, the Empire, Russia, and Denmark, and which finally ended, so far as the last named state was concerned, in her humiliation by the peace of Copenhagen (1660) . Denmark lost the three southern provinces of the Swed- ish peninsula, Scania, Hailing, and Bleking, as well as her lord- ship over the Sound. In this strenuous period, when the Danes were fighting for their very existence as a nation, they had no means or energy to devote to commerce with distant lands. During the lull between the two Swedish wars, however, Henry Miiller, chief of the Copenhagen customs house and a man of extensive manufacturing and trading interests, sent expeditions to Greenland in 1652 and 1653.*° In the later year Frederick III granted privileges to certain "participants" to engage in West Indian trade. It was a grant, as the royal letter reads, "to our subjects who have already sailed to the Caribbean islands in the West Indies in a recent year, and who now desire with such other shareholders as may join them to sail again to these islands." The privileges had mainly to do with Sound and harbor dues and had nothing to say of occupation of any terri- tory.'*^ The results were at first exceedingly meager. It appears that in 1654, the year that Charles X began his martial career, eleven ship owners from Elsinore ventured to send a single ship to the West Indies.*^ Though the beginnings were small and early efforts timid, the possibilities of the Guinea- West Indies trade loomed large. It ^^ No further expeditions appear to have visited Greenland until Hans Egede went there to establish his famous mission in 1721. Thaarup, 365. The Dutch had organized a Greenland company as early as 1614, but apparently made no attempt at settlement. Bergsoe, Den danske Stats Sfatistik, IV, 507. " No. 73, Sjcell. aabne Breve, Apr. 29, 1662 {lndl"See Reglsment of March 11, 1671 (C. P. Rothe, Christian V's Rescripter for Norge ... II B.). ^^ Mariager MS., 15. ^* This account of Governor George (Jorgen) Iversen's life is based mainly on the excellent and exhaustive sketch by Fr. Krarup in the Personalhistorisk Tidsskrift, II R. 6 B. (Kobenhavn, 1891). 36 THE DANISH WEST INDIES ship that left Elsinore in 1654. It is at any rate certain that he entered the service of an English merchant on St. Christopher (St. Kitts), and that about 1660 he returned to Europe with a Dutch merchant. There he joined a company including three business men from Zeeland, of whom one John Basselaer, was the leader; Iversen participated in the enterprise, holding one-sixth of the capital. He was himself to accompany the ship to the West Indies and to take charge of the trade there, of which he was to enjoy one-half of the profits. All went on smoothly until 1665, when Iversen returned to Europe and there learned that war had broken out between England and the Netherlands. This information was brought in upon him in a way that was not to be mistaken, and he paid dearly for his instruction. His ship and cargo were seized by an English privateer. The skipper himself went to Copen- hagen hoping to obtain restitution through diplomatic channels. Admiral Henry Bjelke procured him an audience with Fred- erick III. The king not only acceded to Iversen's desire that Charles II of England be petitioned to deliver over to the in- jured party his share of the damages, estimated at 3,000 rdl., but had Iversen come to him three times to tell him concerning life in the New World and of his personal experiences there. Inasmuch as the Danes appeared to show too much sympathy with the Dutch, and particularly since the failure of the Danes to cooperate with the English fleet in capturing the Dutch East Indiamen in Bergen harbor, Iversen's petition came to nothing. Although he kept up his connections with his Zeeland partners, he appears to have remained in Denmark during the years following. In 1670, the year of the embassy of Essex, he was married "in the house," a distinction which indicates a fairly high social position, and with other evidences, shows him still to have been a man of some means, despite his severe loss. The newly elected governor invested 1,000 rdl. in the West Indian enterprise at the start. He also took charge of fitting out two ships provided by the new king. Christian V, for the use of the Company. About 20,000 rdl. were expended in the outfitting. Captain Arent Henriksen, a Dutch skipper, took THE ESTABLISHMENT OF THE COMPANY 37 the yacht, The Gilded Crown, and set sail on August 30, 1671.^^ He was to look over the ground, for it was not entirely certain that the English might not have occupied it. On the failure of the Fero to arrive within the time expected. Captain Hen- riksen returned to Denmark with ship and cargo, only to find that the Governor had left on February 26,^^ after having been delayed in Bergen since November 20, because of a leaky ship. The passenger list of the Fero makes interesting reading. Be- sides the crew, which totaled only twelve men, those who had bound themselves to service and engaged themselves as em- ployees of the Company numbered one hundred and sixteen. The remaining sixty-one had been selected, as the charter had permitted, from the convicts in Bremerholm and other places. Several culprits had escaped at Bergen, but were promptly re- placed by others equally unpromising. With this motley throng, to manage, an assemblage that was to form the nucleus of the new colony. Governor Iversen would have abundant opportunity to show of what stuff he was made. After leaving Bergen, and especially on the approach to the warmer latitudes, the toll of death began to be taken in earnest. Eighty-six persons of both sexes died on the journey or had es- caped in Bergen. One of the victims was Kjeld Jensen Slagelse, the minister, who had accompanied Erik Schmidt on his voyage in 1665. The ship, with a cargo valued at 18,172 sldl. arrived in St, Thomas harbor on May 25, 1672,^^ just three months after its departure from Bergen. The pioneer band went ashore on the following morning, raised the Danish flag, and took formal possession. They found an island that seemed to them, as the governor expressed it, well suited and large enough for their purposes. No one was there to dispute ownership, the English who had occupied it, having left six or seven weeks earlier, after burning off the roof of the storehouse. ^^ The land had to be cleared of bush and forest before it could be planted; pockwood " Manager MS., 15, '^ Manager MS. has it February 29 (p. 16). " Mariager MS., 16. 18. 18 im.. 18. 38 THE DANISH WEST INDIES was sufficiently in demand in Denmark to furnish a profitable ballast for returning ships during the earlier years of the colony. The problem of securing cane for the newly cleared patches of plantation ground was solved by the aid of the English, who had recently seized Tor tola, a little island just northwest of St. John, from the Dutch. The English officer ^^ in charge there generously gave the Danes full permission to use anything they found on the island, and they made no find more precious than the shoots of sugar cane. The new masters had scarcely begun settlement, before colonists of various sorts began to seep in. The greater number of them belonged to the Dutch nation, and were seeking the protection of a state that they supposed to be on friendly terms with the English, who were harrying the Dutch wherever they dared. Some of these, as John von Beverhoudt, became plant- ers of distinction and even founded influential families; others, like Carl Baggaert, an absconder from Middelburg, became trouble makers who soured the life of the governor and those in authority with him. Although French, Germans, English, and Jews were among these early settlers, Dutch became the pre- vailing language from the beginning. To keep such a variously confused assemblage in reasonable restraint while the necessary pioneering work was being done, was the new governor's task. That Iversen should succeed in laying the foundation of a civil government out of the crude materials that he had at hand was in itself a creditable per- formance, and something for which his masters had reason to be grateful. But in putting through this pioneer work one is not surprised to find that he gained for himself a reputation for severity that made the directors declare that Governor Iver- sen's brutal management "has given the Company such a bad reputation among the common people in Denmark that they are of the opinion that if they should serve in the West Indies they would be worse off than if they had served in Barbary." There was indeed considerable ground for such a belief, and the fault did not all lie with Iversen's government. ^^ Spoken of by Krarup (Jorgen Iversen, 28) a^ Burd. THE ESTABLISHMENT OF THE COMPANY 39 Besides the eighty-nine who died on board the Fero, seventy- five died not long after landing. The Pelican, which arrived in St. Thomas March 29, 1673, lost seven of its people en route and fifty-three after landing, out of a total of only sixty-seven. The galliot St. Thomas, which arrived at the island June 2, 1675, lost five out of nine men; and the Merman, which arrived on May 12, 1675, lost thirty-four out of fifty-eight persons. There were enough survivors, however, to spread reports which required no exaggeration to give the West Indies the reputation of being a veritable charnel house. The resulting depletion was made good by further recourse to convicts and nondescripts, immi- grants against whom the governor never ceased to rail. "Un- controllable fellows, whom neither Holmen ^° nor the penitentiary could improve," "lazy, shiftless louts, who were of no use at home," "vagabonds and idlers," are terms employed by Iversen in describing various of his former charges, even after several years had intervened. To obtain honest or capable employees under these circumstances became well-nigh impossible. The knotty problem of securing suitable ministers reflects the pre- vailing difiiculties. After Kjeld Jensen's death on the outward voyage in 1672, George Jensen Morsing was appointed minister, but he dropped dead on April 23, 1673, just as he was about to take possession of the house assigned to him. The Schleswiger, Theodore Christensen Risbrich (Theodorus Christianus Hol- satus), who succeeded to the post, quarrelled with the governor from the beginning, called him a tyrant, and insisted on preach- ing in German, to the governor's disgust. He was finally per- mitted, in fact urged to leave the land in October, 1677. In 1679 he brought a damage suit against the Company, and met its counter-charge of drunkenness by explaining that such a state "was easily brought about by the terrible stuff they make in that land," — ^referring to the young rum called "kill- devil" because of its reputed powers. The Danes were obviously passing through the most diflBcult pioneering period in the founding of plantation colonies, and learned, in common with other plantation pioneers, whether Spanish, English, Dutch or French, that the first serious prob- ^° Holmen: workhouse for prisoners in Copenhagen. 40 THE DANISH WEST INDIES lem clamoring for solution was that of labor supply. ^^ As early as the beginning of the sixteenth century, when the Spanish government began to concern itself with the preservation of the aborigines, who proved unadaptable to severe labor, African slaves had been resorted to as a substitute for native and white labor. ^^ White convict labor was cursed at in Virginia, Barbados and Martinique as heartily as at St. Thomas. Indentured servants were among those who accompanied Governor Iversen on the initial voyage; but fevers, climate, and careless living killed them off faster than they could be replaced. This labor difficulty seems to have been anticipated in the charter to some extent when provision was made for absorption of the African company of Gliickstadt into the West India Company.^^ The union was in fact complete November 28, 1674, when Christian V issued an edict allowing the Danish West India Company to trade on the Guinea coast. ^* Meanwhile the African company had sent over a ship to Guinea in 1673 which added one hundred and three slaves to the St. Thomas labor supply; ^^ some smaller purchases were made from local dealers, and another voyage was taken by the Cornelia in the summer following, probably for the same company.^® In 1675 a Portuguese bark was found wrecked on the shore with a slave cargo, from which were secured twenty-four wretched negroes, of whom ten survived long enough to be entered on the books of the Company. The Dutch traders seemed peculiarly gifted with the power to scent a bargain from afar, whether in slaves, sugar, or silks. A certain Landert van ^^ See Mims, Colbert's West India Policy, p. 283, for a statement of the con- ditions in the French islands; also Pierre Heinrich, La Louisiane sotts la Com- pagnie des Indes, pp. 32 et seq. ^* G. Scelle, La traite negriere aux hides de Castille (Paris, 1906), I, 123-125, 139-161. ^^ See If 16 of octroi. ^* Krarup, Jorgen Iversen, 31. Christiansborg Castle, near Accra on the Guinea coast, had been built by the Swedes in 1645 and captured from them by the Danes in 1657. The history of the Gliickstadt African Company up to the date of its merger with the Danish West India Company is exceedingly meager. Denmark finally sold its African possessions to Great Britain in 1850. " Mariager MS., 22. ^' L. Fogtman, Alphabetisk Register . . . (see July 10, 1674). THE ESTABLISHMENT OF THE COMPANY 41 der Busse disposed of a batch of sixteen slaves to the Company in 1678, perhaps the remnant of a cargo that he had retailed down the islands. One Paul Jensen from Stade on the Elbe, but recorded as a "Swede," also sold slaves to the Company. That the slave trade of the Company was practically at a standstill is shown by the fact that the king in 1680 granted permission to Oliver Pauli, for a time secretary of the Company in Copen- hagen, to send a ship to Guinea for slaves. The growth of the colony in these early years, when rumors of pestilence and dis- affection were plentiful and dividends were scarce, was nat- urally slow. From a population of barely a hundred each of whites and blacks in 1673, the number had risen by 1680 (the last year of Iversen's stewardship) to a hundred and fifty-six whites and one hundred and seventy-five blacks. ^^ During these early years the colony at St. Thomas was too much concerned with keeping alive to become a dangerous com- petitor to the Dutch, French, or English. Nevertheless, the appearance of the Danes was greeted by a number of protests. The English governor of the Leeward Islands, General Sir Charles Wheler, lost no time in denying the rights of the Danes to any of the Virgin Islands, but on the vigorous representations of the Danish ambassador in London, Marcus Gioe, Charles II disavowed Wheler's actions, recalled him from his post and appointed Sir William Stapleton in his place. Charles' letter was dated September 23, 1672.^^ Spanish protests came in from the governor of Porto Rico in 1673 and 1675, based on the argu- ment that St. Thomas lay on the coast of Yucatan and Cam- peachy, which with the surrounding islands were the property of Spain. The directors, by way of reply, presented a memoran- dum to the Danish king, setting forth the fact that Spain claimed all the Virgin Islands in opposition to the claims of all nations, but that she did not actually occupy one; and further, that the Danes were looked upon by Charles II of England, in his letter (September 23, 1672) as rightful occupants. Christian V had his envoye at Madrid, George Reedtz, set forth these arguments, " Krarup, Iversen, 33; E. V. Lose (in Kirkehistorisk Saml., 6 R. II B., 298) 28 Cd. Col. 1675-76, Addenda 1574-167^ No. 397. The relations of Stapleton with the St. Thomas authorities will be discussed in the next chapter. 42 THE DANISH WEST INDIES and gradually the pretensions of the Spaniards dwindled down for the time to an occasional more or less innocuous reference. ^^ The French had no valid grounds for protest. Their nearest colony was St. Croix which had been taken from the Spaniards in 1650 by an expedition sent by de Poincy from St. Christopher. Colbert, in his efforts to build up French commercial power, had practically closed French colonies to foreign trade, but the Dutch wars of Louis XIV made traffic between France and her West Indian colonies so precarious that Governor de Baas of St. Croix was forced in 1673 to open the island to Danish com- merce during six months to save his people from starving.^'' But when Denmark joined in the war against the French, this trade ceased, and the St. Thomas creditors were left with some thousands of rixdoUars worth of valueless paper on their hands. ^^ The news that war had broken out came in September, 1675, and for the time being the French contented themselves with seizing the Company's yacht at St. Croix. Finally, on Feb- ruary 2, 1678, the French actually attacked St. Thomas. Gov- ernor Iversen had made valiant efforts to complete the fort to the point where it could withstand attack; a tower had recently been finished, and when requested to surrender he was able to bid the enemy defiance. The French left after carrymg off a few slaves and some free negroes. After their departure the work on the fort was continued with greater vigor than ever so that by 1680 the governor was able to record that the fort was completed. With the one hundred and fifty men, white and black, that he had available, he felt himself able, so he reported to his masters, to beat off six hundred or even one thousand men. But the strenuous work involved in preparation against out- side attack had driven the planters as well as the governor al- most to desperation. With the malcontents under the Dutch- man Baggaert against him, with his health undermined by the strain of responsibility, and his temper becoming more and 29 Manager MS., 18, 19. 3» Mims, 323; Krarup, Iversen, 35. ^^ "Debtors on St. Croix" were still in 1708 debited with 2,293 rdl., 5 marks in the Company's books at St. Thomas. A^. J. for St. Th., 1705-1708. THE ESTABLISHMENT OF THE COMPANY 43 more violent, his wife dead, and revengeful enemies on all sides. Governor Iversen finally insisted so strongly on being relieved that the directors proceeded in August and September, 1679, to choose a successor. They found one in the Holsteiner Nicholas Esmit, the only available candidate applying. He did not arrive until July 4, 1680, when he was received by Governor Iversen with appropriate pomp and ceremony. The new governor found the harbor supplied with a good fort, a road running through the island, fifty plantations surveyed, of which forty-six were actually occupied, the other four not having recovered from the attack of the French; he found the Company in possession of two plantations of its own, equipped with forty-nine slaves (men, women, and children), thirty -one cattle, seven horses, poultry, numbers of hogs, and with sheep and goats pastured on nearby islets. ^^ Although the little colony showed signs of vitality, the Com- pany could not begin to pay dividends. Of seven ships, in- cluding yachts and the like, which the Company or King had put into the West India or Guinea trade, several had undergone expensive repairs or costly seizures, and two, the Charlotte Amalia and the St. Vincent, had been wrecked altogether, bringing about a direct loss of 40,000 rdl. to the Company.^^ In the cargoes brought into Copenhagen had been included sugar, cotton, indigo, tobacco, ginger, cacao, " carret " (sea turtle), hides, pockwood and other valuable timber.^^ Only a half score of passports had been issued during the years 1671-1680 to ships bound from Copenhagen to the West Indies, and five for ships sailing to Guinea. Even the extension of trading priv- ileges granted by the Company in its mandate of February 22, 1675, did not bring about the hoped for results.^^ Matters had ^^Buck ("Bocken") and St. George ("S. Jorris") islets, and particularly Water Island, just outside the harbor, were used for pasturage purposes, Krarup, Iversen, 38. 33 Manager MS., 22. 3* Ibid., 19, 23. ^^ By this mandate, the Company permitted its own shareholders to trade with St. Thomas on the payment to the government there of a ten per cent, duty on goods imported; while if they imported slaves they should pay a "recog- nition" or duty of one slave out of each fifty. Strangers might bring in goods 44 THE DANISH WEST INDIES come to a low pass largely because of the reaction of conditions in Europe upon the commercial situation both in the capital and in the colony. In carrying out his second war against the Dutch, Louis XIV had indeed secured the assistance of the former ally of the United Provinces, Sweden, and for a time that of England. The Netherlands were allied from the first with the Hohenzollern elector of Brandenburg and were later to be joined by the Em- peror and by their traditional enemy, Spain. Into this armed camp Denmark threw herself on the side of the Dutch, but against the Swedes, from whom she hoped to regain her lost provinces. Such a state of war not only militated against the success of the Company's efforts, but threatened the very existence of its American factory. for these return cargoes at the same rate of ten per cent. Each of the Danish skippers was to bring to St. Thomas two capable workingmen, for whom the Company would pay 10 rdl. each; while each failure to make such delivery was to be penalized by a fine of 20 rdl. This was very similar to the Arret promulgated by Colbert, January 22, 1671, to encourage the importation of white servants. Vessels of 100 tons or over were to carry two cows or two mares, and those of less to carry two indentured servants in place of each cow or mare. Mims, op. cit., 282. Three Bergen merchants, Jorgen Thormohlen, Cordt von Woyda, and Daniel Wolszman, received permission to send ships to the West Indies in this trade. A Christiania ship seems to have got to St. Thomas with a passport from the king, but with- out the knowledge or permission of the directors. Mariager MS., 26-28. CHAPTER II THE CRITICAL PERIOD (1680-1690) The conclusion of the peace with Sweden in 1679 was followed by a series of efforts on the part of the Danish crown to revive and quicken the economic life of the kingdom. The Board of Trade applied itself anew to the task, and a special commission with Jens Juel at its head was created in September, 1681, to supplement that body.^ In this revival of interest in commer- cial and kindred matters, the West India and Guinea venture came in for its share of attention. On March 3, 1680, the king issued an order, the provisions of which indicate clearly the low state of the company and the heroic measures necessary to fan into a flame its spark of remaining life. In this order the king pledged his assistance by offering to fit out and send a ship to Guinea to fetch slaves for use in St. Thomas; and he promised to send the needed number of men to the Guinea forts, which were sadly in need of assistance.^ The resolution of February 8, 1675, confiscating to the Company the capital of participants who had not paid in their full quota was confirmed, and now each shareholder was assessed an amount equal to ten per cent, of the par value of his share. If he failed to pay, he was liable to lose his entire investment. Moreover, all government em- ployees in his majesty's dominions were "invited" to invest ten per cent, of their salary, if the latter was over 300 rdl. a year, in shares; if they had not paid in the required amount within four or six weeks, it would be deducted from their salaries. Finally, the king reached out after those wealthy but apathetic burghers and others who had hitherto refrained from investing or had been unduly cautious, by requiring that all carriage ^ Other members of this commission were Michael Vibe, Peter Brandt, Paul Rosenpalm, and " procureur-general" Peter Scavenius. D. R. H., IV, 615. 2 Manager MS., 37, 38. (451 46 THE DANISH WEST INDIES owners whose shares did not amount to 500 sldl. must invest 60 rdl. once for all. Whatever the king and company's directors might propose, it was after all the servants of the company in the West Indies and on the Guinea coast on whom would rest the duty of dis- posing; and the success of their efforts would be largely condi- tioned by various external circumstances over which they had no control. To carry out the details required by this scheme of rehabilitation and readjustment, a committee of four ^ headed by Herman Meyer, councilor of war, admiralty and commerce, was appointed to take charge of supplying the Guinea forts with men and munitions and equipping ships for both Guinea and the West Indies. The result was that the Merman was sent out to Guinea ^ under Captain Ove Ovesen, who took with him a new merchant and commander for the Guinea factory, while the Crowned Griffin was sent to St. Thomas, passing Kronborg castle on September 4, 1680, under Captain John Blom.^ The home authorities had done all that they could, and as- suredly no less than was needed. It remained to be seen to what extent their efforts would be seconded by their employees and favored by circumstances. The new governor of St. Thomas, Nicholas Esmit, had given the directors plenty of promises, but had been unable to produce any recommendations. The pend- ing resignation of Iversen gave them no time to search about for candidates. Esmit claimed to have been a skipper, called him- self captain, and asserted that he had served his apprenticeship with the English at Jamaica. His name Esmit was probably ^ The others were Peter Bladt, Assessor in the Board of Trade, Mauritz van der Thy, and Claus Sohn. * No pass appears to be recorded in Vestindisk Reg. 1671-99 for this ship. Merman = Hafmanden or Havmanden. '^ Mariager MS., 34 et seq.; Vest. Reg., 1671-99. The Crowned Griffin = den Cronede Griff. THE CRITICAL PERIOD (1680-1690) 47 originally Schmidt and would point to a sojourn in Spain. He was apparently related to that John Esmit who, according to a petition filed in 1671 had been consul in Spain for four years and thereafter receiver of customs in Copenhagen for twelve years and had been at one time in charge of the renovation of the city.« On his arrival at St. Thomas, Captain Esmit was all amiabil- ity, but he began very soon to lend his ear to George Iversen's enemies, particularly to the Dutch absconder, Carl Baggaert. He released one Peter Jansen from the prison into which his predecessor had cast him, and before Iversen had got ready to leave for home via St. Croix, which he did on September 20, 1680, Esmit had so far broken with the former governor as to forbid his living at the fort. The obvious attempt of the new encumbent to curry favor with the lawless element did not bode well for the colony. It must be borne in mind that since the treaty of Madrid (1670) the English governors in the West Indies had been strictly enjoined to suppress privateering. Their task had been a difficult one, for Spain not only protested against English logwood cutters being allowed to exploit the swamps of Yucatan but effected a considerable number of captures.^ The distinc- tion between logwood cutting and piracy was apparently not very clear to the Spanish official mind. Among the most conscientious officials were Sir Thomas Lynch, who was governor of Jamaica in 1671 and after an ab- sence of a few years was reappointed in 1681, and Sir William Stapleton, governor of the Leeward Islands. Assuredly pri- vateering and the development of plantations and legitimate trade did not go hand in hand. Until there was reasonable guarantee that plantation products would be safe from seizure on the high seas, men would be chary of sinking their funds or investing their labor in plantations. From the viewpoint of British expansion, commercial and territorial, the Danish islands, like the Dutch and French, were ' Nielsen, Kohenhavn, V, 62 el seq. '' It was reported in 1674 that 75 English ships had been seized by the Span- iards since 1670. Beer, The Old Colonial System, 1660-1688, II, 68. 48 THE DANISH WEST INDIES on the frontier between the Spaniards and the English. This frontier had been pushed forward by a straight conquest to in- clude Jamaica; buccaneers had made sport of it and were finally to extend it permanently into Campeachy. It was in this twi- light zone, haunted by buccaneers and men of their type, that St. Thomas had found itself since its settlement. To keep the island out of complications with its powerful neighbor required more firmness and clear-headedness than was possessed by Nicholas Esmit. Of his early history as governor only a few en- lightening documents exist, but a letter written by him to the directors May 17, 1682, is sufficiently illustrative of the ways of the privateers and of their reception in St. Thomas to justify! quotation: "There arrived here February 8 [1682] a ship of unknown, origin, some two hundred tons in size, without guns, passport or[ letters, and with seven men, French, English, and German. O being questioned they replied that they had gone out of Es 'paniola [Hispaniola] from the harbor of Petit Guava {sic) witK two hundred men and a French commission to cruise on the Spaniards. They had come to the coast of Terra Firma and landed in the river of Danan [Darien?] where they were joined by the wild Indians who were to show them the way over the! landtotheSouthSea, which they also did; . . . and they took £^ little ship or bark with a hundred blocks [bars?] of silver, next aj^ large vessel, and finally a Spanish galleon, with which they did much damage over all the South Sea; and after having robbeq for two years in the South Seas, they escaped around Terra de' fago [del Fuego] . . . and on January 28 came to anchor ir^ Antigo [Antigua], where all the English in the crew went ovej on the English ship with all their gold and silver. The restiii namely seven men, who had risked [?] and doubled their moneys* sailed for Petit Goava, but on the way the boat leaked, so the;^ asked to come in to St. Thomas and there careen the boat; which was done at Strand Slucken [Gregerie Beach?] by the aicj of thirty men sent out by me. I bought what little cacao thejlj had, the rest of their plunder they brought ashore and divide( j among our people. The ship was no longer usable. I havji: decided not to confiscate it, in order to avoid any unfriendliness : THE CRITICAL PERIOD (1680-1690) 49 with sea-robbers. The inhabitants of St. Thomas have decided that the said seven men shall remain among them." ^ But clearly enough such cheerful receptions could not go on very long without arousing serious misgivings in the watchful governor of the Leeward Islands, Sir William Stapleton. On August 18, 1682, one Captain "Toms Wadsten" (Thomas Watson?) came into St. Thomas harbor with his sloop, the Prosperous, and received permission of the governor to come in to revictual. The vessel had come from Barbados, it was said, and was bound for Jamaica. On the captain's remaining in the harbor longer than the time agreed on, and selling great quantities of "kill-devil," stuffs, linen, gloves, and the like, his vessel and remaining goods were seized and declared good prize. A commission headed by the Carl Baggaert before mentioned, and including "Mr. William Borth" (Burke?) an "expert buyer of English and Irish wares," found the confiscated cargo to be worth £108, 13s. 2d. On August 26, Captain Watson and his mate, John Campion, were condemned to be hanged. This in- teresting ceremony occurred "in the proper place, where or- dinary justice is done." There the victim was suspended "by a strap;" "Robbert Wautersen van Rotterdam" was ordered banished, while the chief witness, John Finlasson, was to leave 8 Breve og Dokumenter, 1683-1689, from a copy by O. Pauli, the company's secretary in Copenhagen. This rather quaint account of the rovings of a buc- caneering expedition in the South Seas is really the Danish version in a nutshell of the famous voyage described at length in John Exquemelin's history of the buccaneers. In the London edition of that work, which was published in 1685, was included under a separate title "The Dangerous Voyage and Bold Attempts of Capt. Bartholomew Sharp and others, written by Mr. Basil Ringrose, who was all along present." One of the nine "captains" of whom that writer makes mention was Bartholomew Sharp, who was sent to England with some of his fellows, at the instance of the Spanish ambassador in London, where they were to be tried for piracy. After having secured his acquittal with the others on the plea that the Spaniards had fired the first shot. Captain Sharp returned to the West Indies, eventually settling down in St. Thomas, where he succeeded in making the governor's existence miserable. In John Lorentz's term of office, sixteen years after his South Sea exploit, after sickness had deprived him of the use of his hands, he was still able, through the indiscriminate use of an active and violent tongue, to earn a sentence of imprisonment for life from an indig- nant governor and council. Lorentz to Directors (24 June, 1698). C. B., 1690-1713. 50 THE DANISH WEST INDIES the island within a fortnight. The order was signed by Bag- gaert and one Jochum Delicaet, a wily Dutchman who will come in for attention later .^ Before Governor Stapleton could get a chance to secure the delivery of the sloop to him, Nicholas Esmit was replaced by his brother Adolph, who had become the leader of a faction of the more unruly planters. ^° Adolph was shifty, shrewd, vain, and at times boastful, and an exceedingly exasperating neighbor to deal with. It is in the period when the Esmit brothers were responsible for the government of St. Thomas, that the island gained its reputation as a resort for pirates. For that reason their relations with pirates, or with persons suspected of being such, deserve to be examined with some minuteness. On October 7, 1782, Governor Stapleton sent Thomas Biss, his deputy on Tortola, to "the Honorable Governor Esmit in St. Thomas Island," for to have written "of St. Thomas Island" would have been an official recognition of the usurpation. On the demand of Biss for the restoration of a sloop, which he maintained had been seized from its lawful owner, as well as on the request for the de- livery of seven white servants who had run away from Mont- serrat, Adolph Esmit gave contradictory and evasive answers. When the English official demanded the runaway servants, Esmit had replied that this was a free port ^^ and that anyone asking for protection was entitled to it. "Sir," was the reply of Biss, "if your port is free, why did you seize the sloop? If some rogues have freedom here, why not all?" ^^ Later, in a communication to Biss, Esmit offered to restore the sloop (which he had already sold at auction for twenty-five pieces of eight) on the presentation of a certificate from Cover- s'. £!.,.. . 1682-85, "Lit. A." and "Lit. B." appended to A. Esmit's letter to the king (1 Sept., 1683). Delicaet's first name was frequently spelled Jo- achim. ^^ On 3 August, 1682, Nicholas had discharged a debt of 3,000 rdl. to his brother, described in the document as "young of years and faithful," by deeding him his share of a plantation 3,000 feet long and stocked with 37 slaves, houses, indigo, "works," etc. The deposing of Nicholas took place in the autumn. (J5. & D., 1683-89.) ^1 This appears to be the first reference to St. Thomas as a free port. 12 Cal. Col, 1681-85, No. 777 (11 Nov., 1682). THE CRITICAL PERIOD (1680-1690) 51 nor Stapleton showing that he had authority to receive it, and on payment of certain charges. ^^ In a moderately toned letter of December 12, addressed to "Capt. Adolphus Eastmitt," Staple- ton reiterated his demand for restitution of sloop and runaways "now that I understand that you have the power in yr hand." Esmit's reply did not entirely suit the English governor who wrote, "It doesn't show much inclination to live in peace, to say that some [of the seven servants] have gone to Leeward and one is in the [Danish] king's service, which is all one with saying their money in part is employed in the king's service soe is the boat in which they were transported and ye sloop and goods too." But the governor wanted his neighbors to understand that his patience had limits. "You may be confident," he added, "that the detention of sloop goods and servants will not be forgotten. It were no hard matter for me to let you otherwise know it but my inclination is otherwise." Esmit declined to be bluffed, however. In his reply, dated January 8, 1683, he re- fused to assume responsibility for the acts of his brother or to trouble himself further concerning the whole matter, saucily adding that "I know you serve his Mayts (Majesty) of Engen- lant whom I have had the Honner to Serve as Capt: whose Commission I have [and] alsoo another from his Rojall Heighnis : and att present I Sarve my Master the Souerin King of Denne- marck and thus I conclude." ^* Meantime Governor Stapleton had incorporated his griev- ances into a vigorous letter which he had sent to the Lords of Trade and Plantation on November 11, 1682.^^ They suffered alike, he explained, from Dutch and Danes, from fugitive serv- ants, black and white, and from seamen and other debtors, who had run away to these islands and were never restored, on the ground that the freedom of their port protects all, and he de- spaired as to how to proceed except by the law of the Turks and Algerines. The complaint was promptly conveyed to the Danish envoy at London, Christian Lente, by the Earl of " A. Esmit to Mr. Biss (20 Nov., 1682). A. E., 1682-89. " A. E., 1682-89. 15 Cat. Col, 1681-85. No. 777. 52 THE DANISH WEST INDIES Sunderland, with a request for the restoration of the sloop and servants.^® Within a fortnight the Danish king had written a vigorous letter to Esmit rebuking him and ordering him to restore ship and fugitive servants forthwith, on pain of summary punishment of death. Further complaint of violence would certainly bring this punishment upon him.^^ It could assuredly not have missed the observation of the de facto governor that serious trouble was in the wind; and so long as he had secured no commission, his position was bound to be exceedingly precarious. The directors of the company in Copenhagen had early learned of Nicholas Esmit's doings at St. Thomas, and decided to have him replaced at the earliest opportunity by a more likely incumbent. In March 1682 George Iversen who had recuperated from his severe expe- rience again sought his former post. In this and in his plans for strengthening the colony by another consignment of convicts Iversen was supported by Jens Juel and Albert Gyldensparre who with Edward Hoist, assumed the direction of the company's affairs in 1682, on the resignation of Hans Nansen and Herman Meyer. ^^ The governor-elect received his commission Septem- ber 26, 1682, his final instructions on October 28, and left Elsinore on November 10, just when Stapleton was formulating his charges against Adolph Esmit. But Iversen was never to reach his destination, for after he had passed the Azores, he and those in authority with him fell victims to a mutiny instigated by their convict cargo. ^^ As the news of this latest misfortune was reaching the direc- tors at Copenhagen, Adolph Esmit was sending his recently ' married English wife Charity to Denmark to plead his case and I procure him a commission."" He sent in numerous documents j j 18 Cal Col, 1681-85. No. 993 (Mar. 8, 1683). I " Ibid., No, 1003 (Mar. 17, 1683). Another copy of the same docu- j ment has been calendared by mistake under date of Mar. 17, 1684 (No. 1597). !| '^ Manager MS., 44. | 1^ Krarup, Iversen, 43 et seq. Most of the mutineers were caught and horribly i put to death in Copenhagen. CJ. Haring, Buccaneers, 237, where "Everson" is confused with Milan. , 2° A. E., 1682-89 (May 1, 1683). THE CRITICAL PERIOD (1680-1690) 53 intended to prove his brother's treachery and justify his own actions.^^ Charity Esmit was a shrewd woman, of wide ac- quaintance in official, if not indeed in royal circles. She was an adept at intriguing, and lost no time in pulling all available wires to keep her husband in his place. ^^ Her insistence was rewarded when the king and the directors decided early in July that the low estate of the company demanded that for the present the incumbent be confirmed in his office, and issued the commission on July 17. Before Charity could bring her husband the much desired commission, matters had rapidly approached a crisis in St. Thomas. In response to requests from West Indian governors for men of war to protect their interests, the English king had sent H. M. S. Ruhy under Capt. Richard May to the Leeward Islands early in 1683. In his search for a French pirate ship, La Trompeuse, captained by the notorious Jean Hamlin, he visited St. Thomas early in July,^^ but failed to find the ship, although Sir Thomas Lynch had reported the presence of La Trompeuse in a letter to the Lord President of the Council, written on May 6.^^ But the English were not to be balked so easily of their prey. At three o'clock on the morning of July 30, Capt. Charles Carlile put into St. Thomas harbor with H. M. S. Francis, a ship sent by the king early in the year with ammuni- tion and supplies for the new forts at St. Christopher, Nevis, Montserrat, and Antigua. Carlile had with him a letter of recommendation from Sir William Stapleton. The object of the search. La Trompeuse, a ship of thirty-two guns and six boats (patararoes) was lying at anchor within, and (according to Capt. Carlile) the Francis was greeted by some shots from either the pirate or the fort. On Tuesday, July 31, the English ^* An English pirate, George Bond, was one of those whose depositions were included. Various threats made by Nicholas Esmit at St. Christopher and St. Eustatius against St. Thomas inhabitants were adduced. A. E., 1683-89 (May 1, 1683). 2^ One of Adolph Esmit's most steadfast friends was Steen Andersen Bille, vice commandant of Copenhagen in 1676, appointed to the war college in 1679, and made a noble in that year. 28 A. E.. 1682-89 (July 2/l2, 1685). " Cal. Col, 1681-85, No. 1065 (May 6, 1683). 54 THE DANISH WEST INDIES captain sent a protest to the governor concerning the shooting, and planned to burn up the pirate ship that night. The gover- nor's explanation that he had already taken her into custody and sent her men ashore did not help matters, for in that case he was responsible for the firing on the Enghsh flag. Esmit's efforts to cajole Carlile ashore by sending him a present and an invitation to dine were too transparent to succeed. Carlile was in no mood to risk a delay that might bring in the pirate ship's consort, which was daily expected, so he sent his men on board her that evening (Tuesday) and fired her. In the conflagration, another privateer lying near at hand caught fire and was burned. ^^ In vain did Esmit fulminate against this confessedly high- handed measure and against Carlile's threat to summon three more frigates to his assistance if Esmit did not deliver up the pirate Englishmen who were ashore. Esmit admitted the firing of a shot from the castle but maintained that his purpose was merely to secure due salute. Since he was accused of undue intimacy with pirates, he sent over in irons the man who fired the shot. The rest, he explained, had fled.^^ Esmit's first care was to notify the French governor of St. Croix, for the French might be expected to put in a claim for the restitution of property belonging to one of their subjects,^'^ although in his claim to Carlile Esmit argued that the frigate belonged to the King of Denmark. Stapleton had now secured the means by which he could back up his words with powder and ball, and was prepared to press his advantage. On Au- gust 15 he demanded that Esmit deliver up Jean Hamlin, whom the St. Thomas governor had evidently befriended. "Have a care," he wrote, "I shall come from the Leeward Islands with an armed force, blow you up as quickly as the Trompeuse, and pound any pirate that you may have fitted out. If you have a spark of honesty in you restore me the sloop and runaway serv- es Cal. Col., 1681-85, Nos. 1168. 1173, 1188, 1190; A. E., 1682-89 (Aug. 1, 1683). 28 Ihid., No. 1173. Esmit to Stapleton (Aug. 1, 1683). ^ Ibid., No. 1381. The Chevalier of St. Laurens, French governor of Martinique, sent a protest to Governor Stapleton Nov. 13, 1683, main- taining not without reason that his men should have spared the ships and punished the pirates. THE CRITICAL PERIOD (1680-1690) 55 ants that I have already claimed." ^^ In a letter to the Lords of Trade written on the same day Stapleton expressed himseK with equal vigor and at greater length. He was sending Carlile out after Cooke and Bond, two other English pirates who had been befriended by the Danish governor. "There is more need of such [i. e., good ships] in the Leeward Islands than in any other government," he wrote, "with their mixture of Spanish, French, Danes, Dutch, and Indians." ^^ Stapleton's wounded feeHngs received some balm when a copy reached him of Christian V's order to Esmit's brother Nicholas to deliver to the English island of Montserrat the sloop and goods seized, and likewise to restore the seven runaway servants. ^° He may also have extracted com- fort from the success of his men in breaking up the "castle" that Esmit had caused to be built on St. John, and in despoiling of their live stock the grazing islets near St. Thomas harbor.^^ Esmit was nothing daunted by Stapleton's threats. He seized English sloops when he could lay hands on them and sold Jean Hamlin a new sloop, perhaps one of those seized from the English. Hamlin went back to his old trade ^^ in company with a Captain Morgan, a pirate and a namesake of that other Morgan who was trying in the capacity of lieutenant governor of Jamaica to suppress piracy in Caribbean waters. Captain George Bond, master of the ship Summer Island of London, had bought a Dutch vessel at St. Thomas, fitted her out there, turned pirate, and sent some of his captured booty back to St. Thomas for safe keeping.^^ Madame Esmit's return from Copenhagen in November 1683 with the coveted commission was a triumph of which neither she 28 Cal. Col., 1681-85. No. 1189 (Aug. 15, 1683). 2* Ibid., No. 1188. The Indians were on the rampage in the Windward Islands at this time. ^° Adolph Esmit's commission was dated July 17, 1683. The order for the release of the sloop was signed Oct. 4, 1683. Cal. Col, 1681-85, No. 2087. »i A. E.. 1683-89 (Aug. 26, 1683). "Lit. D." ^2 Cal. Col., 1681-85, No. 1223. Stapleton to Lords of Trade (Aug. 30, 1683). Before long Hamlin is again heard of as a captain of La Nouvelle Trompeuse, which Stapleton asserted was fitted and protected by the godly New England independents. Ibid., No. 2042 (Jan. 7, 1685). " Ibid., Nob. 1471-1474, 1535. 56 THE DANISH WEST INDIES nor her husband was slow to take advantage. Difficulty of communication between new and old world meant that the oflFences and grievances of the summer, which had been accu- mulating in London and Copenhagen, became the topic of dip- lomatic negotiation in the winter following. The commission arrived none too soon, for malcontents within the colony were already plotting Adolph Esmit's overthrow. Now that he was governor in his own right, he could proceed against his local enemies with a vigor born of authority. The first to become a target for the governor's wrath was the leader of the plot, Otto Eden, who was condemned to death in the month following Madame's return.^^ His two chief accomplices got off with fines, and banishment to their plantations for nine months. ^^ Esmit showed very much the same instability of character in dealing with the inhabitants, that he showed in his relations with his neighbors on other islands. The return of Madame Esmit could not but further embitter the life of the conscientious, if irascible, Stapleton. "Never was like impudence on the earth as of Esmit and his wife," he wrote to the Lords of Trade, Feb- ruary 13, 1684. "She gives out that she is the relict of an English baron." Had Governor Iversen lived to arrive safely at his post early in 1683 when he was expected, the company might have been spared much expense and annoyance, and the colony a harrowing experience. For Esmit was no more inclined to give up his habits than Stapleton was to let him cultivate them in peace. In April 1684 Sir William issued an order to Col. Thomas Hill, authorizing him to secure any persons that he might find in the Virgin Islands, especially Danes, and bring them to Nevis.^^ Before long Esmit's secretary, Martin Borel, with three negroes was captured and detained in arrest at Nevis. When Esmit threatened to send the secretary's seven children over into Stapleton's safekeeping in case their mother who was danger- ously ill, should die,^^ the secretary was returned. s< A. E., 1682-89 (Nov. 20, and Dec, 1683). '^ Ibid. (Jan. 26, 1684). They were Jochum Delicaet and Jan Borris. 56 Cal. Col, 1681-85. 1947, III (April 3, 1684). " Ibid., 1947, II (June 11, 1684); A. E. (June 16, 1684). THE CRITICAL PERIOD (1680-1690) 57 About two months before Madame Esmit's return, and too early to permit the news of it to reach Copenhagen before she had made off with her husband's precious commission, Stapleton had sent in two letters with his latest grievances against his recalcitrant neighbor. ^^ The news transmitted by Stapleton concerning Jean Hamlin proved the last straw, and on Novem- ber 14, 1683 the king issued an Order in Council authorizing Governor Stapleton to seize the governor of St. Thomas and to hinder the further harboring of pirates in that place. ^^ The Danish envoy was notified of the action taken, and the sending of the order was delayed until he could communicate with the government at Copenhagen.^° In February, 1684, the Earl of Sunderland, Secretary of State, was informed by Christian Lente, the Danish envoy, that the King of Denmark had ordered the arrest of the governor of St. Thomas. ^^ Affairs were by this time moving rather too swiftly for the comfort of the directors at Copenhagen. On account of Iversen's death, they had been forced against their will to confirm the usurper and harborer of pirates in his office until they could se- cure a new incumbent. But the patience of the English govern- ment was evidently exhausted, and it was in no mood to listen to Esmit's counter complaints. So in a shareholders' meeting held on March 10, the directors of the Danish company were asked to choose a new governor. Two available candidates presented themselves, "auditor" Balthasar Lachmann and Gabriel Milan. The latter was selected because of his knowledge of languages and of his business ability to fill the vacant place. ^^ The recommendation, dated March 14, was signed by the executive committee of the directors, con- sisting of Albert Gyldensparre, a brother of the disgraced Count Griffenfeld, Abraham Wiist, later to become a member of the Board of Trade, and Edward Hoist. The terms on which the office was to be bestowed were presently agreed upon, and on 38 Ca/. Col, 1681-85, No. 1188 (Aug. 15) and 1222 (Aug. 30, 1683). 29 Ibid., No. 1382. ^" Krarup, Milan. 3. « Col. Col., 1681-85. No. 1547 (Feb. 19). ** Erarup. Milan, 3. 58 THE DANISH WEST INDIES May 7, 1684, the king issued an order deposing Adolph Esmit and naming Gabriel Milan as governor of St. Thomas in his stead. *3 To take the new governor and his retinue over to the West Indies, the king set aside the warship, Fortuna, armed with forty guns and provided with a crew of eighty men, and placed in command Captain George Meyer, a German-speaking officer who had been in the Danish service for five years. Besides his own family, consisting of a wife, a grown son, Felix, and four children, Milan brought with him a governess, three maids, three lackeys, a laborer, and a Tartar. ^^ As merchant at the St. Thomas factory and next in authority to the governor, the directors sent along Niels Lassen, and as "assistant" in the company's office (a clerical place) John Lorentz, a young man from Flensborg in Schleswig who had contracted to serve the company for four years. Lavish provision was made for the governor's comfort. Various kinds of foreign wines were taken on board, and place was even found for six or seven dogs. The king had furnished him with 6,000 rdl. cash for his immediate needs and given him part of his salary in advance. Certainly no charge of niggard- liness could be laid against the Company, the entire original stock of which amounted to not more than 44,866 rdl. (64,300 sldl.). Captain Meyer was entrusted with a secret order direct- ing that in case of Milan's death Niels Lassen should succeed to the governorship, and that in case of the death of the latter. Lieutenant Christopher Heins of St. Thomas should take charge. ^^ The Fortuna remained long enough to receive a copy of Charles II 's orders to Stapleton to assist the new governor in case Esmit should resist. ^^ The man who was charged with the responsibility of re- deeming the good name of his country in the far-off Caribbean had led an eventful life. Milan came of a reputable Jewish family which had connections in Portugal, Flanders, and *3 Christian V. to A. Esmit. A. E., 1682-89. ■'^ Krarup, Milan, 5. 45 Ibid., 6. « Cal. Col, 1681-85, No. 1676 (May 13). THE CRITICAL PERIOD (1680-1690) 59 Hamburg. His family was related by marriage to the well- known Portuguese-Jewish houses of da Costa and de Castro. He had, according to his own account, begun his career as a soldier, and had served under Cardinal Mazarin in France. In 1667 he appears in the role of an Amsterdam merchant; he was concerned with financing a foreign journey undertaken by Prince George of Denmark; in 1668 he was made Danish factor, and in 1670 factor-general, in Amsterdam. In this capacity he composed reports on political and com- mercial matters, a circumstance that brought him into con- fidential relations with various important personages at the Danish court, among whom the Peter Schumacher (Count Griffenfeld) before mentioned was his chief stay untU the latter's fall in 1676. Among his linguistic acquisitions he counted Spanish, French, Portuguese, German, and Dutch. Milan had tried in vain to get an appointment to the Board of Trade on the ground that he knew the tricks of traders and money-changers, and he had accumulated a list of claims against his royal master for services rendered in the Netherlands — from espionage to loans of money — ^which he had small chance of collecting in cash. His prospects of getting into the employ of the state were improved when on January 18, 1682, he secured a certificate showing that he had discussed with a, Hamburg Lutheran minister the relative merits of Catholicism and Protestantism, had thereby become convinced of the truth of the Augsburg Confession, and had partaken of the Holy Com- munion. In depending upon the favor of princes he had been forced, even before his appointment as governor, to drink deep from the cup of misfortune. However praiseworthy the 60 THE DANISH WEST INDIES King's selection of this fifty-three years old soldier of fortune for service in the company might have been from motives of human- ity, his choice could scarcely have been looked upon by hard- headed business men with anything but misgivings. ^^ The Fortuna arrived at St. Thomas on October 13, 1684, after a voyage of about nine weeks. *^ At Nevis Milan called on Octo- ber 6 to pay his respects to Governor Stapleton and to receive the latter 's "instructions." Sir William seems to have availed himself of the opportunity to accompany Milan and to witness Adolph Esmit's final disgrace. Esmit handed over the reins of office without delay or resistance. He also handed over a treasury so empty that when the English were ready to depart, after having been entertained for ten days, the money needed for the purchase of parting gifts for the English dignitaries had to be borrowed by the government from a planter. What was worst of all, Esmit handed over to Milan an island that had become an outlaw among its more reputable neighbors. This was shown clearly enough two months before the latter's ar- rival, when, on May 22, a Spanish captain, Antonio Martino, landed and carried fifty-six slaves off to Hispaniola or Haiti. Lieutenant Heins had been sent over with two planters to de- mand the return of the loot, but without success. ^^ That Esmit had been prepared for the present contingency there could be no doubt. The gold, silver, and other property that he was able to scrape together had been sent to the Dutch island of St. Eustatius, whence they were to be shipped to Flushing. Although Milan had been instructed only to secure the persons of Esmit and his family and to have them sent to Copenhagen, he took it upon himself to try to secure the latter's property as well, by sending Niels Lassen to Governor Hout- coper of St. Eustatius with an alleged copy of his instructions and a demand for the delivery of the goods. But neither this nor subsequent attempts availed the crafty governor. Instead of « In Personalhistorisk Tidskrift, 3 R. 2 B. (Kjobenhavn, 1893) 102 et seq. F. Krarup has given an admirable and exhaustive account of Milan's early life, which has been followed in the preceding paragraphs. « Ibid., 6. « Ibid.. 7. THE CRITICAL PERIOD (1680-1690) 61 seeking redress through diplomatic channels, as his masters ex- pected him to do, he authorized Captain Delicaet to take the company's ship Charlotte Amalia, find the skipper who had transported the goods and make his ship lawful prize.^*^ It was to avoid just this sort of complication that Esmit had been dis- placed. But Milan was an exponent of direct action, he sought advice from none, and the council dared not oppose his will. Instead of sending his deposed predecessor back to Copen- hagen to answer for his stewardship over the company's affairs, and to act as defendant in a suit brought by his brother Nicholas, he clapped him into confinement, first keeping him at the fort as his guest, but later putting him in a prison cell.^^ Madame Esmit had rightly decided that she could be more useful in Copenhagen than in St. Thomas, and had started on her journey before Milan arrived. By this time matters had grown rather beyond her power of control, despite all her influential friends and her genius for intrigue; so she confined herself to taking measures to save what she could of the family property. She returned to St. Thomas in December to share the hardships of prison life with her husband. The story of how Governor Milan, his sick body racked with fever almost from the first, restlessly suspicious and ofttimes with reason of his fellow men, jealous of his official power and position, administered the affairs of St. Thomas during his sixteen months' incumbency may be dealt with rather briefly. In Captain Meyer's attempt to provide the Fortuna with a good return cargo the governor took but an indifferent interest, and as to the Esmits' returning on the Fortuna, he would have none of it. Just why he should deliberately keep with him persons who could not but be a source of trouble as long as they were near, is difficult to explain on other grounds than cupidity. Milan had been unable to lay his hands on Esmit's gains. In his relations with his council, he showed his arbitrariness and wil- fulness. In place of Lieutenant Heins, who happened to be absent on the company's business when Milan arrived, the ^° Personalhislorisk Tidskrift, 3 R. 2 B., 9. The skipper's name was Jochum Samuelsen. " Esmit to Gyldensparre (September 23, 1686). A. E., 1682-89. 62 THE DANISH WEST INDIES governor promptly appointed his son, Felix. ^^ Instead of select- ing permanent councilors from among the planters as he had been instructed to do under certain specified conditions, he put in now one, now another, until fourteen planters had taken part in the government with him.^^ With the other planters Milan was equally whimsical. For trifling misdemeanors he instituted elaborate investigations and meted out extravagant fines and punishments where a wiser man would have overlooked the whole matter.®"* Offending negroes were made to feel the pressure of the governor's heavy hand. A runaway who might have been mercifully beheaded was impaled alive on a sharpened stick to die in horrible agony.®® Another negro, arrested on a similar charge, had his foot cut off, after which he was confiscated to the governor's use and put to work in his kitchen. When in the spring following the departure of the Fortuna (on March 31, 1685), Milan got wind of what he at once sus- pected to be a nefarious plot against his life, he vented his fury upon the unfortunate persons with swift and fiendish vengeance.®® In the midst of charges and counter-charges, one fact stood out with a clearness that was unmistakable. Milan's stewardship of his own plantation property was above reproach; seventy negroes remained on the plantation even after twenty -five had been returned to an Englishman from whom they had been forcibly seized.®^ Here prosperity was rife. In Copenhagen Captain Meyer's arrival was naturally awaited with a good deal of interest, even anxiety. The cap- tain's report when he arrived on June 10, 1685, without Adolph Esmit, and even without a word from Milan, gave the directors and shareholders food for thought. Although they had only the captain's unsupported word, the small cargo and Milan's silence could not but rouse their fears that something was ^2 Krarup, Milan, 9. 63 Ibid., 10. " Ibid., 12, 23, 26, 36. 65 Ibid.. 22, 23. 66 Ibid.. 23-26. 6^ Ibid., 38. THE CRITICAL PERIOD (1680-1690) 63 seriously wrong at St. Thomas. A meeting of the Company's shareholders was held within two days, and it was decided that the situation was serious enough to justify sending a memorial to the king asking once more for the loan of the Fortuna, and for the sending thence of a commissioner with power to settle all the difficulties. They suggested an attorney or fiscal in the navy department, Michael (Mikkel) Mikkelsen.^^ The king could do nothing but fall in with the company's recommendations. Commissioner Mikkelsen, armed with full power, left Copen- hagen on the Fortuna October 15, 1685, touched at Nevis on February 19 to get the latest St. Thomas advices, and arrived at his destination on February 24, 1686. The governor's son, Ferdinand, had already sent his father a warning from Copen- hagen that it was planned to send out a new governor, namely. Captain Meyer, whom the governor had blamed for most of his misfortunes, even his illness. Milan, whose nerves had scarcely recovered from the shock of the "conspiracy," called the plant- ers together in the "German" (Dutch Reformed.'*) church. There he informed them of this last "conspiracy," namely, the attempt to place this "rascal" Mikkelsen in the governor's seat "when he ought to be hanged to the highest tree." ^^ He coun- selled resistance, exhorted their aid, and by cajolings and threats secured their signatures to a document by which they pledged themselves to leave the land before they would see their governor leave them. But if he proposed to give battle, he must needs secure the sinews of war. He chose a method consistent with his nature. On February 17, 1686, just as the royal commissioner was ap- proaching the West Indian waters, the governor authorized Captain Daniel Moy to take the company's ship, Charlotte Amalia, and cruise upon the Spaniards wherever they might be found. With a ship scarcely seaworthy, provided with a crew of thirty men. Captain Moy put to sea to make war upon the kingdom of Spain. The Charlotte Amalia had no difficulty in finding a Spanish ship on the Porto Rico coast, but the latter vessel had the temerity to answer Captain Moy's fire, wounding ^* Manager MS., 49, 50. ^^ Krarup, Milan, 27. 64 THE DANISH WEST INDIES one man, killing another, and forcing the valiant captain to beat a hasty retreat to St. Thomas. It was withal an in- glorious ending to a sorry enterprise, and not calculated to re- deem the good name of the island.^'' The commissioners had arrived in the harbor before the news of the "reprisal" fiasco could reach the governor, and before his "valet," Moses Caille, could return from the French islands, whence he had been sent by the desperate governor in search of help.®^ Sitting in his private room and surrounded by all manner of firearms, the governor drew the parley out for three days before he finally surrendered to the king's repre- sentative. Mikkelsen's intimation that Milan's attitude ren- dered him liable to the charge of rebellion, combined with the fact that the men on whom he could depend were rapidly dimin- ishing in number, brought the governor to his knees. A guard consisting of twelve men from the Fortuna and twelve planters, all under the command of Christopher Heins, was placed at the fort. With his removal to the ship the reign of Gabriel Milan came to a sudden end. Adolph Esmit and his wife. Charity, likewise the company's merchant, Niels Lassen, who had been in prison since April 30, were taken out of their dungeons and put on board ship. The scene of interest, as far as the company is concerned, was soon to shift to Copenhagen. Nicholas Esmit had already lost his reason while in a Copenhagen prison waiting for a chance to clear himself and to bring action against his brother. The two successors of Nicholas were now to be given a chance to defend their official actions in the Danish courts and before the directors of the company. Commissioner Mikkelsen was employed from March until July with collecting evidence from the planters concerning Milan's conduct. A few extracts from a letter written by the oflScial reporter, Andrew Brock, to director Albert Gylden- sparre on June 30, 1686, just before the Fortuna sailed, will give an idea of the proceedings. "I wish for my part that your Excellency could have been here a single day and heard what "" Krarup, Milan, 29. ^^ Caille's mission appears to have borne no fruit beyond arousing the Span- iards. THE CRITICAL PERIOD (1680-1690) 65 thundering there has been in the commission, with howling, shouting, and screaming, one against the other, and I had to write it into the protocol just as fast [as they spoke] . . . but God be thanked it is over, and former Lieutenant Christopher Heins was yesterday made governor and vice commandant here. May God in heaven aid him to carry on his government better than his predecessors, which I expect him to do, as he has shown himself only as an honest and upright man. . . . " ^^ M^lan himself dictated a letter to the directors in justification of his conduct in which he vented his wrath on those inhabitants and employees who had attested to his zeal and faithfulness, but were now shouting, Crucify him, crucify him ! The letters of the two prisoners, Esmit and Lassen, which were sent over at the same time, bore out on the whole the testimony of the planters, whose sympathies were on the side of those two victims of Milan's wrath.^^ Mikkelsen left St. Thomas with his rather uncongenial com- pany on July 5, and did not arrive in Copenhagen until Octo- ber 12, 1686. Besides the two governors with their families and negro servants, the list of passengers included Niels Lassen, Gerhart Philipsen, and John Lorentz, whose testimony was desired in the suits. A commission was appointed within a week to try the case against Milan, but delays in getting the tangled evidence straightened prevented a decision being reached before November 17, 1687. An appeal to the Supreme Court brought further delays, but finally the case was opened on February 14, 1689. The judges rendered their individual opinions on March 14, and judgment was finally pronounced on March 21. The sentence was not a surprise to those who had followed the case. After a fair, impartial trial Gabriel Milan was found guilty and condemned to lose his property, honor, and life, and his head and hand were to be put upon a stake.^* A royal pardon saved him from the last grim disgrace,®^ and at « B. & D.. 1683-89. " Esmit to Directors; Lassen to same (March 13, 1686). A. E., 1682-89. ** Ejarup, Milan, 47. ^* Queen Charlotte Amalia had earlier befriended Madame Milan, and was one of the "chief participants" in the company. She had helped to mitigate 66 THE DANISH WEST INDIES dawn on March 26, 1689, he was beheaded on the New Square (Nytorv) in Copenhagen. Adolph Esmit's long imprisonment both on St. Thomas and in Copenhagen in 1686 and 1687 had given him grounds for ap- pearing as the injured party, and for demanding some form of restitution. While the Milan trial was dragging slowly on, the former governor and his wife seem to have been kept in prison in Copenhagen. From their arrival on October 12, 1686, until March, 1687, when Nicholas' case against his brother was finally ready for trial, they remained in confinement.^^ Here, as in the case of Milan, a commission was appointed,^'^ and al- though a number of petty irregularities and cases of tampering with accounts were found, Adolph Esmit was on November 2, 1687, given a verdict of not guilty. On the same day, the di- rectors of the company actually named him governor of St. Thomas,^^ and a few days later a fleet of three ships, the Young Tobias, the Red Cock (Den Rode Hane) and the Maria left Copenhagen for the West Indies. Accompanying Adolph Esmit, and in command of the fleet, was vice-admiral Iver Hoppe who seems to have had secret orders to bring Esmit back with him to Denmark in case he proved intractable. The latter was evidently being given his last chance, but at best it is difficult to see how the directors could have hoped that a spell of confinement could make the leopard change his spots. A report Commissioner Mikkelsen's instructions, and may have used her good offices here. ^^ Adolph's "brothers-in-law" Steen Andersen Bille and Jiirgen Jiirgensen gave bonds for his appearance. A. E., 1682-89 (March 25, 1687). ^^ Jens Juel, Mathias Moth, Muhle and Hoyer. *^ One condition was that he should invest 2,000 rdl. within one year after he took possession at St. Thomas. THE CRITICAL PERIOD (1680-1690) 67 of the Swedish ambassador at Copenhagen (Anders Leyencio) / dated November 11, 1687, offers an explanation for the strange conduct of the directors: "Three ships are now lying at anchor here and entirely ready to sail out of the harbor with the first wind. The first of these carries thirty, the second twelve, and the third six pieces, which [ships] those in charge are to take over to St. Thomas in the West Indies, and there install Governor Adolph Smitt [Esmit] who was brought here from thence as a prisoner. He has now been entirely acquitted of the serious charges made against him, but Milan [has been] condemned to lose his life, although the judgment has not yet been carried out. And inasmuch as said Smidt [Esmit] has informed the king of a scheme concerning a Spanish galleon, which is said to have been very heavily laden with silver and stranded not far from St. Thomas some forty years ago, Vice-admiral Hopp[e] is accompanying him with some divers and a lot of machines and implements with the intention of finding the silver. With what success it may be possible to report by the close of next May, especially since January and February, the months when the sea is most calm, are to be used for that purpose. Not only his Majesty, but other private persons, have advanced as much as 20,000 rdl. to promote this fishing scheme in the hope of securing a large return." ^^ In the February following, after the two smaller ships had arrived,^*' vice-governor Heins in a letter to the directors ex- plained the circumstances concerning the treasure ship. It lay on the north coast of " Spaniola," he wrote; twenty-six ships and sloops were gathered about the wreck until a royal English ship of fifty-six pieces came there and drove them all away. "We have received news from the English themselves that their captain has employed one hundred and fifty divers, and I think he had made a clean sweep, for many tons of gold had already been taken out." ^^ The incident is not without significance, for ^^ Danske Samlinger, II R. 5 B., p. 175. ™ The Young Tobias arrived at St. Thomas on January 29, 1688, and the Red Cock on February 23. The Maria with Esmit and Hoppe arrived a month later (March 24). " C. Heins to directors (February 24, 1688). B. & D., 1683-89. 68 THE DANISH WEST INDIES it indicated the king's wiUingness to jeopardize the interests of the colony by an impossible appointee for the chance of securing precious metal from a galleon wrecked on a Spanish coast. After his arrival on March 24, 1688, in the leading-strings of vice-admiral Hoppe, it took Adolph Esmit just three months to convince all concerned of his utter incapacity. On June 22, his quarters were moved from the fort to the ship, where they re- mained until he had finished his last voyage to Denmark. Be- fore the Maria's departure, the vice-admiral called the in- habitants together (July 7) and told them that he wished to know if Esmit's statement that he held the affection of all on the island was true. "If you want Adolph Esmit to become governor, speak now while there is yet time," the vice-admiral said. To this the planters all responded as with one voice, "No! if that should happen, we should all leave the land!" When asked concerning vice-governor Heins, they replied that they asked for no better governor .^^ This time Charity's pulling of wires could not avail, but she pulled at them with her wonted vigor to the last as the directors learned from an intercepted letter to her husband. ^^ Thus ended nearly a decade of weary "J5. & D., 1683-89. Esmit's diary (July 7, 1688). This was finished in another hand, apparently Lorentz's. '" See Appendix E, p. 303. The case against Adolph Esmit was resumed by the company on his return, but apparently without result, for the ship and goods he had sent to Flushing in 1684 were confiscated before he could get hold of them, so he had nothing to be seized. Early in 1689 he offered the Swedish ambassador in Copenhagen his services in seizing the island of St. Thomas for Sweden without loss of life. Nothing came of it, and on January 25, 1690, the case against him was finally dropped, and he was allowed to go whither he would. He seems to have left Denmark for Courland, after which all trace of him is lost. THE CRITICAL PERIOD (1680-1690) 69 administrative turmoil. During this time three governors had been tried and found utterly wanting. Of dividends there had been no thought; the stockholders could count themselves fortunate that the island was still under Danish sovereignty. It became the business of Christopher Heins to carry out the work with which Adolph Esmit had been charged. Esmit had brought with him a lengthy series of instructions, the carrying out of which came to be left in the steadier hands of his successor, who served the company faithfully and well until his death on October 2, 1689. He was ably seconded by John Lorentz, a young man who had begun his career in St. Thomas as assistant in the company's office, had been in Copenhagen at the Milan and Esmit trials, and had returned with Adolph Esmit in 1688 with a commission as bookkeeper and assistant for the company. The young man was engaged for four years at a salary of 14 rdl. per month. Heins' administration ^^ was a quiet one if contrasted with the turbulent times when the Esmits and Milan held the fort. There was nothing for the Company to do but mark time until conditions might invite renewed action. As a result of a mandate issued in Esmit's last brief term offering eight years' exemption from taxes to intending settlers from other islands, a few French Huguenot and Dutch planters moved to St. Thomas with their negroes. Louis XIV's revocation of the Edict of Nantes in 1685 was car- ried out by zealous Jesuits for whom distance did not dim the sense of duty. Some slight progress in planting was made during these troubled years. Cotton, sugar, tobacco, and indigo were sold by the planters to the Company, Trade with the home country being irregular, considerable petty trade was carried on with the lesser islands, with the French on St. Croix and St. Kitts, with the Dutch on Saba, St. Eustatius and Curasao, Besides planting, some of the inhabitants, as Captain Delicaet, made a living by fishing turtle, which were particularly numerous in the Vest. Reg., 1671-99 (January 25, 1690); Danske Saml., II R. 5 B., p. 297 (March 1, 1689); H. Pflug, den danske Pillegrim, p. 1174. ^^ Heins' council after Esmit's departure consisted of Henry Irgens, Capt. Delicaet, John de Windt, and John Lorentz. 70 THE DANISH WEST INDIES vicinity of Crab Island. The company had begun before Heins' time to go into the planting business, and managed to secure eighty slaves from one of the Guinea cargoes brought to America by Pauli, the secretary of the Company 7^ A most significant effort to start the island on the road toward prosperity had been made in 1685, when the Elector of Bran- denburg entered into a treaty with the King of Denmark, by which a company organized under his protection and patronage was to be permitted to establish a factory and a plantation at St. Thomas under certain conditions. Occupation had been begun in 1686, and hopes were entertained that the Branden- burg occupation might help put new life into the poor, distracted little colony. The accession of John Lorentz to the post of act- ing governor in 1696 was the beginning of an official career of notable efficiency which ended with the death of Lorentz in 1702. Although not governor during the entire interval, he never re- laxed his interest in the Company's welfare. The connection of John Lorentz with the Danish West India and Guinea Company as its acting head brings to an end what may properly be called its most critical period. '^ The contract was made October 26, 1686, and the slaves were delivered by Captain Cordt (Cort) May 14, 1687. C. H. (May 26, 1687.) CHAPTER III THE BBANDENBURGERS AT ST. THOMAS It will be remembered that in the second war of Louis XIV against the Dutch, which was ended by the treaties of Nimeguen (1678-1679), the Elector of Brandenburg and the King of Denmark-Norway were both allied with the Protestant Nether- lands against France and Sweden. Brandenburg, like the other German states, had not yet recovered from the horrors of the Thirty Years' War, and was distinctly to be reckoned among the weaker European states. That it was able to play even a small part in European diplomacy was due in a considerable degree to the energetic and capable government of Frederick William of HohenzoUern, the Great Elector, who was Duke of Prussia as well as Elector of Brandenburg. Sweden's Baltic ambi- tions, and particularly her possession of Western Pomerania on the south shores of that sea, made her a natural rival of Brandenburg-Prussia. The fact that Sweden was the common enemy of Denmark and Brandenburg would of itseK tend to drive the two states into an alliance. Early in the reign of Frederick William, Brandenburg had attempted, through negotiations first with Denmark, and later with Austria and Spain, to form a company and establish fac- tories in East Indian lands, but without success.^ During the negotiations in connection with the peace of Nimeguen, she had attempted to secure French support in her efforts to estab- lish a trade in Guinea that would survive the opposition of the Dutch and English companies. Her ambassador in Paris, Meinders, was instructed to try to secure a permanent factory on the Guinea coast. In a letter from Benjamin Raule, at that time director-in-chief for naval affairs {Oberdirektor in Seesachen) he was urgently requested to "labor energetically to bring ^ R. Schiick, Brandenburg-Preussens Kolonial Politik . . . \,% et seq., 48 et seq. The attempt was made to buy the Danish factory of Dansborg in 1647. Ibid.. 19. [71] 72 THE DANISH WEST INDIES about the sanction [of France] to lands," and be willing to make considerable sacrifices by way of reciprocal trade privileges. The French, however, did not consider Brandenburg trade of sufficient importance to be worth the trouble of a treaty.^ The first proposal to establish a Brandenburg African com- pany appears to have been made by Benjamin Raule in Decem- ber, 1679. It was to this Dutchman, more than to any other one man, that the interest of Brandenburg in Guinea and the West Indies during the last two decades of the seventeenth century is due. Raule was born at Flushing (Vhssingen) in Zeeland, and had become, before the outbreak of war with France, a shipowner on a large scale (Grossreeder), and a coun- cilor in the nearby town of Middelburg. In the naval war of 1672 he was practically ruined, and in the war that followed Sweden's invasion of the Mark of Brandenburg he sought to re- coup his fortunes by serving the Elector as a privateer. On the conclusion of peace the Elector made him director-in-chief for naval affairs, and in 1681 he became director-general of marine with the rank of colonel. A man of restless activity and bold imagination, he was brimful of schemes for promoting the commerce of Brandenburg-Prussia. At one time it was an East India Company, at another an Iceland company, and now it was a company for trading with the Guinea and Angola coasts in "wax, gold, ivory, grain, blacks, and whatever the coast pro- duces." ^ In June, 1677, before the French had concluded their treaty with the Dutch, he had offered to lead a privateering expedition against the French and another agamst Spain, the latter for the purpose of securing the equivalent in ships for the subsidies promised by Spain to Brandenburg in a treaty made in 1674. That, he argued, would cause not only the Spaniards, but the entire world to open their eyes in astonishment at the Elector's sea power, and would lead French, Swedes, and Dutch to try to make commercial treaties with him.^ " Schtick, I, 135, 136. Raule had proposed engaging in the Guinea trade and having the Elector participate with him when he was first called to Berlin in 1676. Ibid.. 137. » Ibid., II, 89-94. * Ibid., I, 98, 99, 112. THE BRANDENBURGERS AT ST. THOMAS 73 Frederick William I fell in readily enough with Raule's plan. The Peace of Nimeguen prevented any attempt against the French, but the rest of Raule's program was actually attempted in 1680, when two expeditions were sent out, one to Spanish- American waters, and the other to the Guinea coast. As the America-bound fleet of six ships of war and one "Brenner," (fireship?) sailed by Copenhagen and through the Sound in August, 1680, the curious inhabitants never dreamed that they were gazing at the embryo of an imperial German navy that was destined to become in two centuries the dominant naval factor in the Baltic sea.^ After sending back two vessels with a Spanish prize captured near Ostend, the remaining four vessels proceeded westward. "About 20th December last," wrote Sir Henry Morgan, deputy governor of Jamaica, to his master early in 1681, "ar- rived here four small frigates, between sixteen and thirty guns, under the command of four Flushingers, Captain Cornelius Reers, Admiral, belonging to the Duke (sic) of Brandenburg, having letters of reprisal against the Spaniard." ^ The failure of the fleet to accomplish more than the capture of a few smaU prizes was ascribed by the Swedish ambassador at Copenhagen, in a letter written to his government four years after the event,^ to the fact "that the Elector had no harbor in America, and that therefore the fleet was forced to return with its mission un- performed." This letter was written at the time when the Danish company was at its lowest ebb, and while the negotia- tions that ended in the Brandenburgers securing a factory site at St. Thomas were in progress. The Guinea expedition from Brandenburg landed in 1680 at Cape Three Points and on May 16, 1681, the Elector's representatives made a treaty with three of the native chiefs.^ This was followed by the establish- ^ The fleet was equipped with 165 guns, and had a crew of 519 sailors and 180 soldiers. Schiick, I, 114 et seq. 6 Cal. Col, 1681-85, No. 13 (January 27, 1681). ^ Danshe Saml., II R. 5 B., p. 145. Report of Leyenclo, October 16, 1685. The letter mentions the report that Denmark would likely cede Crab Island or St. John to the Elector. 8 SchUck, I, 313, and II, 199 (No. 51a). The text of the treaty is quoted in full in Vol. II. 74 THE DANISH WEST INDIES ment in December, 1682, of the first Brandenburg factory, just east of the Dutch station at El Mina, near the former Branden- burg landing place; they named their station "Den Grossen Friedrichsberg." ^ In February, 1684, they occupied Accada, just to the east of their first factory, and in January, 1685, a place called Tacca- rary. They lost the latter to the Dutch, the leading traders on this part of the coast, in 1687, and in its place the Brandenbur- gers took up a station at Tacrama (or Tacerma), not far from Cape Three Points, which they named Fort Sophie Louise. In planning to secure a West Indian factory where they could dispose of the human part of their Guinea cargoes, the Branden- burgers were following the lead of the Enghsh, Dutch, French, Swedes, Danes, and Courlanders. Despite threats and acts of violence by the Dutch West India Company against the Bran- denburg factors Raule proceeded with his Guinea plans, which he promoted with the help of disaffected shareholders of the Dutch company. Some extracts from Raule's letters to the Elector will show what was transpiring. "John Pedy writes me from Rotterdam," he remarks in 1681 (August 16.?) "that the Messrs. Coy mans and Van Belle from Holland, who are two of the leading contractors with the Dutch West India Company and deliver to it six thousand slaves annually, have informed him on the quiet that they would be glad to consider entering into a contract with me instead of with the company, provided it would be possible to arrange matters with the Danish crown, so that either we could buy their place St. Thomas or secure full and free permission to bring slaves to the island." Pedy's suggestion prompted Raule to propose bringing the matter before the Danish court. "Pedy and I and our company would be able, I believe," Raule wrote, "with the help of the said Van Belle and Coymans to bring together 40,000 florins, of which we would present half to the Danes on condition that half of the returns [from the capital invested] should go to Copenliagen [apparently in return for the use of St. Thomas], and the other half to Konigsberg. I believe that if it were properly inau- 9 Schiick, I, 314 et seq. This factory is referred to by Lucas (ii, 68) and others as Fredericksburg. THE BRANDENBURGERS AT ST. THOMAS 75 gurated we would be able to put the scheme through. And the [Dutch] West India Company would thereby be entirely ruined. And we should then be able to send twenty-five ships out from this land each year and develop a very large trade, indeed bring much fine silver to you and marked advantage to your subjects. But everything must be done under the authority of your Electoral Highness and the King. That would promote friend- ship between you and him. I should very much like to hear the opinion of your Electoral Highness upon the matter." ^° Four years later, the negotiations with Denmark were taken up in earnest. To Raule and those interested with him it was becoming clearer and clearer that a permanent station in the West Indies was necessary to make the Guinea trade profitable. "Every one knows," wrote Raule to the Elector on October 26, 1685, "that the slave trade is the source of the wealth which the Spaniards bring out of the West Indies, and that whoever knows how to furnish them slaves, will share their wealth. Who can say by how many millions of hard cash the Dutch West India Company has enriched itself in this slave trade!" " Raule had tried in vain during the previous year to buy or lease the French islands of St. Vincent and St. Croix,^^ and he was now ready to take up negotiations with Denmark. Inas- much as two of the recently appointed governors of the Com- pany at St. Thomas were at that time in custody, and the last appointed, Gabriel Milan, was about to be displaced, the Danish company was likely to favor anything that would promise a regular income for the shareholders.^"^ Inquiries were in fact begun in March, 1684, when Raule and von Knyphausen, repre- senting the Berlin and East Friesland shareholders in the new company, were deputed to sound the Danish court and see whether it would permit the establishment on St. Thomas of a few "lodges" and negro stations {Logen and Negereien) on the "> Schuck, 1, 148. " Ibid., I, 192. >2 Ibid.. I, 192. " Schiick's statement (I, 193) that no news had come out of St. Thomas for three years will not hold, though its trade certainly "lag damals beinahe vollig darnieder." 76 THE DANISH WEST INDIES condition of paying to the Danish company two slaves out of each hundred brought in. In 1685, when Raule betook himself to Copenhagen with instructions from the Elector, negotiations moved rapidly for- ward. He was to try to purchase or lease St. Thomas, or at least make it accessible to Brandenburg ships, because, as his instructions said, without the slave trade to America the African company cannot make any headway {nicht emergiren kann)}^ Jens Juel, the chief director of the Danish com- pany, opposed the Brandenburg plan from the first,^^ so Raule had to work through such other men of influence as chancellor (Storkansler) Frederick Ahlefeldt, Count Ulrik Frederick Gyl- denlove, councilors Conrad Bierman and Conrad Reventlow.^^ In an audience granted on October 13, 1685, Raule learned that the king favored a union of the two companies. ^^ Shortly thereafter, Raule and Gyldensparre, a director with Juel in the Danish company, conferred at Hadersleben in Schleswig, and prepared a scheme of union ^^ based upon the king's ex- pressed desire. It was proposed that the Danes should retain their stations in Guinea (Cape Coast) and the West Indies (Christiansfort on St. Thomas), and the Brandenburgers like- wise their Guinea stations of Great Fredericksburg {Gross- Friedrichsberg) and Accada; that both groups should share the garrisoning of these stations on equal terms. Cape Coast was to be the African headquarters. A governor-general elected by both companies in common was to reside in Copenhagen, and he was to have the supreme command over the garrisons in those places; an officer known as "chief in commercial matters" was to be selected by the Elector; Calvinists and Lutherans | were to have free exercitium religionis on St. Thomas, and ' Catholics and Jews were to be tolerated and allowed to hold private services, provided they permitted no scandala. Two " SchUck, I, 193. His instructions were dated September 25, 1685. " Ibid., I, 194, note 185. ^* Ibid., I, 194, note 183. Bierman was created Count von Ehrenschild in 1681. " Ibid., I, 194. » Ibid., 194, 195. THE BRANDENBURGERS AT ST. THOMAS 77 chambers, the one to be in Copenhagen and the other in Emden, each composed of three shareholders, and the whole to be presided over by Raule, were to constitute the governing board. In case of war the colonies should be considered as neu- tral territory. Private individuals were to be entirely excluded from the colonial trade. The Elector refused to sanction this scheme of union, and after much trouble, including the bestowal of "gifts" by Raule upon influential persons, a treaty was finally concluded on November 24, 1685, which in effect laid down the terms on which the Brandenburg African Company should be allowed to do business in St. Thomas. ^^ As the bulk of the shareholders came from East Friesland and Emden, that city became the business headquarters of the company .^° Supplemental agree- ments were made on March 5 ^^ and October 2,^^ 1686. The treaty should remain in force for thirty years, reckoning from the time that the first ship with men and materials was sent thither,^^ and might then be renewed by mutual agreement. Sovereignty over St. Thomas and the surrounding islands was to reside in the King of Denmark. The Brandenburgers were to receive a plantation ground of sufficient size to employ two hun- dred negroes, and this land was to be exempt from taxes during the first three years, reckoning from the time that the first ship with building materials and necessaries arrived in St. Thomas; ^* after that time they were to pay five pounds of tobacco or its equivalent as an annual tax on each hundred square feet of land thus occupied. This loosely drawn provision, which was re- ferred to in the opening paragraphs of both of the supplemental "declarations" of 1686, was to become the pivotal point in the "^^.SchiJck, 1, 197. The text in the original German is given in ibid., II, 257 et seq. The Great Elector ratified the treaty on December 19, 1685, and Chris- tian V ratified it on June 5, 1686. 2" Ibid.. I, 174. ^' See "Declaration zu dem Vertrage wegen St. Thomas vom Si. November 1685" in ibid., II, 278-281. ^^ See "Fernere Declaration . . ." in ibid., II, 293-295. » Ibid., II, 258 (If 3). 2^ Ibid., II, 258, 259 (Ifs 2, 5, 6). Schuck (I, 197) seems to have confused 3 and 5 in discussing the time from which the 30 year period was to be reckoned. 78 THE DANISH WEST INDIES vexatious troubles that shortly arose between the representa- tives of the two companies. ^^ On all products exported from St. Thomas, the Brandenburg African Company was to pay the Danish company five per cent, in kind (in natura); ^^ on slaves imported, one per cent., on those sold or shipped out of the land, two per cent.^^ The con- tract provided further that all goods coming in or going out were to be subject to a weighing fee of one pound of sugar or its equivalent for each one hundred pounds. ^^ Provision was made for the settlement of disputes in which subjects of both states were involved. ^^ To the Danes the greatest promise held out by the treaty was contained in the paragraphs dealing with the plantation which they expected the Brandenburgers to estab- lish, and which, with poll taxes, weighing fees, export and im- port dues, was calculated to yield a moderate return upon the Danish company's capital stock. To the Germans, the Guinea trade was the main consideration; they seem from the first not to have looked upon the plantation idea as anything obligatory for them.^*^ Raule's dream that an investment of 150,000 Thaler should be able to yield a million in two or three years ^^ was going to be rudely shattered when the application of the treaty was to put to the test his diplomatic ability; and the stubborn obstacle that blocked the way to friendly intercourse was to be the provision which demanded or did not demand the establishment of a plantation, according to the reader's predilections. What the treaty really did was to raise up on St. Thomas a rival to the Danish company which still might deal in slaves if it desired, and which already owned and managed a couple of good-sized plantations. So long as the respective fields of the two com- panies were not strictly limited by agreement, there would be 2* For the Company's viewpoint see the directors' instructions to A. Esmit, November 9, 1687. A. E., 1682-89. 26Schiick, II, 259(117). " Ibid., II. 260 (1[ 8). 2« Ibid., II, 260 (If 10). 29 Ibid., II, 261 (1[ 15, H 16, If 17). 30 Ihid., I, 231. " lUd., I, 195. I THE BRANDENBURGERS AT ST. THOMAS 79 trouble about in proportion to the vitality developed by the two companies. A second and serious occasion for friction lay in the provision which made the Brandenburg company respon- sible to the Danish company for whatever damage might result from carrying on "a dangerous trade" with foreign nations. ^^ This was to protect the Danes against complications from Brandenburg encouragement of privateering. Denmark could ill afford being dragged into trouble with Spain through circum- stances over which she had no control. The first director of the Brandenburg factory at St. Thomas was one Laporte whose knowledge of French and whose business shrewdness made him well suited to his task. He left Emden in August, 1686, on the Marschall Dorfling ^^ which Captain John Catt had taken out from Pillau in Prussia and passed Elsinore early in June.^* Captain Catt arrived in St. Thomas via Guinea on November 23. The Falcon dropped anchor on the 24th.^^ Meanwhile the Peace, Captain Jacob Lambrecht, was sent out with four other vessels, — all of them with Danish passes — ^to the Guinea coast for slaves. So confident was Raule of success that he had sent out the ships without consulting the share- holders.^^ Before the Falcon had left St. Thomas with its cargo of sugar, cotton, cacao, etc.,^^ the vice-governor, Christopher Heins, had had a disagreement with M. Laporte regarding the payment of export and import duties and the use of the Danish company's scales for weighing the goods shipped in or out by the Branden- burgers.^^ Strict insistence by the Danes on the latter point »2 Schuck. n, 266 (1[ 35). '^ Also referred to as the " Feldmarschall Derflinger," Schiick, I, 206; Laporte's name is variously given as La Porte, Delaporte. " Oresundtoldboger for 1686. 35 Heins to directors, January 4, 1687. B. & D., 1683-89. "^ Schuck, I, 206. " The cargo as reported by the vice-governor,. Heins, was as follows: 64,581 lbs. sugar, 7,250 lbs. cotton, 1,430 lbs. cacao, 1,024 lbs. tobacco, 55 lbs. confituren (sweetmeats?), 21 lbs. Caret (seaturtle), 20 lbs. " Bastar-Canel" (a sort of spice resembling cinnamon), 566 pieces of pockwood, and 220 tons of other wood. Heins to directors. May 26, 1687. C. H., 1685-89. 38 IMd. 80 THE DANISH WEST INDIES gave them a very definite idea of what their neighbors in St. Thomas were doing. The Brandenburgers seem never to have entertained seriously the idea of actually establishing a bona fide plantation. Neither Laporte nor Moses Caille, who acted as deputy director on Laporte's visit to Berlin in 1688, were willing to admit the soundness of the Danish interpretation. On the pretext that they must await instructions from home before taking up plantation ground, they kept the Danish officials in suspense until their impatience was turned into a suspicion that the Brandenburgers were looking for a chance to seize the entire island. The vigor with which the Brandenburg authorities pushed their business in procuring slaves and dis- posing of them on St. Thomas and the surrounding islands (as St. Eustatius) aroused the fears of the Danes who were receiving next to no assistance from the Company. The fact that the planters became indebted to the Brandenburg company led the Danes to fear that in case of trouble the planters might side with the foreign company. ^^ The persistent annoyances to which the Brandenburgers were subjected led them to attempt the occupation or purchase of neighboring islands. They tried to secure Crab Island, but the Danes laid vigorous claim to it, and the Spaniards sent ships around at intervals to drive off such settlers as they might find there.^" The Brandenburgers finally did take possession of St. Peter, an appropriately named rocky islet just northwest of St. John, but it was ill adapted to their purposes. ^^ Except for the refusal of the English to give up their claims to the island, they might have secured Tobago, near Trinidad, from the Duke of Courland. The negotiations were begun early in 1687, but the duke's rather shady title and the opposition of the Dutch made it impracticable to push the matter to a conclusion at that time.^^ The death of vice-governor Heins in October, 1689, and the election of John Lorentz to take his place, did not improve the " Heins to Directors, (September 2, 1687). C. H.. 1685-89 (?) *> Schiick, I, 233. Lorentz to Directors (January 6, 1693), C. B.. 1690-1713. ! THE LEASING OF GUINEA AND ST. THOMAS 101 home."' The governor's chagrin must have been still deeper when he received a copy of the king's order of September 3, 1692, directing Thormohlen to pay 8,000 of the 16,000 rdl. — in case he had not delivered the contested goods to the Brandenburgers al- ready — to Vice-admiral Iver Hoppe. This was by way of resti- tution for a seizure made by the Brandenburg commissioners at Emden in 1689,^^ — a characteristic seventeenth century mode of "settling" an international dispute. But the king's previous order of June 7, 1692,-^ had already been received and executed. Delavigne made a poor start when he tried to carry out Thormohlen's schemes for raising the taxes. His attempts to curry favor with the Brandenburg director-general imme- diately after his arrival made him an object of suspicion to John Lorentz, who was watching his every move with an eagle eye and reporting his observations to Juel and Moth in Copenhagen. Lorentz was a man worth reckoning with, for he retained a strong hold upon many of the planters and hold-over officials (like the factor, von Holten and assistant, Peter Chris- tensen), and he could no doubt have been of real assistance as an adviser on matters of inter-island trade. Before Lorentz had returned from Copenhagen in the autumn of 1694 to replace Delavigne, the latter had imprisoned and put von Holten in irons, charging him, and apparently on good grounds, with misappropriating funds and juggling accounts. ^^ Likewise the assistant Peter Christensen, as a result of the irresponsible talk of a negress, — "a loose heathenish female," — had been chained to a block in a cell at the fort, and his entire estate condemned "without any judgment, summons or warning." One Engel Huysen had been kept for months "in a dark room, without air, sun or moonshine" because of alleged rebellious action. ^^ ^^ The "vexation and chagrin" which this caused sent the governor to bed "with a deathly illness" for seven weeks, according to his own account. Dela- vigne to Thormohlen (November 25, 1692). Delavigne papers. 22 Christian V to Iver Hoppe (September 3, 1692). Vest. Reg., 1670-1699. -^ See Neben-Rezess zum Interims-Vergleick, June 10/20, 1692 (Schiick, op. cit., 11,405-407). ^* Von Holten, " Liste paa hvis jeg kommer till kort paa Cassen" (November 15, 1694). Delavigne papers. 26 Lorentz to Directors (January 17, 1695). C. B., 1690-1713. 102 THE DANISH WEST INDIES Thomas Berentsen, an influential planter, had been removed from his lieutenant's post and his place on the councU.^^ Delavigne's relations with the Brandenburgers did not long retain that spirit of mutual confidence which Thormohlen and the king had imposed upon him as one of his first duties. On Thormohlen's failure to secure from the Brandenburg company the 3,000 rdl. with which he expected to make part of his annual payment for the lease, Delavigne had seized Brandenburg goods to the amount of 9,320 pieces-of-eight.^^ The directors seem in fact to have left the collection of the rental dues from the Bran- denburgers to Thormohlen, who naturally disclaimed all respon- sibility for the whole Brandenburg matter. ^^ Acting upon his master's orders Delavigne had successfully protested against the attempt of the Brandenburgers to lay claim to Crab Island,^^ While the governor was being kept thoroughly occupied with local problems, the proprietor Thormohlen was having troubles of his own with the implacable directors of the Company. This difficulty began when the first payment became due in 1692. The situation had even then begun to look dark to Thormohlen. Brandenburg had negotiated a new treaty with Denmark pro- viding for a rental very much lower than what the directors had insisted on when the Thormohlen lease had been drawn up, and the latter had not even been consulted in the matter. The king had peremptorily ordered Thormohlen's governor to deliver up the 16,000 rdl. worth of sugar which Lorentz had seized. Al- though not included, according to Moth's statement, in the in- ventory of the property taken over by Thormohlen, the latter had looked upon it as one of his perquisites.^" ^' Berentsen to Delavigne (December 18, 1694); Delavigne to Berentsen (Feb- ruary 20, 1695). Delavigne papers. " Directors to Lorentz (July 28, 1694). C. B., 1690-1713. 28 Moth to Thormohlen (August 15, 1693); Thormohlen to Juel and Moth (February 28, 1694). Ibid. '^ Delavigne had sent Capt. Peter Iversen to Crab Island on December 19, 1694, just two days before the Brandenburg director had sent his frigate, the Lion, there with orders to take formal possession. See above, pp. 88, 90. Delavigne papers, Joum. (December 17 ct seq.); Lorentz to Directors (January 6, 1693), C. B., 1690-1713. 2" Moth to Thormohlen (June 25, 1692); same to same (July 15, 1693). C. B., 1690-1713. THE LEASING OF GUINEA AND ST. THOMAS 103 By the end of the second year of the contract, the directors began to breathe forth threats as to what the lessee might expect if he failed to make prompt payment of his arrears.^^ Finally in February, 1694, Juel and Moth went to the length of making a formal demand on Thormohlen through a royally appointed notary public, for categorical answers to the following questions : (1) whether he desired to abide by the contract any longer, and (2) whether he would make immediate payment of the rental for 1693. Failure to render a satisfactory reply on these points was to constitute a breach of contract. In his reply Thormohlen pointed out that the Brandenburgers had not only been awarded 16,000 rdl. "of my effects, which according to the inventory, I should have and hold as long as the contract lasted," but that he had seen nothing of the 3,000 rdl. rental dues, in vain search of which he had made a difficult journey.^^ In March Thormohlen began to bring suit for damages against the Company, and immediately the directors nominated John Lorentz as governor, giving him the title of "vice commandant in our land St. Thomas in the West Indies." The king confirmed the latter as governor on March 24, and on April 7 issued an order to Delavigne to hand over to Lorentz the command en- trusted to him by Thormohlen.^^ On Lorentz's arrival in St. Thomas with these letters the connection of Thormohlen with the proprietorship of St. Thomas was entirely severed. It only remained to determine the extent of the damage caused to Thormohlen by the company, or the reverse. Before the court appointed to investigate his claims ^^ Thormohlen maintained that the damage suffered from Brandenburgers, or from Zee- landers and Hamburgers masquerading under the Brandenburg name, brought his losses up to 76,000 rdl., not counting other 31 Moth to Thormbhlen (July 1 and 15, 1693). C. B., 1690-1713. 3^ Juel and Moth to Thormohlen (February 26, 1694) ; Thormohlen's reply (February 28, 1694). Ihid. 33 Report of Directors' meeting (March 19, 1694), C. B., 1690-1713; Christian V's order to Lorentz (March 24, 1694); Christian V's order to Delavigne (April 7, 1694); Vest. Reg., 1671-99. 3* This commission consisted of "his High Excellency," Stadtholder U. F. Gyldenlove, Reventlow, J, Juel, von Plessen, Moth, von Jessen, and Harboe. Protokol over Kommissioneme udi Raadstuen . . . vol. 3 (July 24, 1694). 104 THE DANISH WEST INDIES inconveniences, loss of credit, and the like. Out of 98,875 rdl. expended, he had received only 39,341 rdl. in return, making a total cash loss of 59,534 rdl. The court admitted that he had considerable ground for complaint, and in recommending that the king extend him his good offices, that body called to mind his former enterprises in various lines and held that he might render the state considerable service in the future by remaining in business.^^ Whether Thormohlen secured any further satisfac- tion from the Company is doubtful. Though he never recovered from the shock which the West Indian proprietorship and the accidents of war ^^ gave his finances, he rose during the reign of Frederick IV (1699-1717) to membership once more on the Board of Trade (1704-1708), and just before his death in 1708 (December 25) he was made a member of the newly established Board of Police and Trade.^^ The leasing of the factories in Guinea and the West Indies had brought profit neither to the lessees nor to the Company's stockholders. If the investors were to enjoy any appreciable returns, it was more likely to come about through the honest efforts of their own trained employees, loyally supported by directors who were willing to repose con- fidence in them. One great European war was nearing its close; another was to begin after the death of Charles II of Spain in 1700. In the lull between these two great struggles the Danish West India and Guinea Company was to go through a period of internal readjustment that was to enable it, better than in the past war, to reap the advantages of Denmark-Norway's neutral position in any future complications. In this attempt to bring the Company into line with the commercial demands of the age, a chief part was played by the oft-mentioned John Lorentz who, beginning afresh in 1694, gave the Company nearly eight years of continuous and capable service. ^^ Protokol over Kommissionerne udi Raadsiuen . . . vol. 3 (July 24, 1694.) ^^ He stated that twelve of his ships had been seized by one or another of the warring factions. O. Nielsen {op. cit., VI, 171), mentions a petition from N. J. AtS, Thormohlen and W. and N. Edinger, presented in 1697 in which they claim to have lost 500,000 rdl. on ships seized during the war. ^^ Arkiv-Meddel, 1S86-SS, 163, 164. The Board of Trade was united with the Police Board by a royal order issued on March 23, 1708. The new Board continued in existence until 1731. CHAPTER V THE GOVERNORSHIP OF JOHN LORENTZ When John Lorentz returned to St. Thomas to replace Dela- vigne as governor in November, 1694, he had been for ten years a participant in the troubled history of the company and its colony as above related. This young Flensborger, according to Pere Labat, had traveled in France, Spain and Italy, and spoke French fluently. He first came over as assistant in the company's office with the irascible Milan. He had humbly done the governor's bidding and bent before his violent wrath, and he managed to survive Milan's administration and to do service as a witness against him in Copenhagen. When Com- missioner Mikkelsen was sent to St. Thomas to give Adolph Esmit a trial as governor and as loadstone for Spanish treasure, Lorentz returned to his former post to the gratification of the company's directors whom he had impressed as a young man of promise. After Esmit's return to Denmark Lorentz served under vice-governor Heins as the company's bookkeeper. On Heins' death in October, 1689, two deputies from each of the "nations" on the island (Danish, Dutch, French, and pos- sibly German) elected him vice-governor to the great satisfac- tion of the inhabitants. In 1691 he induced Madame Heins to remain on the island as his wife, and on May fifth and sixth a brilliant wedding was celebrated in the town of Charlotte Amalia, to which the leading planters, Brandenburg function- aries, and French and English captains in the harbor lent dis- tinction by their presence.^ ^ Lorentz" 8 Journal (March 31, May 5, etc., 1691). [103] ]06 THE DANISH WEST INDIES After Thormohlen had leased the island Lorentz remained in charge until Delavigne's arrival in September, 1692. Even be- fore Lorentz had been displaced, the directors had required him to keep them accurately informed as to the state of Thormoh- len's trade. In the summer of 1693 he returned to Copenhagen to give the directors a verbal report on the St. Thomas situa- tion. About the time that Lorentz was departing for Copen- hagen, Joachim von Holten (who was later to become the eighth governor of St. Thomas) wrote a letter to Thormohlen filled with complaints against Delavigne and assuring Thorm(>h- len that he had "lost a good servant {Sorgtrager) m John Lor- entz.^ Whether the letter was written with or without the latter's knowledge may not be said, but it was certainly in line with Lorentz's personal ambitions. Captain Peter Iversen's arrival in Copenhagen that summer with but a small cargo for the proprietor Thormohlen led to an investigation by the latter which caused him to issue a long list of charges against Gov- ernor Delavigne, and to order one George Lorentzen (or Lau- rentsen), whom he asserted that he had "trained to take charge of the government," to proceed to St. Thomas, place the incumbent under arrest, and assume the vice-governor's position.^ With another administrative dispute threatening at St. Thomas, and with the directors preparing to bring suit against the proprietor at Copenhagen, it was surely the part of the discreet office-seeker to be on hand where he might fish in the troubled waters. For some unexplained reason the new appointee never took office. Lorentz assumed charge of the government on November 23, 1694, immediately following his arrival. He had come over by way of the Dutch island of Curasao whence he had sent the directors a letter telling of the bad conditions reported at St. Thomas.^ Lorentz, according to his own account, had come 2 J. von Holten to Thormohlen (May 25, 1693). Delavigne papers. ' Thormohlen's examination of Captain Iversen and "Irnst" Rongel (Sep- tember 20); Thormohlen's nine charges against Delavigne (September 25); Thor- mohlen's order to George Lorentsen (September 25, 1693). Ibid. The latter's name was also spelled Laurentsen. * In his letter of January 17, 1695, Lorentz mentions having sent a letter from Curacao on October 22, 1694. C. B., 1690-1713. THE GOVERNERSHIP OF JOHN LORENTZ 107 not a whit too soon, for the Enghsh authorities in the neighbor- ing islands had already forbidden their people from trading with St. Thomas, while the French were designing to remove Delavigne from his fort by force and bring him to the general at Martinique because of alleged high-handed treatment of a French ship in St. Thomas harbor. Lorentz found two of the company's three plantations ° badly run down, the inhab- itants dissatisfied with the government, and the Brandenburgers still smarting under the robbery perpetrated by the "blond" Legendre scarcely three weeks before. He prepared to apply himself immediately to the task of rehabilitating the colony as best he might under the liberal set of instructions with which the directors had furnished him. These instructions deserve some passing notice. With respect to the Brandenburgers (^ 14) he was to abide by the three-year arrangement made on April 23, 1692, after which he should proceed according to the original treaty of 1685. He was to keep on good terms with all foreign "generals" and governors, assert the company's right to St. John, Passage (a small island just east of Porto Rico), and Crab Islands, resist attacks from without, and prevent re- bellion, whether of blacks or whites, from within. Governor Lorentz was especially urged, by way of keeping on good terms with his neighbors in the West Indies, to have noth- ing to do with "sea-robbers," though he was to be allowed to buy properly condemned prizes when they might be offered for sale. In his relations with the English, who were becoming more aggressive as the war went on, he was soon to have a chance to show his mettle. The most radical departure from the previous policy, however, came as a result of an offer made by Lorentz himself to the directors. "Inasmuch as he [Lo- rentz] had undertaken to support himself and all the company's employees and soldiers on the income from the company's plantations and the poU tax," so ran their acceptance of his offer (^ 8), " we are satisfied on behalf of the company to accept for it such surplus as may be left over, if any there be, leaving it to his honesty and his oath to see that the company may re- ^ These were known as the " New Quarter plantation," the " Sugar plantation " and "Krumbays plantation." 108 THE DANISH WEST INDIES ceive what is due."^ In other words, Lorentz was given a free hand to administer the Company's affairs in the West Indies exactly as he saw fit. The concluding paragraph of their in- structions gives a still better idea of the new incumbent's lati- tude of action. "He may do whatever he finds needful for the Company's best interests, provided he immediately notifies the directors; and inasmuch as we have confidence in his re- liability and in his desire to promote the Company's welfare in all things, we shall not hold him responsible if he should risk some of the Company's resources and (which may God in his mercy prevent) it should not turn fortunately as was expected. And we shall besides, when the Company gains headway and gets upon its feet, show our appreciation for his faithful service in such a way that he shall see that he is not dealing with un- grateful people. Finally," they concluded by way of a parting benediction, "we will wish him such a measure of success that his good resolution may redound to the service of his Majesty, the prosperity and growth of the Company, and to his own honor and fame." ^ The success or failure of the West Indian colony was put squarely up to the new governor. The part he played in curb- ing the efforts of the Brandenburgers and helping to bring about the collapse of their plans for commercial expansion has been discussed in the previous chapter. The perfect unity that had characterized his former relations with directors Juel and Moth continued during the years following his return. In March, 1701, he was able to report to his masters that the Branden- burgers were carrying on little or no trade, having for a long time bought nothing from outside merchants but a few slaves ^ ^ The original resolutions of the shareholders, passed at their meeting of March 19, was signed by the following directors and shareholders: Jens Juel, P. Bran[d]t, M. Moth, W. Worm, A. Gyldensparre, N. Krag, R. Meier, W. Mule, V. Lerche (Lerke), F. C. Adelaer (Adeler), P. Hiort, P. Lemvig, Nicol. Janson (sic) Arf[f], C. Braem, J. Wurger, J. Kroyer, J. Matisen (for "Hr Cane. Raad Adelaer"), and Frid. and Niels MoUer. Resolutions of Directors (March 19, 1694). C. B., 1690-1713. ^ Directors' instructions to Lorentz (March 29, 1694). C. B., 1690-1713. ^ Lorentz and Van Belle had together bought a cargo of 154 slaves from a Zealand slave ship. THE GOVERNORSHIP OF JOHN LORENTZ 109 and some "Campeachy" wood. On the island they had no trade except a little in cotton when they made an occasional purchase from a planter. "On the whole, they are quite civil," he reported, "and are waiting for a new treaty."^ John Lorentz had every reason to be pleased with such a quiescent situation and to pray for its long continuance. The most numerous nation among the planters of St. Thomas was the Dutch. Inasmuch as the number of prosperous planters largely determined the size of the return cargoes, there was considerable competition among the islands to secure planters of means and induce them to settle permanently. Organized into a militia corps these burghers could become an important factor in defence against outside attack. As early as 1688, when Europe was on the verge of war, Adolph Esmit had offered eight years' exemption from taxes to intending planters. In the years 1690 and 1691 a number of Dutch planters had come from St. Eustatius and Saba to avoid confiscation of their property, especially their negroes, by the French who had just taken possession of the island. ^° During the course of the war, Governor Lorentz took measures to prevent their leaving. As the war closed, and the refugees repeated their desire to go, on the ground that St. Eustatius was a more healthful place to live than St. Thomas (which was admittedly true) he intimated that their real reason was the expiration of the eight years' tax exemption. He tried to induce those leaving to pay the tax for four of the eight years but was unable to prevent five families from going, although one planter, Lucas Beverhoudt, left his plantation on St. Thomas in full working order, to the governor's great joy. Just how many others eventually re- turned does not appear. ^^ The greatest obstacle to Lorentz 's constructive efforts was privateering. Although Brandenburg was ostensibly an enemy 9 Lorentz to Directors (March 27, 1701). C. B., 1690-1713. ^^ Among these were Adrian Ronnels, Lawrence Westerbaen, Adrian Sorgeloos, and John le Ducq (Duq). Delavigne papers; Lorentz' s Journal (February 11, 1691, passim). " Lorentz to Directors (September 6, 1696), C. B., 1690-1713; same to same (January 22, 1698), Gov. C. B., 169^-1700; same to same (June 20 and 24, 1698), C. B., 1690-1713. 110 THE DANISH WEST INDIES of France, its African company's factor in the West Indies bought Spanish and English prizes captured by French priva- teers whenever opportunity offered. ^^ These difficulties reached their height in 1696 when French captains holding commissions from Governor Du Casse of Petit Goave swarmed like birds of prey around the mouth of St. Thomas harbor, seizing not only enemies' ships but vessels belonging to St. Thomas inhabitants.^^ To Governor Lorentz's vigorous protests against these acts of violence towards a friendly power, Du Casse gaily replied that those complained of were rascals, and advised Lorentz to have them hanged when they came to St. Thomas again. Further, Du Casse accused Lorentz of selling passports to Curasao skippers at 10 rdl. each. According to Lorentz's account, the Petit Goave governor bore a particular grudge against the St. Thomas government because of Delavigne's failure to pay him for two kegs of indigo which he claimed were still due him, and he threatened to get Lorentz out of his government "as he had Delavigne." The last thrust probably did not disturb Lorentz, who knew better than Du Casse why Delavigne had been re- moved. For the Count of Blenacq, "general" at Martinique, the governor had mainly words of praise for the good order he had kept among his privateers. ^^ Although Denmark had not openly sided with Louis XIV, her attitude of neutrality was looked upon as an indication of her friendliness. For the Spaniards who had joined the league against Louis XIV and Sweden it was not difficult to find an excuse for attacking St. Thomas. The report that they were planning an attack upon the island with three thousand men in the summer of 1696 spread consternation among the planters and well-nigh demoralized the population. The planters took '^^ Lorentz to Directors (October 19, 1697); same to same (November 30, 1696), C. B., 1690-1713. " Governor Lorentz cites several instances. Benjamin Frank, a Jew, but a Danish subject, had his ship detained and his skipper maltreated and robbed; John de Windt's ship was seized on the way from Curagao to St. Thomas, the cargo was confiscated and the ship only released on deposit of 5,080 rdl. as surety; two inhabitants who had a bill of sale from the Brandenburg factor had their bark seized. Lorentz to Directors (September 6, 1696). C. B., 1690-1713. ''Ihid. THE GOVERNORSHIP OF JOHN LORENTZ 111 measures for their own protection by sending their families and movable property to Curagao ^^ and some of the Leeward Islands {"de ofver Eilande"). The report that the Spaniards had planned to get the negroes' help in turning St. Thomas over to them made the governor take measures to send as many slaves as possible out of the island, especially the most unruly ones.^^ The arrival of the French fleet under Pointis in West Indian waters made the Spaniards retire to Havana, so by November the Danish refugees had begun to re turn. ^^ Lorentz hastened to advise the directors of the company to procure protection for St. Thomas by making representations at Madrid,^^ which ad- vice they promptly followed.^® But the Spanish plans were only postponed. Fortunately for St. Thomas a squadron of six French men-of-war met the Spanish "Barlovento" fleet ^^ when it was reported to be on its way to attack St. Thomas, probably early in 1697. The battle took place in the waters between Porto Rico and San Domingo, with the result that the Spanish vice-admiral, three hundred men, and fifty-four guns were captured by the French and brought into Petit Goave.^^ While this danger was thus averted by the opportune ap- pearance of a French squadron, an equally serious danger was threatening from another quarter. The Brandenburgers on St. Thomas had been carrying on considerable trade with the French colony at Petit Goave by collusion with the local French authorities who should by right have seized the Brandenburg vessels as belonging to an enemy of their king. At a time when France and England were getting ready to grapple for naval supremacy in West Indian waters it behooved Denmark with her little colony strictly to avoid getting into the melee. '* Madame Lorentz was among the refugees to Curagao. " C. B.. 1690-1713. " Lorentz' 3 Journal (November, 1696, passim). '8 Lorentz to Directors (Nov. 30, 1696). C. B., 1690-1713. " Directors to Christian V (April 16, 1697). Ibid. ^"The "Armada de Barlovento" was a small fleet that the Spaniards had used for the protection of their mainland and for catching interlopers. The visits of this fleet to Crab Island prevented its permanent occupation by either Danes or English. The fleet at this time consisted of five ships and one small snow. Cf. Haring, Buccaneers, 109. 21 Lorentz to Directors (March 17, 1697). C. B., 1690-1713. 112 THE DANISH WEST INDIES In January, 1697,^^ the French fleet above referred to left Brest for the West Indies under Jean-Bernard Desjeans, baron de Pointis. At Petit Goave, Pointis was joined by a fleet of privateers under the command of Governor Du Casse and de- parted in March for Carthagena on the coast of New Granada. After a difficult siege the citadel was captured, and booty esti- mated to be worth forty million crowns (ecus) was loaded on the French ships and promptly started for home. The English vice-admiral Nevell had meantime come to the West Indies in search of the French, who were assumed to have gone to some part of the Spanish Main, probably to Porto BeUo.^^ It was important to prevent the captured loot from reaching Louis XIV who might be able with it to prolong the war considerably. As soon as a Martinique bark had brought the news of Nevell's presence in Caribbean waters to Petit Goave, the French au- thorities compelled a Brandenburg captain in the latter harbor, one Arduin, to take on board a French captain, a steersman, and six French seamen and proceed to CartTiagena to warn Pointis and Du Casse of Nevell's whereabouts. The French fleet ar- rived in Brest on August 29 with the loss of but a single ship. Admiral Nevell was furious when he heard how the warning had been sent and fixed the blame upon the Danish authorities on St. Thomas, who were after all responsible for the govern- ment there. He wrote to the surrounding English governments that they should try to break up St. Thomas's trade on the sea, and three privateers from Curagao and several from Jamaica "were sent out to cruise on this island's vessels, to prevent the carrying on of trade with the French islands." ^* The conclusion of the Peace of Ryswick in September, 1697, helped presently to relieve the tension between St. Thomas and her neighbors. With the consummation of peace, however, piracy took the place of privateering.^^ During the course of the war it had been ^^ Chevalier, in his Hisioire de la marine fraiiQaise (Paris, 1902), p. 205, mis- takenly places the date at June 7, 1696. Guerin (Histoire maritime de France, Paris, 1862) is probably more nearly accurate in placing the date of de Pointis' departiu-e at January 9, 1697 (IV, 69). " Cal. Col, 1696-97, No. 824 (March 18, 1697). 24 Lorentz to Directors (October 19, 1697). C. B., 1690-1713. " Cal. Col, 1697-98, No. 269 (March 1, 1698) and passim. THE GOVERNORSHIP OF JOHN LORENTZ 113 deemed necessary only to determine whether a prize had been legally condemned by a properly constituted admiralty court before it was offered for sale in a neutral port. After the peace it would be more necessary than ever for skippers to present a clean "bill of health" for ships brought into foreign harbors. The attitude of John Lorentz toward strange craft suspected of irregularities is well illustrated by his action in the case of cer- tain "rovers of the sea" of whom the most notorious is Captain Kidd. Captain Kidd has passed into tradition to such an extent that it may be interesting to see how this arch-pirate of legend impressed people of his own time who had had unusual facilities for studying men of his alleged profession at close range. Kidd appeared before St. Thomas harbor on April 6, 1699 (O. S.?) having lately come from Madagascar in the Quidah Merchant, a Genoese vessel of four hundred tons, thirty guns, and eighty men, and having been refused succor by the English at An- guilla.^^ His appearance and action may best be told in Gov- ernor Lorentz 's own words as he put them down at the time in his carefully kept diary. ^'^ "April 6. — ^Today, Maundy Thursday, there arrived before the harbor an EngHsh ship which anchored just outside of can- non range. Presently the captain sent his sloop [boat] ashore with a person on board who came to ask the vice commandant [i. e., Lorentz] whether he might come in free with his ship, which his men had compelled him to seize from the Moors in the East Indies — ^he could produce proof that he had been com- pelled to seize it. The vice-commandant answered that if he could produce proof in writing that he was an honest man, he might enter, which message he sent by Lieut. Claus Hansen and Peter Smith [a well-to-do merchant who had been associated with the Brandenburgers in the slave-trade] who, however, were not satisfied with his explanations, for he [Kidd] had re- 26 Cal. Col, 1699, No. 404 (May 18); qf. Cal. Col, 1689-92, No. 136 (May 18, 1689), where a letter from council of Nevis to Blathwayt has been dated 1689 instead of 1699. 2^ Lorentz's Journal (April 6, 1699, etc.). Lorentz spelled the captain's name Cidd. Maundy Thursday: the day preceding Good Friday, Green Thursday. The translation is not close, though reconstructed from very full notes. 114 THE DANISH WEST INDIES quested the vice-commandant to give him protection from the English royal ships, should they seek him here without orders, from which the vice-commandant saw that he was a pirate, and therefore deferred his answer till the morrow. "April 7. — In the morning the vice-commandant called the council together to consult as to whether or not the said sea- robber's request could be granted; but as he saw that it would produce considerable friction between this land and the English if the pirate were admitted and not delivered up on their re- quest, it was resolved that no word, beyond yesterday's mes- sage, should be sent to him. "A man came ashore . . . with a written request that Kidd receive protection on land until he could send a bark to New England, present his case there, and prove that he was no sea- robber, inasmuch as the governor there, Mylord Bellamont, was the chief owner in the ship in which he sailed out of England three years ago to cruise on the Red Sea for pirates. But his request was flatly refused him, and besides, he was forbidden to send his men ashore again unless they came into the harbor with the ship. "Long Friday was celebrated in the church today. "April 8. — Today the pirates lying outside the harbor have twice sent boats ashore at the harbor's point. The vice- commandant at once sent his men there, and they found that seven men had been put ashore who maintained that they were passengers . . . [and proved it]. Two of these secured permis- sion to take a canoe and fetch their baggage, but when they were on the way the ship spread sails and left, the canoe follow- ing. " Watch was kept in the harbor that night by Captain Vinck's boat." Although Captain Kidd was forced meekly to leave the harbor of St. Thomas in his leaky vessel, and ceases thereupon to have any personal connection with St. Thomas history, the island authorities were presently to concern themselves with part of his cargo, — his "treasure." On leaving St. Thomas, Kidd steered for San Domingo, but instead of risking putting in at Petit Goave, he stopped at the little island of Mona, just off the THE GOVERNORSHIP OF JOHN LORENTZ 115 southeast coast of Hispaniola, and apparently he anchored later in the mouth of the "River Romano" near "Catherine" island on the same coast. ^* Here he was met — or followed — by traders from Curasao, Antigua, and St. Thomas, to whom he disposed of a large part of his cargo. According to information given by the St. Thomas trader, Peter Smith, to Nevis officials, one Henry Bolton of Antigua had furnished him with provisions, and had undertaken to act as his agent in getting rid of his cargo. To William Burke,^^ an Irish trader who had recently taken a cargo of slaves from Barbados to Carthagena, and who had done considerable business with the Dutch at Curasao in his time, Kidd sold one hundred and twenty or one hundred and thirty bales of muslin,^° and finally, when he had disposed of nearly all of his cargo, he bought a smaller boat (from Bolton?) and left for New York.^^ There he was to attempt to prove his innocence before Lord Bellamont, part owner of the ship in which he had left England, and the admiralty judges. On Friday, May 27, 1699, about seven weeks after Kidd's departure, Burke came into St. Thomas on an English barken - tine, approached Governor Lorentz, and asked the favor of a private interview. With only Madame Lorentz present to act as interpreter, Burke stated that he had been with the sea- robber Captain "Cidd" and that if the governor would partic- ipate with him, a large profit could be got from the said pirate. To this the governor vigorously replied that he would have nothing to do with pirates, and thereby give the land an evil reputation. But if Lorentz was unwilling to receive the stolen goods, the Brandenburg factor, Van Belle, had no such scruples. That very night the searobbers' goods were landed and stored in the Brandenburg warehouse. The guard had informed the governor of the stir in the harbor during the night, so the latter began an investigation on the following day with a view to finding out whether Van Belle had made the investment on his own account or on that of the Brandenburg company. 28 Cal. Col. 1699, No. 616, I (July 7), No. 680, IX (July 10). 2* Also spelled Bourck, Burch, Burcke. '« Cal. Col., 1699, No. 616, I (July 7). ^' Lands-Protokoller for St. Thomas . . . 1694-1711 (June 7, 1699). 116 THE DANISH WEST INDIES The governor's prompt measures alarmed the Brandenburg officials. Their bookkeeper, Si vert Hoesz, as well as Burke, came to parley with him in the hope of reaching an agreement. On Monday the governor managed to seize some of the goods which had been brought into the house of an inhabitant. ^^ Lor- entz, in a letter written July 4, 1699, mentions fifteen small packages and sixty sacks of saltpetre as having been seized and placed in the fort.^^ Perhaps these included the goods referred to. On June 1 Burke was arrested, to be released on June 7, when the suit against him was begun. In the course of the hearing, Burke testified that besides Van Belle, Messrs. Beck and Moyart from Curagao and some gentlemen on Barbados had a share in the cargo in question,^^ and that he remembered having paid Kidd 12,000 pieces-of-eight. A [Brandenburg.?] gunner testified that he had recorded delivery of 158 packages, large and small, into the Brandenburg magazine. The court concluded that Van Belle must have been cognizant of the origin of the goods, and that he should therefore have a protest sent to him, charging him with action prejudicial to the island, that Burke should pay a fine of 300 pieces-of-eight for his In- solentie, and deposit 5,000 pieces-of-eight by way of guarantee that Kidd's title to the goods was a legal one.^^ In his letter to the directors describing the affair, Lorentz mentions their having fined Van Belle 5,000 rdl.,^^ which helps to confirm a suspicion that the latter was forced to put up the deposit for Burke, who was only a go-between. The governor refrained from seizing those goods which actually reached the Brandenburg magazine. They were eventually put on board the Brandenburg ship, the Seven Provinces, which Lorentz re- ^2 Lorentz' s Journal (May 27, etc., 1699). '3 Lorentz to Directors (July 4, 1699). C. B.. 1690-1713. In a letter of April 15, 1700, Lorentz informed the Directors that he had caused the 69 sacks of saltpetre and 12 bales of cotton and "Netteldug" to be loaded on the Christian V on the company's account. 3* Burke case (June 7, 1699). Lands-Prot.. 16H-1711. '^ Ibid. The court was composed of the governor and John (Johannes) de Windt, Thomas Berentsen. Claus (Claes) Hansen, J. Rasmussen and Abraham Matheusen, who signed with his mark. ^'' Lorentz to Directors (June 19. 1699). C. B., 1690-1713. THE GOVERNORSHIP OF JOHN LORENTZ 117 ported to be laden with "a deal of searobbers' goods, of pock- wood, some cotton and money," for no sugar was to be had.^^ The governor and council considered the case extremely grave. The governor's instructions had expressly prohibited him from having dealings with pirates, but from the point of view of the colony it was just as dangerous for the Brandenburgers to engage in such traffic as for the Danes, for the Company would be held responsible in any case. Councilor Claus Hansen was sent over on the Danish ship Gyldenlove, Captain Vinck, which left St. Thomas on June 20, 1699, provided with documents to prove where the responsibility for collusion with the pirates really lay.^^ The problem for the Danes in the West Indies was how to convince the English that there was no collusion between them and the pirates. From New York, the Carolinas, and the Bahamas, came complaints from zealous English officials like Edward Randolph against the encouragement given to piracy and to evasion of the acts of navigation.^^ In the West Indies, the Danes and the Dutch were held largely responsible for such wrong-doings, although it was the attitude of the planters that made smuggling practically impossible to repress. The Enghsh had made some progress in discouraging piracy when they succeeded in getting Captain Kidd shipped off to England for trial. Local laws did not permit hanging, and conviction by local authorities would have been problematical. ^° Another victory for the forces of order was secured when Bolton was seized and brought to England for trial.^^ With respect to Burke they were less lucky. Threats of Rear-admiral Benbow, who appeared at St. Thomas in October, 1699, with a ship of fifty-four pieces and two small frigates of twenty or twenty-two guns each, could not make the governor give up Burke, who had sought refuge with the Brandenburgers, " Lorentz to Directors, Gov. C. B., 16H-1700 (August 10, 1699), ^* Lorentz' s Journal (June 20, 1699). ^' Edward Randolph was Collector of Customs and Deputy Auditor for New England. Beer, op. cit., I, 222. *° See, e. g. Cat. Col., 1701. No. 180 (February 19). *i Cal. Col., 1699. No. 1034 (December 4); ibid., 1701, No. 26 (January 11). 118 THE DANISH WEST INDIES or surrender the money that Burke (or Van Belle) had deposited in the Company's treasury. ^^ Instead, Benbowmade a report on the island and its harbor, in which he stated that it " would be of great use to our English nation in case of war in these parts," that it could be easily fortified, whereas at present it was but "a receptacle for thieves," ^^ The stubbornness of Lorentz, whose main concern was the retention of the five thousand pieces-of-eight and the seized goods for the Company, led the Earl of Bellamont, the English governor of New York, to con- tend that Burke had bought protection from the Danish gov- ernor with the proceeds of Kidd's spoils.^* His statement that Burke "will not be parted with" turned out entirely true, for in August, 1701, that pirates' friend was reported out of reach of the arm of English law in the French part of St, Kitts.*^ Lorentz was able to assume so bold a front because he knew through in- formation secured by Peter Smith on Nevis that Admiral Ben- bow was merely putting up a bluffing game, and was exceeding his orders in the hope of forcing the restitution of Kidd's and Burke's boat,"^ In July, 1699, another Madagascar pirate. Tempest Roger (or Rogers) a former acquaintance of Kidd's from those regions, appeared in St. Thomas harbor to ask leave to repair his ship, but he was not allowed to remain. ^^ But pirates did not always get off so easily. In a letter written in April, 1700, Lorentz mentions having meted out exemplary punishment to four out of nine pirates "who came here some time ago," leaving the fate of the remaining five in the hands of the directors, ^^ Their con- fiscated goods, amounting to 2,600 rdl., helped to justify his zeal for the interests of his masters and make the performance of duty doubly joyous, *2 Lorentz to Directors (November 9, 1699). Gov. C. B., 16H-1700; Cal. Col., 1699. No. 907 (October 28). ^s Benbow to Vernon, Cal. Col.. 1699, No. 907 (October 28). 4^ Bellamont to Lords of Trade, ibid.. No. 890 (October 23, 1699). " Codrington (Antigua) to Council of Trade, ibid., 1701. No. 784 (August 25). « Lorentz to Directors (November 9, 1699). Oov. C. B., 169i-1700. "Same to same, ibid. (August 10, 1699); Cal. CoL, 1699, No. 880, II (Au- gust 17, etc.); ibid.. 1700, No. 848 (October 18). « Lorentz to Directors (April 15, 1700). C. B.. 1690-1713. THE GOVERNORSHIP OF JOHN LORENTZ 119 The willingness of the Brandenburg factor to encourage un- lawful commerce did not escape the English Leeward Islands governors. In September, 1698, Van Belle attempted to send two score slaves to St. Kitts in a boat flying a Danish flag, but a Mr. Mead, the English commissioner and collector of customs at Nevis, seized them, apparently on the basis of the first clause of the Act of Navigation, which provided that "no goods or commodities whatsoever shall be imported into or exported out of any of his Majesty's plantations except in English or Planta- tion shipping, and manned as specified in the Act." The Coun- cil of Trade and Plantations were not disposed to intervene in Van Belle's behalf, since they had "rather much reason to sus- pect him well versed in methods of interloping and trading there illegally, a practice very prejudicial to [British] service and interests." ^^ From the various circumstances above related it will be seen that the governor's position at St. Thomas was not a sinecure. He must stand ready to assert the claims of King and Company against all comers. In 1698 the governor sent an expedition to Crab Island to protest against its occupation by that Scotch Darien company promoted by William Paterson, an enterprise through which the sponsors hoped to revolutionize Caribbean commerce.^*' The conscientious governor must discriminate between legal and illegal commerce, he must permit the Bran- denburgers a certain stipulated freedom in trade without en- dangering Danish sovereignty on the island. He must keep on good terms with the planters, prevent uprisings among the « Peter Vanbelle (Van BeUe) to king. Cal. Col., 1699, No. 648, I (July 13); Council of Trade and Plantations to Earl of Jersey, ibid.. No. 685 (July 27). s° Lorentz to Directors (October 12, 1698), Gov. C. B., 169^.-1700; Cal. Col., 1699, No. 866 (October 16): Host, op. cit., 40 et seq., gives Lorentz's protest to Captain Robert Pinkerton, of October 2, 1698, and extracts from Lieut. Clans Hansen's Journal of the Danish expedition to Crab Island. It is curious to note that as early as October 15/25, 1688, four "English (sic) merchants" had ap- plied to the Elector of Brandenburg for an octroi for a new "American Com- pany." The names given by Walter (Schiick, II, 528) are Heinrich Bulen, Wilhelm Pocock, William Paterson, and James Schmitten. The only one of these who is mentioned in the act of Parliament of June 26, 1695, incorpo- rating the Darien Company, is Paterson. For James Smith see p. 189 above. 1^0 THE DANISH WEST INDIES negroes, and maintain good relations with the neighboring governments. He must see to it that the Company's planta- tions and magazine pay a surplus above their expenses, and particularly that homeward-bound ships of the Company have a good cargo that will enable the shareholders to secure dividends on their investment. That even as capable a man as John Lorentz should be successful in all these respects was quite im- possible, but that he should be able to hold his position until his death, and retain possession of the island against the threats of Spaniards and English, is somethuig for which he deserves no little credit. Lorentz was always alive to what he considered the Com- pany's best interests. His prompt report of John Mathew Leers' attempt to lease the island in 1695 helped to nip that proposal in the bud, for he wrote that the rumor had "caused considerable grumbling among the inhabitants, who had all sworn to leave the land if it were leased out again." ^^ His letters concerning the lucrativeness of the slave trade led the share- holders of the Company to undertake with Jacob Lerke the sending of a ship to Guinea for a cargo of slaves, and eventually brought the Company into the business on its own account.^" On June 10, 1702, Governor John Lorentz died in office, the first governor save one to obtain that distinction.^^ Of the six- teen years that had elapsed since he first arrived in St. Thomas as an humble "assistant," he had served the Company eleven years as its governor. Under his clear-headed and vigorous guidance, the Company had been brought from bankruptcy to solvency, and its colony had become firmly established in the Caribbean. " Lorentz to Directors (May 8, 1695), C. B., 1690-1713. The Leers' project was supported by the Brandenburgers, who expected to be able to agree with Leers better than with the Danish company. Schiick (I, 248, 249) discusses the matter, but is unable from the Brandenburg documents to explain why it was dropped. 52 Ibid (November 30, 1696), Gov. C. B., 16H-1700. 5^ Christopher Helns. See above, p. 80. CHAPTER VI ST. THOMAS AND ST. JOHN AS PLANTATION COLONIES (1688-1733) If the importance of the history of the Danish islands in the West Indies is to be judged by the extent of the interests in- volved, or is to be measured by the actual influence of the is- lands upon the history of the Caribbean or on the state of Den- mark-Norway, the propriety of devoting an entire volume to them might well be questioned. But if a rather detailed study will disclose the rise of a fairly typical plantation society, if it will show on a small scale the sort of thing that took place in West Indian lands in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries on a large scale, such as the rise of the sugar industry and the slave trade, the eflFort need require no apology. For the islands reflected very distinctly the economic solidarity of the West In- dian community at a time when it was looked upon as one of the main sources of the world's wealth. St. Thomas can scarcely be said to have assumed its place as a regular plantation colony until 1688, when the Company's accounts first began to be kept in money instead of sugar. In that year the first census was taken, and although not a scien- tific affair, its results are not without interest.^ This report showed that there were 90 plantations surveyed, and a total white planting population to record of just 148. These were distributed among eleven nationalities as follows: 66 Dutch, 31 English, 17 Danes and Norwegians, 17 French, 4 Irish, 4 Flem- ish, 3 Germans, 3 Swedes, and one each of Scotch, Brazilians, and Portuguese. Of the 76 adults listed, 56 are entered as plant- ers, 5 as carpenters, 2 as planters and merchants, and one each as minister (Lutheran), schoolmaster, fisher, captain on the ^ Land Lister for St. Thomas, 1688. The figures given in Host, op. cit., 29, vary- slightly from those given here. The report was signed by Franz Martens, who was a member of the council and a tavern keeper, Andreas Brock, who acted as secretary, and Sigmont Liick. [121] 122 THE DANISH WEST INDIES Company's bark, tavern keeper, overseer, turner, planter and tailor, and planter and miller. In the village of Charlotte Amalia,^ 37 persons were enumerated, of whom 21 were adults (12 men and 9 women), 11 were children, one was an indentured servant, and 4 were negroes. Of the adults, 8 were Dutch, 4 were Danish, 3 were English; there was one each of French, Spanish, and "high German" inhabitants, while the nationality of the remaining three was not recorded. The trades repre- sented in the village and the number in each were: tailor, 2; innkeeper, 1; seamstress, 1; shoemaker, 1; carpenter, 2; black- smith, 1; and cotton ginner, 1. Among the 21 adults were 10 Calvinists (Reformed), 7 Lutherans (distributed among high Germans, Danes, and Dutch), and 2 Catholics. The number of white men, women, and children in the island totalled 317, and the negroes 422, which latter figure includes one Carib Indian, three squaws, and three mulatto women. In the census taken three years later (1691), just when Thormohlen's proprietor- ship began, the information seems to have been gathered with greater precision, especially with regard to the plantations. The increase from 317 whites in 1688 to 399 in 1691 was no doubt partly due to the publication of the edict concerning the eight years' exemption from taxes offered to new settlers, coupled with the outbreak of hostilities in Europe. The num- ber of negroes had risen at a rather more rapid rate, they num- bering 555, of whom 361 were put down as "capable," which meant full-grown negroes capable of performing their full quota of work.^ It must be borne in mind that despite the voluminous na- ture of the census records, they are not such as to permit the investigator to claim absolute accuracy for the figures drawn from them. They will, on the whole, give a reasonably ac- curate idea of the actual state of affairs in many respects; but with regard to the number of slaves, especially in the second decade of the next century and after, when St. Thomas has be- ^ Charlotte Amalia, the name which the port of St. Thomas still bears, was named in honor of the queen of Christian V, in whose time the town was founded. For present-day view of town, see photo facing p. 257. * One Indian squaw and four children are included in the list of negroes. ST. THOMAS AND ST. JOHN AS PLANTATION COLONIES 123 come the home of a class of capitaHst planters, the figures quoted will invariably be lower than they should be. Governor Bredal, writing to the directors in 1718, complained that the plantation owners did not fill out their records concerning the poll and land taxes they were supposed to pay, " but the planters let their negroes hide themselves for the time being in the forest, and only a few of them are to be seen.^ By 1691, the number of plantations had increased to one hundred and one. Only twenty-eight of these had been under cultivation for eight years or more, while the average length of time that each of the plantations had been cultivated amounted to just four years, eleven months. The newness of the colony is further seen by the fact that as yet only five plantations were devoted to sugar cane even in part, while on 87 cotton was the chief product. Provisions ("Cost" or "Kaast"), which in- cluded cassava, millet and maize, were raised on nine-tenths of the plantations. Eventually, the negroes were allotted plots of ground on which they raised their own food supply. Indigo culture had been begun. In 1699 Peter Smith was the only person who planted indigo, though others had tried it before him.^ In their instructions issued to Adolph Esmit in 1687 before his departure for St. Thomas, the directors named cotton, indigo, tobacco, pockwood, and other valuable dye woods as the chief products of the island. The failure of the inhabitants to plant much sugar was as- cribed to their having taken up the "fattest" land from the start, whereas the "poorer" and stonier land was really better suited to the sugar cane. The northern and more fertile slopes were naturally taken up later than the southern and more ac- cessible side. The hope of the directors that rice and vine cul- ture be given a trial seems not to have been justified by ex- perience.^ In 1689 the governor and council proposed that a * E. Bredal to Directors (March, 1718), B. & D., 1717-1720. ^ The Company had indigo "works" as early as 1688. CJ. A. E. Esmit's Journal (June 19, 1688); Lorentz to Directors (February 20, 1699), C. B., 16H- 1700. ^ Millet ("Milien," or "Millie,") was used quite commonly for food for the slaves; "tobi" and cacao were also mentioned by the directors as worthy of attention. Directors' instructions to Esmit (November 9, 1687). Heins re- 124 THE DANISH WEST INDIES sugar mill should be put up on Milan's former plantation, and ventured the opinion that if sugar cane should prove successful on the Company's plantations, it would prove more profitable than cotton or tobacco/ The main reason for the Company's having hitherto received so scant returns from its investment was explained by the fact that the older islands yielded more sugar than the newly settled.® As the area devoted to sugar increased, the culture of tobacco decreased. There was always a good market for the latter in Denmark, however, and to- bacco from Porto Rico, Virginia, and other regions ^frequently found a place in the Company's homeward-bound cargoes. Sugar and cotton remained the leading products during the period under discussion. The sugar cane was cut by the ne- groes with a sort of hatchet called kapmesser, and carried by them to the mill or "sugar works" with which the greater part of the plantations after 1700 were usually provided.® In 1696 Governor Lorentz reported seven sugar mills to be at work pro- ducing brown sugar, which was to be sent to Denmark by a ship expected from Copenhagen.^" By 1715, the number of sugar plantations provided with mills had reached thirty-two out of a total of forty plantations devoted solely to sugar, ^^ The motive power was furnished mainly by windmills, though these came gradually to be supplemented by treadmills turned by mule-power. Compared with modern methods the waste was of course tremendous. At least ten negroes were required to keep one such mill running; two, who were called "rollers," feeding the cane stalks between the upright wooden cylinders, ported a successful trial in growing ginger. Heins to Directors (January 2, 1689), B. & D., 1683-89. ^ Resolutions of governor and council (February 19, 1689). The members of the council were Henry Irgens, Joachim Delicaet, John de Windt, and John Lorentz. 8 Heins to Directors (August 20, 1689). B. & D. 1683-89. * See Appendix H., p. 318. >» Lorentz to Directors (November 30, 1696), C. B.. 1690-17U. " Land Lister for St. Thomas, 1715. For description of an eighteenth century sugar mill, see Oxholm, De danske vcstindiske ocrs Tilstand . . ., pp. 44 et seq., and J. C. Schmidt, Blandede Anmcerkninger samlede paa og over Ejlandet St. Kroix . . . {Samleren, 1788, 2 B). ST. THOMAS AND ST. JOHN AS PLANTATION COLONIES 125 others carrying in the fresh stalks and removing the crushed ones. An ax always lay near at hand, with which to amputate the arm of the careless negro whose hand might get caught by the revolving cylinders; for when help was scarce, even three- quarters of a negro was better than none. The juice of the cane required expert handling, and negroes who were adept at boiling sugar brought fancy prices. As the juice was transferred from one copper kettle to another and larger one, until it had run the gamut of a " battery " of three or four kettles, the foam was removed and used for the distilla- tion of rum. The crystallized sugar was finally "cured" in the coolers in the curing house, and emptied from these into molds. The molasses which was drained oS went to the distillery to help make rum. With great, husky blacks cutting cane in the fields, with negro boys leading the loaded mules or asses to the mill, with still others to carry in the stalks and to tend to the crushing, boiling, and distilling, the scene presented during harvest must have been a busy and noisy one indeed. The cotton plantations were smaller and more numerous than those devoted to sugar. They, too, were usually provided with "works" where the cotton was ginned. The proportion of the number of plantations devoted to the raising of cotton as com- pared with the entire number fell from eighty per cent, in 1691 to forty-four per cent, in 1715, and rose again to fifty per cent, by 1733. Of the total number of plantations, the part devoted to sugar rose from five per cent, in 1691 to thirty-five per cent, in 1720, falling back to twenty-four per cent, in 1733. The de- cline shown by the figures for 1733 is due to a series of mis- fortunes, of which drought, storms, and disasters at sea formed a part.^^ The cotton production was worth perhaps a third to a fourth as much as the sugar. It is impossible to determine the exact ratio or the exact amount, for the planters frequently refused to sell their produce to the Company, and the factura or invoices of the cargoes often include items from neighboring islands. The "boom" period in early St. Thomas history was the first decade and a half of the eighteenth century, substantially the ^2 See Appendix H., p. 318. 126 THE DANISH WEST INDIES period of the War of the Spanish Succession. This was due to a variety of causes, both local and general. John Lorentz, with Juel and Moth, had done much to put the Brandenburg African Company out of the running. Quarrels within that company's management had done the rest. The revival of the Danish company's slave trade had bene- fited both it and the planters. The liberties allowed the latter in disposing of their plantation produce had helped to make them capitalists. This prosperity is indicated by the increase in the number of plantations laid out just after the opening of the new century. In the years 1692 to 1700 only fourteen new plantations were assigned to planters. ^^ These plantations had a total working force of seventy-nine slaves. By 1705 an addi- tional thirty-seven new plantations had been laid out, with a working force in that year of two hundred and eighty slaves. From 1691 to 1715, the total number of plantations had risen from one hundred and one to one hundred and sixty. It is the increase of negroes, both relatively and absolutely, that gives the most striking proof of the rapid development of St. Thomas as a plantation colony during these years. While the number of white men, women, and children increased only from three hundred and eight-nine to five hundred and forty-seven (1:1.4), the number of negro slaves increased from five hundred and fifty- five to three thousand and forty-two (1 : 5.5), during the same in- terval (1691-1715). In other words, the number of slaves had risen nearly four times as fast as the number of whites. John Lorentz had laid the foundations of a fiscal system by which the inhabitants of the colony bore a proper share of the expenses of the civil government. These expenses were largely defrayed by a poll and a land or "ground" tax. The poll tax, which appears first to have been collected in the year 1692-1693, amounted to 23/^ rdl. for each planter and for each "capable" slave, and to 13^ rdl. for the planter's wife and for each of his adult children. For "manquerons," or those unable to do a full '^ Land Lister for St. Thomas. The names of the planters as they appear in the records are: David Liron, Reynier Claever, Jean Cramy, Zent van Wundergem, Jan Arnout, Samson Burin, Mintje de Tooy, Jiirgen Hansen, Mathias Terling, Jiirgen Carstensen, Joris van Overschelde, Pieter de Windt. ST. THOMAS AND ST. JOHN AS PLANTATION COLONIES 127 day's work, and for minor white children, the planters were not required to pay any poll tax. The land tax on St. Thomas (and St. John after its occupation and the expiration of the eight years of exemption) was assessed according to the width of the plantation, the length being in most instances fixed at three hundred feet.^^ For each one hundred feet in width, the planter paid 10 styver, or 20 skilling. Inasmuch as the width of the sugar plantations on St. Thomas in 1733 averaged one thousand five hundred and forty feet, and the average number of negroes employed on each one was a trifle over twenty -six, the amount due from each planter in poll and ground taxes amounted to about 3 rdl., 1 mark, for the latter, and nearly 70 rdl. for the former tax. Similarly, the owner of a sugar plantation on St. John, of average width and average slave equipment (thirteen negroes), would have to pay nearly 2 rdl. in land tax and 35 rdl. in poll tax. So long as the returns were properly made out by the planters, the burden would seem to have fallen upon the persons taxed very nearly in proportion to their ability to pay. Indigent persons were indeed, as a rule, entirely exempted from the pay- ment of the poll tax.^^ The indirect taxes that the planters were forced to pay through being obliged in certain cases to sell their produce to the company, or to ship them on the company's vessels, and to buy goods needed from the Company's magazine, will be discussed in another comiection. St. John had been claimed by the Danes as early as the first administration of Adolph Esmit. In a letter written early in 1684, the latter mentions having made an attempt through two moneyed merchants from Barbados to set up "works" (forts?) on St. John; but the English governor, Stapleton, sent two sloops over to the island, thus driving away forty men sent over by the Barbados merchants. "This is the third time," wrote the Danish governor, "that he has driven our people [from St. John?]".!^ On his return to St. Thomas in 1688, Esmit was instructed to attempt the settlement of St. John by ^* The Danish foot is slightly longer than the English. 15 L. L., St. Th., 'passim. i« Esmit to Du-ectors (January 26, 1684), A. E., 1682-89. 128 THE DANISH WEST INDIES placing from four to six men there and encouraging them to begin planting, ^^ but it was not until 1717 that the project was actually carried out. In November, 1716, Governor Erik Bredal wrote the directors that many of the St. Thomas in- habitants were inclined to go to settle St. John, but that they were held back solely by fear of the English, who were unwilling to let any nation go there to cut down the timber. ^^ On the twenty-fifth of the following March, the governor had a vessel loaded with guns and ammunition, and with provisions from a ship that had recently brought in a cargo of flour, meat, etc., to take him to St. John with twenty planters, sixteen negroes, and five soldiers. "I have planted there the flag of our most gracious king, and fired a salute," wrote the governor, "and then we feasted, and drank the health, first of our sovereign, and then of the Com- pany. Later, I selected a place on which to build a fort, a con- venient location which commands the inlet to the harbor as well as the harbor itself, and a level space beneath it on which a village can stand. The harbor is quite secure, and when a person is within it ... he sees land all about him, I have permitted the planters to indicate which pieces of land they preferred, and have selected a place for the Company's plantation just a cannon-shot distant from the fort (which is to be built there). Later the planters have returned because of their fear of the English and are simply waiting cautiously to see what the latter will attempt. . . ."^^ " Directors' instructions to Esmit (November 9, 1687). A. E., 1682-89. '8 Bredal and Council to Directors (November 24, 1716), B. & D.. 1717-20. In a letter dated July 23, 1715, Governor Crone and council informed the directors that John Henry Sieben had recently proposed, on behalf of himself and fifteen other planters from St. Thomas, to begin the occupation and cultivation of St. John. B. & D., 1714-17. " Bredal to Directors (May 8, 1718), B. & D., 1717-20. " Thi defrygterfor de Engelske og sidder ikkun og lurer paa, hvad de ville tentere." ST. THOMAS AND ST. JOHN AS PLANTATION COLONIES 129 Meantime Bredal proceeded to have the ground cleared for the fort, and a road cut through the brush for bringing up the nine four-pounders that were to guard the fort. The five soldiers under a Danish officer, named Axel Dahl, and the sixteen negroes, took charge of this preparatory work. When the English Leeward Islands' governor, General W. Hamilton, saw that the Danish efforts were serious, he sent John Marshall, the "Capt. Commendant" of Hamilton's regiment, with the man- of-war Scarborough, one of the two English ships then in West Indian waters, to St. Thomas to forbid the Danes to occupy St. John, hinting that they had no good right to St. Thomas itself.^" Bredal replied firmly that whatever he was doing was being done on the authority of his sovereign, and he was not aware of having transgressed his rights. "If they [the directors] would only assist me with a hundred men," the governor pleaded in his letter to the directors, "I well believe that when the English come with their two ships . . . they will not perform any great miracles." Despite the report of English threats that they would dis- lodge the infant settlement, the work went on. After long searching fresh water was found on the island. This not only made it unnecessary to bring water by boat from St. Thomas, but made it possible to begin work promptly on the fort, which required fresh water for the lime and the cistern. ^^ Maize and sweet potatoes (Pataiter) were planted in the cleared space to furnish provisions for the negroes. ^^ According to the ordinance issued by the St. Thomas govern- ment on March 24, 1718, the St. John planters were required to have one white man on each plantation within three months from the time it was taken up; exemption from taxes was granted for the first eight years as on St. Thomas; sugar mills were to be erected within five years on pain of confiscation; and planters were to be permitted to take as much lime and wood as they ^oHamUton to Bredal (November 19, 1717), B. & D., 1717-20; see also John Mars[e]hairs "Explication" (undated), ibid. Both Hamilton's letter and Marshall's "Explication " are copies. " Bredal to Directors (May 8, 1718). Ibid. 22 Bredal to Directors (July 8, 1718). Ibid. 130 THE DANISH WEST INDIES needed.^^ By 1720-1721, thirtj'^-mne planters had received deeds to plantations on St. John.^'* The early inhabitants came entirely from St. Thomas and were equally varied in their nationality. Nine of these were Danes, five were French Huguenot refugees or of refugee stock, and nearly all the rest were Dutch. Their coming was prompted by a variety of motives. Some had sunk hopelessly into debt on St. Thomas, others had had badly located plantations there, while many of them naturally expected to improve their previous state. Their plantations were nearly fifty per cent, larger than those on St. Thomas, their average width being one thousand five hundred and fifty-six feet. The number of negroes held at this early period cannot be ascertained, but within a decade of the actual settlement, — namely in 1728 — there were one hun- dred and twenty-three whites to six hundred and seventy-seven blacks (1: 5.5), while in 1733, the year of the first serious slave insurrection, the whites numbered two hundred and eight, and the slaves one thousand and eighty-seven, a slightly higher ratio of white inhabitants (1: 5.2).^^ Although the number of plantations was increased only twenty-five per cent, in those five years, the number of negroes on them increased sixty per cent. Nevertheless in 1733 St. John had but ten negroes on the average to each plantation, to St. Thomas's twenty-five. The Company went' into the plantation business on its own account early in its career. The encouragement that it was ex- pected to give to plantation life on St. Thomas undoubtedly accounts in large part for the willingness of the Company's di- rectors to permit the Brandenburgers to establish a factory ^' Conditioner tilataaed St. Jans Indvaanere (March 24, 1718), Ibid. ^* See Appendix H., p. 407. ^^ Governor Frederick Moth wrote to the Directors early in 1726: "St. John is now entirely settled, [so] that there is no more land left to give away except at the Fort, and the Company's plantation, which is still lying idle, as it is not yet surveyed. . . . Next year the greater number of the St. John inhabitants are to begin paying the poll and land tax. There are already about 20 sugar works built, and others in process of building, so that I calculate that St. John will produce 600,000 to 800,000 pounds of sugar, besides [some] cotton, on [all of] which customs duties must be paid. ..." Moth to Directors (March 6, 1726), B. & D.. 172]f-27. ST. THOMAS AND ST. JOHN AS PLANTATION COLONIES 131 there. The failure of the latter to found a plantation was the chief basis for the complaints made by Danish diplomats con- cerning the failure of the Brandenburg African Company to fulfil its treaty obligations. The first plantation, the Com- pany's "Sugar Plantation," appears to have been established in the Old Quarter on the southeast shore of the Great Northside Bay. The second of the Company's plantations was probably the "New Quarter Plantation," built on or near the present "Ny Herrnhut" midway between Long and Jerse Bays. The third and smallest plantation was located at Mosquito Bay, from which the plantation took its name. The Company also secured a plantation on Krum Bay (or Crum Bay) which seems to have been of little value, and was sold at auction in 1726, at which time the Mosquito Bay Plantation was disposed of .^® Lorentz's proposal to have the Company start a plantation at Crab-Pan Bay on the southwest side seems not to have been followed up. The size of the Company's plantations has been impossible to ascertain because of the confused and complicated system of bookkeeping that prevailed and the omission of reference to them in the census reports (Land Lister). The latter fact is explained by the circumstance that the purpose of the annual census was to ascertain the amount of taxes due from each inhabitant. Naturally the Company did not propose to tax itself. A fairly accurate idea of its planting activities may be gained from an examination of the number of negroes credited to the Company's account year by year. The greater part of these must have been employed on the plantations, though the number, no doubt, includes those used at the Company's forts and magazines. In 1698, when the Company was begin- ning to take oA^er the Guinea trade, it owned 178 slaves, whose inventory value was placed at 9,043 rdl., or about 50 rdl. each. In the same year the "Sugar Plantation" was valued at 3,654, the "New Quarter Plantation" at 3,763, and the "Mosquito Bay Plantation" at 536 rdl. The eflPect of the War of the Span- ish Succession on St. Thomas plantation life is indicated by the ^ The purchaser was Governor Frederick Moth. See Negotie Journal for St. Th. (August 29, 1726). 132 THE DANISH WEST INDIES figures for 1705. At this time, when the island was prepared to reap the advantages of Danish neutrality, the number of negroes had jumped to 251, their inventory value to 13,441 rdl. (53.7 rdl. each), while the three plantations were entered on the books at 6,289, 3,141, and 905 rd/. respectively. Although the second had fallen eight per cent, in value, the first had in- creased seventy-two and one-half per cent, and the third sixty- nine per cent, over its inventory value in 1698. After 1715 the value of the plantation as recorded in the books remains stationary, while the number of the negroes gradually decreases from two hundred thirty-eight in 1716 to one hundred ninety- six in 1726.27 The following table, while based upon a careful examination of the Company's books, is not presented as giving an absolutely dependable picture of the plantations as dividend-paying propo- sitions. It is never quite certain that accounts have not been "doctored" for emergencies, or that the intricacies of the elaborate bookkeeping of two centuries ago have been con- pletely solved. In fact the officials themselves were at times hopelessly tangled in the meshes of their own system. THE COMPANY'S PLANTATIONS ON ST. THOMAS Abbreviations: S. PI., Company's "Sugar Plantation"; N. Q., "New Quarter Plantation"; M. B., "Mosquito Bay Plantation." Year 1690 1691 1693 1698 1700 1701 1702 170328 1704 Total negroes. . 122.. 158.. 191.. 178.. 180.. 176.. 177.. [69]29 Value of ne- groes 10,957.. 14,038.. 16,144.. 9,043.. 9,504.. 9,380.. 9,500.. 4,019.. Valueof S. PI.. 4,572.. 4,743.. 7,122.. 3,651.. 3,654.. 3,638.. 4,155.. 5,415. .6.374 ValueofN. Q.. 2.318.. 3,300.. 6,371.. 3,414.. 3,763.. 3,763.. 3,679.. 2,981.. 3,206 ValueofM.B. 457.. 457.. 1,112.. 536.. 536.. 536.. 536.. 380.. 905 Total invest- ment 18,424. .22,538. .30.74930 16,644. .17,457. . 17,317. .17,870. . 12.795. . Proceeds from S. PI 1,137.. 2,026.. 2,514.. 2,941.. 2,422.. 807.. 2,260.. 2,219.. 2,849 Proceeds from N. Q 410.. 3,486.. 2,351.. 1,441.. 1,337.. 720.. 936.. 369.. 1,663 Proceeds from M.B 248.. 645.. 268.. .. 135.. 134.. 155. . [-472]. . 464 Total 1,795.. 6,157.. 5,133.. 4,382.. 3,794.. 1,661.. 3,351.. 2,116. .4,976 Per cent, profit oninvestment 9.7.. 27.2.. 16.7.. 26.3" 21.6.. 9.6.. 19.1.. 17. .26(?) 2' Cf. Appendix H.. p. 318. L. L., St. Th. ^* The figures given for 1703 cover the period from June 9, 1702, to Decem- ber. 31, 1703. All money values are given in rdl. ^' This includes only the sound or "capable" slaves. ^^ The high values for 1693 apparently have some connection with Thor- mohlen's contract which was discontinued in 1694. '' This percentage covers Ij^ years (August 8, 1698, to February 8, 1700). ST. THOMAS AND ST. JOHN AS PLANTATION COLONIES 13S It would add to the value of the above figures if it could be determined exactly on what basis the profits were calculated, — whether, for example, the sugar and cotton are credited to the plantations at the same rates as those paid to the private planters. Likewise, the exact amount of sugar, cotton, etc., produced on each plantation would be useful in the study of plantation economy, but unfortunately the accounts were not kept separately, and it is practically impossible to extract the individual items in a way that will give a dependable result. A few of the available figures will give an idea of the productive- ness of the Company's plantations. John Lorentz, in writing to the directors in April, 1702, informed them that sixty-seven hhd. of sugar had been cooked on the Sugar Plantation and that as much more was expected; that the New Quarter Plantation, despite the recent drought and the attack of worms upon the cane,^^ had yielded during the past year and the cur- rent one one hundred and seventy casks (T'onder). Governor Gardelin, in reporting the state of the Company's plantations to the directors in June, 1733, which was like 1701 a dry year, stated that the Company's sugar plantation had thus far yielded eighty-eight hhd. of sugar, and 433 rdl. worth of cotton; the New Quarter Plantation, one hundred and three hhd. of sugar; and the Company's plantation on St. John,^^ sixty -two hhd. in place of the expected one hundred and fifty hhd. The severe drought had crushed the hopes for a good crop, and the governor proposed the sale of the last-named property, " since it is worth nothing, but does more damage to the Company [than good]." 34 The sugar, cotton, etc., raised on St. Thomas and on St. John after its occupation, were usually bought in whole or in part by the Company's St. Thomas factor at a price fixed by the gover- nor and council alone, or by agreement with the planters. They ^2 Lorentz to Directors (April 24, 1702), C. B., 1690-17 IS. The effect of these calamities is seen in the percentage of profits that the plantation yielded, as shown in the table above. ^^ See above, p. 130 (n. 25). ^^ Gardelin and Council to Directors (June 18, 1733), B. & D., 17S2- 134 THE DANISH WEST INDIES were stored in the Company's warehouses until one of its ships arrived from Copenhagen or the Guinea coast. If the directors were not certain of a cargo they would leave it to the Guinea slave-ship captain to take whatever cargo was on hand back with him to Denmark. As long as the company had only St. Thomas and St. John, it was rarely necessary to employ more than two ships a year to empty the St. Thomas magazine, and frequently a single vessel was ample. The difficulties that the local factor often met when he tried to force the planters to sell their produce to the Company at a fixed price, will be dealt with in a later chapter. Europe-bound ships usually took dye woods (pockwood, fustic, Campeachy wood, etc.) on board for ballast. Sometimes a schooner was sent over to Porto Rico for hides or tobacco if interloping trade at St. Thomas had been dull. A few illustrations will serve to show the character of the trade, and give some indication as to its extent. The Frederick the Fourth, under Captain Peter Andersen Wseroe, left St. Thomas on April 6, 1706, with the following cargo, secured at the prices indicated,^^ quoted in rixdoUars, "Mark" and "Skill- ing." Rdl. M. Sk. 9,112 lbs . Campeachy wood at 2 rdl. per 100 182 1 6 7,507 " stock fish (dried cod) at 2 rdl. per 100 150 - 12 4,484 " fustic 67 3 — 33.867 " Brazil wood 529 3 — 360,005 " [brown] sugar at SJ^ rdl. per 100 12,600 1 — 11,672 " white sugar at [price not given] 620 1 — 29,137 " cotton at 12 sk. per lb. 3,642 - 12 6,739 " cacao 914 2 — 1,242 " tobacco 44 5 10 129 " indigo at 1 rdl. per lb. 129 - — 89 " caret (sea turtle) 69 3 It staves for barrels and casks 180 2 4 nails 32 - — provisions beyond those needed 167 3 — 19,329 Rdl.iM.— In the following year, Peter Smith, the wealthy Dutch mer- »5 N. J. for St. Th., 1705-08 (April 6, 1706). ST. THOMAS AND ST. JOHN AS PLANTATION COLONIES 135 chant, paid the required duty ^^ on the following goods which he sent to New York on an English bark : ^^ 12 hhd. (2,674 lbs.) white sugar =» 10 sacks (1,012 lbs.) cacao 12 hhd. (5,500 " ) brown sugar 4 bales (1,000 " ) cotton 27 bales (5,838 " ) cotton 4 sacks ( 340 " ) cacao. It will be noticed that sugar and cotton were by far the most valuable items in the Copenhagen as well as in the New York cargo. Whether a ship was able to secure a good cargo or not depended on the funds that the St. Thomas factor had at his command, and upon the prices he was willing to pay. The amount of the funds depended in turn upon the sale of the Company's cargoes. The one sort of cargo the arrival of which was most frequently hailed with joy, not only by the St. Thomas planters, but by their various neighbors, was "black ivory," — ^African slaves. When times were good, slaves meant cash in the St. Thomas treasury, cash meant good cargoes for the return voyage, and bulging ships meant good dividends for the European stockholders. The distribution of these cargoes after their arrival in Copen- hagen remains to be considered. First, as much as possible of the cargo was sold at auction. The sugar refiners came to buy the brown sugar, the cloth manufacturers bid for the cotton, the dyers for the dyewoods and so on. The dyewoods had to be ground or pulverized by hand before they could be used, and as the work was exceedingly injurious to the health, the state kept up an institution called " Rasphuset " where it set those criminals to work whose long continued existence was least desirable.^^ Export trade was especially to be encouraged, as it brought ready money into the country. The duty on exports to foreign places was only one per cent., while on goods shipped from Copenhagen to places within the kingdom of Denmark- Norway, a duty of two and one-half per cent, had to be paid. ^° Six per cent, on some goods and four per cent, on others, " N. J. for St. Th.. 1705-08 (October 18, 1707). ^8 The white sugar in these and the preceding cargoes probably came from the French islands, where there were refineries. '3 Mention of "Rasphuset" is made in O. Nielsen, Kjobenhavn paa Holbergs Tid, p. 360. 1S6 THE DANISH WEST INDIES The foreign ports to which the West Indian cargoes were re- shipped were mainly in the Baltic region, and included Liibeck, Danzig, Stettin, Konigsberg, on the South Baltic, Stockholm and Gotenborg in Sweden, and (beginning with 1750) St. Peters- burg in Russia, and Amsterdam in Holland. Among local towns to which West Indian products were distributed were Kiel, Flensborg, and Aabenraa in the duchies; Elsinore, Nyborg, Slagelse, Odense, and Aalborg in Denmark proper; and Bergen, Christiania, Trondhjem and Fredrikshald in Norway.'"' According to the list of shipments from Copenhagen to foreign and domestic points which is contained in the Company's " Udskibnings og Passeer Sedlers Copie-Bog, 1709-17 5Jf" no sugar and little cotton were shipped out of Copenhagen from 1712 to 1720, inclusive. From 1721 to 1733, when St. Croix was purchased, the shipments to foreign ports were more than twenty times those to domestic ports. During the period from 1729 to 1749, sugar was exported but a single year *^ to a foreign port. It was in September, 1729, that the Company began re- fining its own sugar,^^ and this fact, combined with the king's edict of July 4, 1733, requiring privately owned refineries to use only the sugar that came from the West Indian colonies as long as the supply held out, will explain the falling off in exports. The purchase by the Company in 1737 of the two principal refineries, those owned by the Pelt and Weyse families, gave the Company a monopoly of the refining business,^^ and made it possible for it to absorb most of its own sugar. ''^ *" Udskibnings og Passeer Sedlers-Copie-Bog, 1709-1754, passim. ^^ In 1741, 11,443 lbs. of sugar were sent to Stockholm. Ibid. 42 Manager MS., 130. The Company had been granted the privilege of put- ting up a refinery, by the king on April 17, 1721. Vest. Reg., 1699-1746. *^ Mariager MS., 149. 44 See table showing exports to domestic and foreign places in Appendix L, pp. 328-331. CHAPTER VII THE SLAVE TRADE IN THE DANISH WEST INDIES The rise of a class of capitalist planters in the Danish as well as in the other West India islands, was made possible through the labors of the African slave. Indentured white servants too frequently succumbed to the climate or proved quite in- tractable as laborers; while the attempt to use deported crim- inals from the home country proved generally abortive, in the West Indies as elsewhere. The sudden change in habits and environment practically prohibited strenuous effort on the part of the whites whose lot was cast in tropical America. If the agricultural resources of those regions were to be appreciably developed, it must come about through the white man's efforts to earn his bread by the sweat of the negro's brow. It was "the blacks bought by way of trade" who by reason of their ready adaptability to field labor early became "the most useful appurtenances of a plantation, and perpetual servants." ^ This trade, so loathsome to the modern mind, had been be- gun by the Portuguese before the discovery of America. But the few hundred negroes that they had bought from the Moors had been brought into Europe itself." After the occupation of America had begun, Portuguese traders not only supplied their own colony of Brazil but made contracts or "asientos" to supply the Spanish colonies with slaves. Interloping expe- ditions from the Guinea coast of Africa to the West Indies like those of Sir John Hawkins are conspicuous in the sixteenth cen- tury because they were rare. During the period of union be- tween Spain and Portugal (1580-1640) the Dutch wrested from the Portuguese their monopoly of the Guinea trade, and jeal- ously guarded the trade thus won against encroachments by other nations. The rise of the English plantation colonies, 1 Cal. Col., 1661-68, No. 791 (1664?). 2 Lucas, III, 77, 78. [137] 138 THE DANISH WEST INDIES particularly Barbados, in the first haK of the seventeenth cen- tury, and Jamaica in the second half, led the EngUsh to begin exporting slaves to their own American possessions. It is worth noticing that the English slave trade began in earnest about 1640, just when a Dutchman is said to have introduced the art of sugar making to the English colony of Barbados.^ The es- tablishment in 1672 of the Royal African Company of England has been previously noted. This company was enjoying its greatest prosperity during those years when the Danish West India and Guinea Company was attempting in the face of tre- mendous obstacles to secure a permanent foothold for its col- ony at St. Thomas.* A trade that had had the sanctity of century-long custom was little disturbed by the conscientious scruples of reformers. There was no one to plead the rights of the negro as Las Casas had championed those of the Indian. The few timid voices that had dared to raise themselves on the negroes' behalf be- fore 1700 were scarcely heard in the din of the struggles for commercial supremacy and exploitation.^ Once the sugar planting had been well begun, the demand for suitable labor would become insistent. To the seventeenth-century planter there was but one course to pursue. Over on the Guinea coast, in a latitude but slightly lower, was an unlimited supply of la- borers, many of them already accustomed to servitude, who readily adapted themselves to the conditions of plantation life. The problem of the day, so far as the planters and the adminis- trators interested in plantations were concerned, was simply one of method, — how best to bring these laborers where they were needed. The attempt of individuals to solve this problem led to interloping, an art in which the Dutch were preeminent; while the attempt of merchant-statesmen led to the formation of companies under state or royal patronage. ' Lucas, III, 80, 81. * The average annual dividend declared between 1676 and 1688 amounted roughly to eight per cent, annually, reaching as high as twenty-two per cent, during the first two years. See Beer, The Old Colonial System, 1660-1688, I, 343. ^ Beer (I, 322) cites an anonymous pamphlet published in 1684 and a protest against the slave trade by the Pennsylvania Quakers in 1688. ^ O M THE SLAVE TRADE IN THE DANISH WEST INDIES 139 The early efforts of Denmark to establish factories on the Gold Coast have already been referred to. The conditions un- der which the trade was carried on need to be considered some- what in detail. A popular misconception with regard to the slave trade is that white men filled their ships with kidnapped slaves. If such had been the rule it would have been a practical impossibility to have brought the enormous numbers that in the course of time were exported to the New World. In the years from 1680 to 1786, for example, one writer estimates that 2,130,000 slaves were imported into the British West India islands alone.® Though cases of kidnapping doubtless occurred now and then, the simpler and safer plan, and the one usually followed, was for the European state to negotiate a treaty with a local chief or "king" through its representative who was frequently the captain of the ship. The arrangement usually provided for the lease or cession of a bit of coast territory, preferably near a river that furnished good anchorage and communication with the "hinterland." Here was built a "castle" or fort with negro huts and an enclosure for the slaves bought. The governor or factor acted merely as the middle- man, buying the slaves from the chief with whom he had con- tracted. The chief made his captures from among the tribes with which he was at war or on unfriendly terms. If hard pressed himself, he could receive protection at the fort. Cap- tured negroes from inland could be floated down the river to the fort, where the factor bought those that were fit and kept them under guard until the Company's ship came along from Europe with its cargo, or if there was no prospect of that, until Dutch, English or other interlopers came and offered a reasonable price. The cost price at the Guinea factory varied according to conditions along the coast. When the demand was strong in the West Indies, ships of interlopers and companies swarmed along the coast of Africa from Senegal to Angola, and the price rose accordingly.^ ^ Bryan Edyfards, History ...ofthe... West Indies (2 v., London, 1794:), II, 55; Humboldt, Travels, VII, 147. ^ In a letter to the directors dated March 28, 1737, the St. Thomas officials suggest that slaves be secured from the region between Caplahoe and Cape 140 THE DANISH WEST INDIES A single illustration will serve to indicate the nature of the slave market at the Guinea factory from the solely commercial point of view. To those who were in the trade, it was purely a business matter. The Hoye Galley under Captain Lawrence Span arrived at Christiansborg castle on December 15, 1726, with a cargo, not counting the brandy, of 16,135 rdl. A fort- night later when the New Year's stocktaking took place, the Company was credited on its Guinea books with fiftj^ men slaves valued at 84 rdl., twenty-five women at 48 rdl., three boys at 50 rdl., and four girls at 36 rdl. each. This appears to have been the Company's wholesale purchase price. The actual cargo taken on board on March 6 included 238 souls, indicating a brisk business in the opening months of the year. The invoice of the departing ship shows the following cargo and values: one hundred and forty-seven men at 88, seventy women at 56, eleven boys at 56, and ten girls at 40 rdl., making a total value of 17,872 rdl.^ If the discrepancy in the prices of adult male and female slaves as shown in the above invoice was general, it might appear that the mortality among the women in the cargo was higher than among the men, for in the St. Thomas market women sold for nearly or just as high a price as the men, but there is no direct evidence to show that such was the case. The horrors of the "middle passage" have been frequently painted in most lurid colors. Indeed, at its worst it would be difficult to exaggerate the picture of misery presented by a re- turning slaver. Naturally, it was to the captain's as well as the Company's interest to bring as large a part of his cargo safely to the other side as possible. But where the captain's reward depended on the number brought over, or where the officers could bring over slaves on their own account, the temp- tation to overcrowd the vessel was very great. In case of stormy weather, when the hatches had to be closed down, the air in the crowded hold became so stifling as to suflFocate many. Good water was often difficult to obtain, and bad water, as well Three Points, and between Ziode Wolta (river Volta?) and Hardra, as these were usually better than the Loanga or Angola slaves. Martfeldt MSS., VI; Secret-Raadets Breve, 17S3-S9. 8 A^. J. Sot Ouinea; N. J. for St. Th. (1727). See Appendix J., pp. 320-326. THE SLAVE TRADE IN THE DANISH WEST INDIES 141 as unwholesome food, brought on violent forms of dysentery and other internal diseases, with which the physicians who ac- companied the ships found themselves unable to cope. Some- times the negroes would become unruly, and if successfully subdued would have to be loaded down with chains. An anony- mous author, writing in 1684, gives a graphic and characteris- tic description. "For no sooner are they [the blacks] arrived at the Sea-side, but they are sold Hke Beasts to the Merchant, who glad of the booty puts us aboard the Ships, claps us under Deck, and binds us in Chains and Fetters, and thrusts us into the dark noisom Hold, so many and so close together, that we hardly breathe, there are we in the hottest of Summer, and under that scorch- ing Climate without any of the sweet influences of the Air, or briezing Gale to refresh us, sufifocated, stewed, and parboyled altogether in a Crowd, till we almost rot each other and our- selves." ^ P. F. Isert, himself a physician on a Danish slave-ship, writing in 1788, when the agitation against the slave trade was at its height, tells of the indignities to which the negro women were subjected at the hands of the ship's officers, and of the ar- tifices used by the factors to sell miserable wretches who were nigh unto death before the buyers could learn the serious na- ture of their ailments. Before the negroes were bought on the Guinea coast they had to undergo a careful inspection and sorting under the super- vision of the Company's surgeon who accompanied them on the voyage to the West Indies. The usual mode of calculation on the Guinea coast in the seventeenth century was to rate the full-grown negro man or woman as the unit, or "Pies de Indies," the others being classified as "| boys," "| girls," "\ boys," and so on. The fraction indicated what part of the price of a full-grown slave the younger ones should sell for. It must not be supposed that the authorities who permitted this trade were entirely unmindful of the fact that the negroes had souls that might be worth saving. In their contract with Arff, by which ' Philolethus Physiologus, Friendly Advice to the Gentlemen Planters in the East and West Indies (1684), Part II, pp. 82, 83 (quoted in Beer, op. cU., I, 345). 142 THE DANISH WEST INDIES he took over the Guinea trade in 1689, the directors required the lessee to keep a minister on board the slave ships and at the Guinea factory. ^° It is nevertheless to be feared that the zeal of the trader met with greater rewards from the authorities than that of the priest. There is good reason to suppose that the extent of the slave trade must have standardized its processes, so that there was little difference in the treatment of negroes along the various parts of the Guinea coast. The Dutch probably got their car- goes across the ocean with the least loss of life. The Branden- burg officials at the Gross-Friedrichsberg factory were largely Dutch, and what happened there may be considered typical for the coast. A surgeon of the African Company gives in his journal a vivid description of what he saw up to the time that the slave-ship was ready to sail. The surgeon, who began his service there in December, 1692, wrote as follows: ^^ "As soon as a sufficient number of these unhappy victims were collected, they were examined by me, the healthy and strong ones were bought, while those who lacked as much as a finger or a nail or were in any way defective — called Magrones ^^ — ^were returned. "The slaves that were taken were made to kneel, twenty or thirty at a time; the right shoulder was greased with palm-oil, and it was branded in the middle with an iron that bore the initials C. — ^AB — C. (churfurstlich afrikanisch-brandenburgische Compagnie); then they were strictly guarded in the lodgings provided for them. Where a band of fifty or sixty slaves had been secured, they were coupled together in twos or threes and driven to the coast under escort. It was my duty to watch over the transport, for which purpose I was carried in the rear in a hammock, so that I could see the entire column. Once the coast was reached, a prearranged signal brought the ship's boats ashore to bring their black cargo on board. Some of these un- fortunates followed their leaders weakly and unresistingly, even 10 Vest. Reg., 1671-99, fol. 166, 1116 (July 27, 1689). ^^ Surgeon Johann Peter Oettinger's Journal (quoted in Schiick, I, 331 et seq.). '^ Probably a corruption of " manquerons," a term applied in the West Indies to negroes who were below standard. THE SLAVE TRADE IN THE DANISH WEST INDIES 143 when they were forced to hasten by the lash of a whip; others, however, howled and danced; and there were still others, es- pecially women, who so filled the air with their heartrending shrieks, that drums and other noisy instruments were scarcely able to drown out the sound, and it often cut me to the quick. Yet it did not lie in my power to alter the fate of these unhappy beings. . . . "On April 4 the ship was finally filled with seven hundred and thirty-eight slaves of both sexes, so that we were able to take leave of the king {i. e., the chief) and return to the ship. After being carried in palanquins (Sanften) to the beach, we treated our carriers and attendants with brandy and then chmbed into the boats. In the evening we arrived on board the ship, wet, sunburned and stung by mosquitoes and other pests, and we thanked God that we had at last emerged safely out of this heathenish land. Yet what a horror overcame me, when I visited the decks in which the unhappy victims were confined, and breathed the frightful atmosphere in which they were com- pelled to live. Chained together by the feet in pairs they lay or sat in rows next to each other, and my heart well nigh stood still at the thought that I must see such beings, to all appear- ances like men, treated like chattels." No doubt the slaves on board ship were as well cared for as the crowded conditions permitted, for captain and owners were interested in bringing as large cargoes as possible safely across the ocean. When the weather was favorable they were brought on deck a few at a time to limber up their stiffened muscles by dancing and exercise. The women were frequently placed, unchained, in a room by themselves. ^^ The monotony of the daily fare of pork, beans, and barley gruel was relieved by weekly allowances of millet, and by brandy and tobacco on alternate days. Palm-oil was used to flavor the gruel. ^^ The success of a voyage was largely dependent upon the kind of ^' P. F. Isert {Reise nach Guinea, pp. 305 et seq.), gives an interesting account of his experiences on the Guinea coast and on a slave-ship. " Directors' order, (August 8, 1725), Amer. & Afr. C. B.. 1716-26. The weekly allowance for each slave consisted of | lb. pork, 2 qts. beans, 2 qts. barley, -| qt. millet, ^ pint brandy, 2 oz. tobacco, 1 pipe, j pint palm oil. 144 THE DANISH WEST INDIES negroes secured. Certain parts of the coast had a bad reputa- tion as sources of slave supply, for their negroes were liable to grow violently mutinous when threatened with bondage. Such, for example, were the El Mina negroes from the Dutch part of the coast. The percentage of loss on the Guinea- West Indian slave- ships varied from ten to about fifty-five per cent, of those taken on, so far as the limited number of available statistics shows. ^^ The scenes that ensued when the prospective buyers boarded an incoming slave-ship were frequently well-nigh riotous and frightened the poor blacks, who had little or no idea of what awaited them, almost to death. The white men would make a wild dash for the negroes that they intended to buy, and sep- arate them from the main group by way of securing first right to purchase. Sometimes the cargo would be taken on shore, kept under guard, and sold in small lots until entirely disposed of. The eagerness with which the directors of the Company took up the slave trade as a means of increasing the shareholders' profits, and the tenacity with which they clung to their monop- oly of the trade once they had begun it, emphasize the impor- tance ascribed to this traffic by the moneyed interests of the seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries. It was not until the governorship of John Lorentz, when St. Thomas begins to be administered as a normal, well-ordered colony, that the directors were able to carry out any plan for direct participation in the slave trade with ships owned by the Company; and it was not until 1733, after the Company had suffered a number of severe losses at sea, and about the time it began negotiations for the purchase of St. Croix from France, that it was ready to let the slave trade fall back into private hands. This experience of over a third of a century, during which the Danish West India and Guinea Company attempted to supply slaves to its own colony, and also to make St. Thomas a depot for the supply of slaves to the neighboring lands, needs to be explained in some detail. '^ These percentages are drawn from the figures of ships sailing in 1698, 1699, 1700, 1707, 1714, and 1733. THE SLAVE TRADE IN THE DANISH WEST INDIES 145 It was the profits made by the Brandenburg African Company in some of its early Guinea voyages that brought home to the observant governor Lorentz the possibiHties of the slave trade as a source of revenue for the Danish company. Two Branden- burg slave-ships^® that arrived in St. Thomas in November, 1696, before the peace at Ryswick had been concluded, and hence while Louis XIV was still at war against the league of opposing states, brought to St. Thomas more than one thousand one hundred pieces of human freight. One of the Brandenburg captains whose cargo contained four hundred and eighty slaves remarked to the governor that if he had had more room on board he could have made as fine a bargain in slaves as he could ever desire. ^^ The other captain confided to the governor the opinion that the Danish forts on the Guinea coast afforded excellent prospects for the slave trade. These successful ven- tures and the information he received from the captains led the Danish governor to express to the directors the hope that the Company would take up the Guinea trade, "since all other trade is as nothing compared with this slave trade." If the directors would only make a beginning with a few hundred Guinea slaves, urged Lorentz, they would not find it a bad ven- ture, but "the first experience would give them such joy, that the slave trade would hold its place before all other sorts of commerce, and the Company would feel itself impelled to con- tinue it." ^^ The governor's enthusiasm was not lost on the di- rectors, who had great faith in their representative at St. Thomas and were especially anxious to get the Company to the point where it could pay dividends and thus regain the confidence of the investing public. Nicholas Arff, the Guinea lessee, had, as we have seen, per- ^® Frederick III under Capt. Jacob Lambrecht with six hundred and thirty, and the Electoral Princess under Capt. Wouter Ypes with four hundred and eighty slaves. " Lorentz to Directors (November 30, 1696), C. B., 1690-1713. 1^ Ibid. The French were also becoming increasingly active in the Guinea trade during the interval preceding the outbreak of the War of the Spanish Succession. On July 9, 1701, Louis XIV issued an arret granting to a new Guinea company certain rights that had been held by a former one. Scelle, La traite negriere, II, 687. 146 THE DANISH WEST INDIES mitted his lease to expire because of serious and unforeseen losses brought about by the European war. Just at the time that the Ryswick negotiations were being concluded, the Danish West India and Guinea Company was being reorganized under a new charter which bore the date of September 28, 1697. New conditions demanded a corresponding readjustment. Baron Jens Juel and Mathias Moth, who had so faithfully backed the governor in his endeavor to stifle the Brandenburg African Company's activities at St. Thomas, were retained as directors. ^^ The Company's total capital, including a ten per cent, assess- ment made in 1695 in order to secure capital to send a ship to St. Thomas for a cargo,^° was just 84,883 rdl., 2 marks. On this investment the shareholders had received no other returns than the three or four per cent, yielded by the Thormohlen lease. It was not until late in 1697 or early in 1698 that the directors decided to send a ship and cargo to Guinea and the West Indies. Finding themselves unable to secure a large enough sum from the stockholders, the directors turned to a wealthy merchant, one Jacob Lerke, who contributed half of the funds necessary for the new venture. The result was the voyage of the Copen- hagen Bourse to the Guinea coast under joint auspices. But this initial venture fell below expectations, for out of the five hundred and six slaves taken on at Christiansborg and along the Guinea coast, only two hundred and fifty-nine were delivered at St. Thomas in September, 1698, and thirty-seven of these died shortly after landing. A mutiny had broken out on board, in the course of which many had been killed or had jumped overboard. To cap this misfortune scurvy had helped to reduce the numbers to scarcely more than half of the original cargo. ^^ The surviving slaves were sold at 85 rdL each, which appears to have been three times their cost price in Guinea.-" The excellent state of the West Indian market as compared with the low prices prevailing " Manager MS., 103. ^° The Company had resumed its administration after the Thormohien fiasco late in 1694, On March 7, 1702, Matthias Moth made a clear and fairly detailed resume of the Company's activities in Guinea and the West Indies since 1695. See Comp. Prot., 1697-1734. 21 Lorentz to Directors (October 12, 1698), Gov. C. B.. 169^.-1700. " See Appendix J, pp. 320-326. THE SLAVE TRADE IN THE DANISH WEST INDIES 147 on the Guinea coast made the disappointment of the owners all the keener. ^^ Before the news of this partial failure reached them, the directors had arranged for the purchase in Holland of another vessel, for which a cargo valued at 30,000 rdl. was planned. Ten thousand rixdoUars were to be invested in slaves, the re- mainder in other Guinea products, presumably ivory, gold, palm oil, and the like.^^ The new ship, called Christian V, had to be fitted out by the wealthier shareholders on their personal credit, for the others were in no mood for paying further assess- ments. This second ship left for Guinea in August, 1698. It fared rather better than the first, for Captain Grabner succeeded in July, 1699, in bringing into St. Thomas harbor three hundred and fifty-three slaves, almost two-thirds of the number taken on in Africa.^"" About this time the Company managed to take over Lerke's share in the Copenhagen Bourse, paying 7,800 rdl. forit.26 The Danes were not alone in this attempt to supply a market that had been starved during a general European war. The Dutch at Curasao immediately prepared to resume the business with the Spanish Main which had been seriously interrupted by the war. Peace had scarcely been proclaimed before the Dutch magazines there were filled with Spanish-American goods that had been paid for largely in African slaves. The English parliament passed a bill modifying the monopoly of the slave trade in favor of private traders for not less than thirteen years beginning with June 24, 1698.^^ ^^ In the investigation instituted by the St. Thomas governor and his council, the captain, Innes Petersen, seems to have been absolved from responsibility. The same captain lost in his next voyage three hundred of a total of five hundred and thirty-eight slaves. Landsprot. for St. Th., 169^-1711 (October 6, 1698). See Appendix J. 2* Comp. ProL, 1697-1784 (April 29, 1698). 2^ See Appendix J. 2" Comp. Prof., 1697-1734 (June 9, 1699). 2' The Royal African Company was merely to keep up the forts and castles and was to receive a ten per cent, duty on all goods imported to Guinea and five and ten per cent, on certain goods exported. Gold, silver, and negroes went out duty-free. But the market was so large and the possibilities for profitable agriculture so vast that the demand was not easily satisfied. After the suppres- 148 THE DANISH WEST INDIES When the report spread through the islands that the Danish governor was expecting a slave-ship to arrive, a Jamaica trader sent word to St. Thomas that he would like to invest 30,000 rdl. in slaves if the governor would guarantee their delivery at a certain time.^ This the latter was unable to do, so that when the expected slave cargo did arrive he had to employ a local merchant to take the surplus slaves to Hispaniola and the sur- rounding islands.^ A very considerable share of the negroes sold at St. Thomas were brought in by interlopers.^'' Unless its treasury happened to be empty, the Company rarely permitted planters to buy directly from the slave captain, and never allowed slaves to be landed without charging an import duty, — usually four per cent. This duty or "recognition" was as a rule paid i7i natura, which in a cargo of men, women, and children of assorted sizes often required some ingenious calculations. The selling price varied from twenty-five to one hundred per cent, above the cost or wholesale price, according to market conditions. In one of the agreements with the Brandenburgers it was stipulated that either party might share with the other in the purchase of interlopers' cargoes. After the coronation of Frederick I as king in Prussia in 1701 the Brandenburg African Company was left to its own fate, and practically its sole activity until its discontinuance in the reign of Frederick William I consisted of such occasional purchases as those referred to, and of pro- testing if its rights appeared to have been transgressed or ignored. The distribution of slaves to other islands was usually done by traders from those islands. The keen trader, hearing of the approaching arrival of a cargo from Guinea would hasten to St. Thomas, if business conditions would warrant it, and wait there for weeks in order to get the first chance at buying a sion of the buccaneers, Jamaica in particular progressed rapidly in its plantation life. Lorentz to Directors (January 22, 1698), C. B. 169^-1700; W. R. Scott, Joint-Stock Com-panies to 1720 (3 v., Cambridge, 1910-1912), II, 23. =8 Lorentz to Directors (January 22, 1698), C. B., 16H-1700. -" In this way Peter Smith took a batch of forty-four negroes off on his bark, on condition of receiving half the profits. ^^ Appendix J. THE SLAVE TRADE IN THE DANISH WEST INDIES 149 slave cargo. The local St. Thomas traders frequently bought considerable numbers of negroes for customers in other islands. Some good-sized fortunes were built up at St. Thomas during the War of the Spanish Succession in just this way. The following summary taken from the Company's journals kept at the St. Thomas factory indicates how the Company disposed of one entire cargo. On July 8, 1710, a Zeeland inter- loper. Captain David Diniesen, sold the following slaves to the Danish company: 134 men = ISi^Pies^de Indies 26 women = 26 11 "2/3 boys" = 71/3 20 "1/2 boys" = 10 2 "2/3 girls" = 11/3 5 "1/2 girls" = 21/2 2 "1/3 boys" 2/3 200 head = 181 5/6 Pies de Indies at 65 rdl. = 11,819 rdl.. 1 mark. Date July 10 Number 2 "1/2 boys" 1 "1/2 boy" 1 "1/2 girl" 1 " 1/2 boy" 1 "1/2 boy" 1 "1/2 boy" 1 "1/2 boy" 8 "1/2 boys" 1 "1/2 boy" 1 "1/2 boy" 1 "1/2 girl" 2 "2/3 boys" 1 "2/3 boy" 1 "2/3 girl" 2 "1/2 boys" 1 "1/2 girl" 4 "2/3 boys" 1 "1/2 boy" 1 "1/2 boy" 4 men 1 woman 4 men RECEIPTS (in the order of purchase) Rdl. Rdl. Price each Total 50 60 90 60 100 100 100 50 50 60 65 60 60 480 40 60 60 180 100 90 120 60 300 00 60 400 100 400 Rdl. Rdl. Date Number Price each Total July 12 3 men 100 300 2 "2/3 boys' 85 170 9 men 100 900 1 man 100 1" 1/2 girl" 55 1 "2/3 girl" 85 3 men 100 300 2 women 100 200 24 men 100 2400 3 women 100 300 1 "1/3 boy" 33 1/3 1 "1/2 boy" 45 5 men 100 500 July 14 1 man 100 July 26 8 men 100 800 2 women 100 200 37 men 100 3700 4 women 100 400 Aug. 14 20 men 100 2000 9 men 100 900 8 women 100 800 Sept. 19 1 "2/3 boy" 80 Totals . 187 head 14,443 1/2 rdl. Expenditures: Provisions from July 10 to August 31 ... . 140 rdl., 1 mark. Losses: From July 10 to November 8, 7 negro men died and were debited on the books at 65 rdl. each. Suviming up: No. of negroes sold by September 19 ... . 187 " " " dying before sale 7 " " " unaccounted for 6 Total bought 200 150 THE DANISH WEST INDIES Total receipts from negro sales 14,443 1/3 rdl. Total cost of negroes 11,959 1/6 Purchase price 11,819 Food 140 1/6 11,959 1/6 Net profit 2,484 1/6 rdl. 2,48476 "^ 11,95976 = 20Vio> the percentage of net profit on the cargo, according to the books, exclusive of current ex- penses. It will be noticed that the cargo was sold mainly in small lots, that the Pies de Indies had no definite relation to the price except in the case of the full-grown negroes, and that the cargo was practically disposed of within five weeks. The larger lots were sold mainly to government oflBcials who knew the intrica- cies of the business and were often able to take advantage of the situation to their own profit.^^ The prices of slaves, wholesale and retail, during the War of the Spanish Succession afford a good trade barometer for St. Thomas. Denmark was neutral, and in a better position than in the previous war to reap the advantages of neutrality. From 45 and 80 rdl. in 1702, the wholesale and retail prices respectively rose by 1704 to 60 and 100 rdl. and three years later to 80 and 100 rdl. The highest point seems to have been reached in 1714, when slaves sold at St. Thomas for 120 rdl. each. This price is excelled in 1722 by a cargo that brought 125 rdl. per head. Business conditions at St. Thomas, which were evidently stimulated by Denmark-Norway's neutral position during the Spanish Succession War, suffered a slump after its close. Not until the end of the Northern War (the treaty of Nystadt was concluded between Sweden and Russia in 1721) when Sweden had been reduced to a second-rate power, do commercial condi- tions in the Danish islands, as evidenced by the state of the slave trade, begin to show improvement. During the years preceding the conclusion of peace with Denmark (1720) the St. Thomas government prepared itself more than once to resist a rumored Swedish attack.^- The depredations of pirates, re- " See below, p. 191. " Udtog af Secret-Raads Prot, 1710-20 (August 5, 1715; June 22, 1716). Martfeldt MSS.. Vol. VI. THE SLAVE TRADE IN THE DANISH WEST INDIES 151 viving difficulties with the Spanish neighbors of St. Thomas, complications with the English in the Leeward Islands because of Danish occupation of St. John, and the peculations of its local officials, combined to make the position of the Danish company and its colonists extremely uncertain. Besides, this was a period of hard times when the St. Thomas government supplied the lack of coin by issues of paper money. In attempt- ing to account for the business depression the St. Thomas au- thorities were inclined to place the emphasis upon the ruin of the formerly lucrative trade with Spanish America.^^ The planters on the other hand were convinced that the Company's officials at St. Thomas and those directing the Company's policy were responsible for the changed conditions.^^ Certain it is that the loss of the principal foreign market and the disappearance of hard cash were bound to affect all forms of business and partic- ularly the slave trade, which was very difficult to carry on except on a cash basis, and which required considerable sums for its successful prosecution. To be forced to wait until crops matured and then to find themselves face to face with a variety of petty local restrictions, was the prospect that awaited the traders who attempted to carry on business at St. Thomas on a barter basis. The Danish West India and Guinea Company seems rarely if ever to have had more than two ships at a time on the Copen- hagen-Guinea-West India run. Dutch interlopers furnished far greater numbers of slaves for the St. Thomas market than the Danish Company.^^ In view of the expertness and daring of the ubiquitous Dutch trader it was not necessary to invest much of the Company's capital in slave-ships except when the Dutch slavers failed to appear. As a rule the St. Thomas au- thorities had only to await the arrival of a cargo which they could accept or refuse as they saw fit according to the condition of the slaves and the state of the market. During the years from 1697 to 1733, — that is, from the time " Governor and Council to Directors (August 10, 1714), B. & D., 17U-17. ^* The commission sent over by St. Thomas planters in 1715 in order to bring about certain changes in policy is dealt with in Chapter IX. '5 See Appendix J. 15^ THE DANISH WEST INDIES the Company began the Guinea- West India trade on its own account until the directors voted for its discontinuance, — the Company lost not fewer than eight ships. The greater number of these were employed in the Guinea as well as in the West India carrying trade. The total number owned by the Company at one time or another in this period amounted only to twenty. ^^ The following resume of the losses will show their approximate extent; The Guldenlew, intended for the Copenhagen-St. Thomas run, was lost at Lessoe, off the Norwegian coast, on Novem- ber 20, 1702. The Cronprincen (the Crown Prince) was lost at Isle de Prince in the Guinea gulf on May 31, 1706, through the explosion of its powder magazine while en route from Guinea to St. Thomas. Only five on board were saved of whom three eventually reached Denmark. The Christian V and Frederick IV left Guinea on May 29, 1709, with a rich cargo of gold and slaves. Both of them missed St. Thomas and were wrecked in the Bay of Honduras on March 7, 1710. The Spaniards confiscated their cargoes and brought them to Porto Bello. The Chrisiiansfort, while on its way to Copenhagen from Bergen where it had been forced to winter, was lost with its West Indian cargo at Hoje Wserde March 2-3, 1713. The Jomfru Alette was captured on October 31, 1717, by a Swedish privateer, while on its way from Norway to Copenhagen with a West India cargo. The Salvator Mundi was wrecked, August 15, 1729, on Anegada reef near Virgin Gorda while en route from St. Thomas to Copenhagen with a return cargo. The Christianshorg was wrecked in the Cattegat on its return from St. Thomas on September 17, 1730. During the decade preceding the purchase of St. Croix (1733) the policy to be pursued with regard to the slave trade was an all absorbing question at the meetings of the stockholders. In their instructions of November 16, 1723, the directors had specifically sought to encourage private traders to sell their »« Vest. Reg., 1699-1746; Manager MS.. 110 et seq. THE SLAVE TRADE IN THE DANISH WEST INDIES 153 slaves at the St. Thomas factory.^^ Four years later Frederick Holmsted who had been employed as bookkeeper in the Com- pany's Copenhagen office for about twenty years advised the directors against the Company's active participation in the slave trade, but his advice was not heeded. From 1728 to 1733, inclusive, the Company made^a vigorous attempt to revive its Guinea- West Indian commerce. At least three new ships were put into active commission, and about 200,000 rdl. according to Holmsted's account were sunk in the venture, but with no prospect of the Company's being able to pay interest on more than half of that sum. When the directors and chief stock- holders met in February, 1734, there ensued a heated debate as to whether or not the Company should continue the trade. In this discussion there seems to have been no mention of humanitarian or religious arguments, the sole question being one of dividends. The news of the arrival of the Laarburg Galley at St. Thomas with only two hundred forty-two of her original cargo of four hundred forty-three slaves ^ was used with telling effect by those who opposed the continued partici- pation of the Company in the slave trade. These opposition leaders included three directors ^^ and three "chief sharehold- ers" ^^ (Hovedparticipanter) . In the written argument drawn up by these men is included the following estimate of moneys ex- pended and received in connection with the Laarburg Galley, which statement they assert to be a "proper and true rela- tion" of how matters really stood. ^^ The ship Laarburg Oalley has cost 7,683 rdl. 4 sk. Repairs and equipment 12,881 " 3 m. 15 " Cargo . . . and insurance on slaves 31,066 " 5 " 13 " Interest on ship and equipment from date of sailing to return, and of cargo ... at only 6 per cent 3,922 " 3 " Total cost of expedition 55,554 rdl. 1 m. »7 Holmsted's "Deduction" (February 4, 1734), Co. Prob., 1697-173^. Cf. also Host 64 et seq, 38 B. & D.. 1732-3k (May 8, 1733). '^ Blome, Holmsted, Klauman. *° C. A. von Plessen, Dose, Kreyer. " Deduction og Voto (February 26, 1734), Corny. Prot., 1697-173^. 154 THE DANISH WEST INDIES On the other hand, there should be deducted for deteriora- tion of ship 5,000 rdl. Profit on gold and other goods. . .3,157 rdl. 4 m. 10 sk. Freight which ship should earn from St. Thomas hither 4,110 "2" 6" 7,268 " 1 m. 12,268 rdl. 1 m. Delivered to Fort Christians- borg surplus of various goods from the ship, which with usual 10 per cent, advance for freight amounts to 14,281 rdl. 4 m. 14 sk. On the other hand, the ship has taken slaves, etc., at the fort for 3,976 " Leaving 10,305 rdl. 4 m. 14 sk. An order (Assignation) for which is to be redeemed at Cape Coast 1,608 " 3 " Slaves on St. Thomas have been sold for goods, in part for 50 per cent, above the cash price 26,658 " 3 " 6 To balance account 16 " 8 " Total 50,857 rdl. 8 sk. The advocates of Company participation in the slave trade had used figures based on the Laarburg Galley's last voyage as an argument in support of their views. "According to the figures we have quoted," ran in effect the arguments of the opponents of slave-trade under the Company, "there is a loss, up to the time of the ship's return, of but (sic) 4,697 rdl., 4 sk. on this voyage, which with one exception is the most fortunate of twenty voyages which have been undertaken. It must at best be called a bad business, when so considerable a capital as over 50,000 rdl. must be furnished and is expected to yield interest while it is being risked in the waters of three continents, and, after all that, is still unable to make a better showing to the stockholders." The victory of the opposition was decisive. In the final vote eighty-five out of a possible one hundred and thirty-four votes were registered against the Company's continuing in the THE SLAVE TRADE IN THE DANISH WEST INDIES 155 slave trade, and only twenty-two in favor of it. Twenty-seven refrained from voting. The votes of the royal family were among the majority. The slave trade was formally thrown open to sub- jects in the Danish West Indies who might wish to participate by a royal mandate issued April 25, 1734. The directors fixed a duty of eight rixdollars on slaves brought to St. Thomas and half that sum on those brought to St. Croix. '^^ Since this con- cession to freedom in trade failed to bring about the hoped-for increase, the trade was thrown open to all Danish subjects, whether they lived in home lands or in the colonies. The re- sults were just encouraging enough to make it worth while for the Company to enter into an agreement with private merchants and shipowners on December 3, 1745, with a view to preventing needless competition and duplication of effort. Finally, in 1747, a plan was formulated and put into operation which re- sulted in the Company's virtually absorbing the private inter- ests. The reorganization of the Danish West India and Guinea Company under the "Convention of 1747" marks the last stage of the slave trade as a field of investment for that Com- pany. An attempt was made to correct some of the more common abuses connected with the Guinea trade. Captains and officers were forbidden under severe penalty to take slaves on board on their own account, and by way of encouragement to large cargoes a progressive bounty was provided, beginning with 7 rdl. and rising to 20 rdl. for each slave above three hun- dred.43 But the years that elapsed before the king took over the Company's holdings in 1754 were too few to permit of any ex- tensive development. It became clearer and clearer after 1750 that the days of the Company were numbered; consequently it was more important for the latter to conserve its resources than to divert them into uncertain channels. So long as men's ideas of human rights suffered no substantial change, and so long as the demand for sugar and cotton made it profitable to raise those products, just so long would there be a demand for slave labor on the West Indian plantations. The « Manager MS., 174. « Trykte Octroyer . . . for 1750 (Mandate of October 14, 1747). 156 THE DANISH WEST INDIES labor problem as it appeared to the merchants and statesmen who were called upon to solve it was merely one of method; for African slaves remained in the eighteenth, as they had been in the seventeenth, century "the strength and sinews of this western world." They were indeed the chief agency that fur- nished the wealth, for the control of which European nations were willing to throw down the gage of conflict and usher in titanic wars. In fact, no small part of those resources which were dissolved in the smoke of eighteenth-century European battlefields was extracted from fertile West Indian plantations of cotton and cane by the sweat of the negro's brow. CHAPTER Vni THE SLAVE AND THE PLANTER Few indeed are the negroes in America who are able to tell from what part of Africa their ancestors came or to what tribe they belonged. Though they have every "prospect of pos- terity" the sources by which they might develop a "pride of ancestry" are shrouded in impenetrable mystery. Which of his forbears came from Calabar or Loango, from the El Mina tribe or from Madagascar, it would be next to impossible for any negro to tell, and the problem would certainly tax the in- genuity of the most skilful genealogist. Yet the black popula- tion was as varied in its way as the white. Besides the brand of the importing company and the owner there might be found on the imported negroes ^ in any plantation colony the tattoo marks and slashings that were peculiar to tribes of many differ- ent characters, scattered along the African coast from Senegal to Loango. These imported negroes were drawn from all sta- tions of life in their native land. Their numbers embraced rich and poor, haughty chiefs and humble retainers. Not in- frequently had a chief been forced to sell some of his own numer- ous wives that he might keep his contract with a punctilious trader.^ A negro who had been accustomed to rule in his na- tive land was not unlikely to prefer death to bondage. If he was landed alive he might be expected to make trouble for his owner by running away or by stirring up rebellion among his fellows. Freshly imported slaves were distributed among the older and the native-born slaves in order that the problem of adjustment to the new condition of servitude might be ren- dered less acute. But the period of "apprenticeship," during which the raw laborer had to be broken in to the routine of his task, must always have been trying both for slave and owner. ^ Called Bosal negroes by the Danes and Dutch. 2 Oldendorp, Udtog . . . (Kjobenhavn, 1784), Part 1, p. 179. 158 THE DANISH WEST INDIES The status of the negro was not fixed by any single "black code," but was determined by a series of laws passed by the colonial authorities from time to time. These regulative mandates began to appear before 1700 and became more severe as the ratio of negro to white population increased. When there were three adult whites for each five adult slaves, as was the case in 1691, there was obviously little difficulty; but when there came to be not fewer than eight full-grown slaves for each adult white person, as was the ratio indicated by the census re- ports made in 1720 and 1725, the situation became vastly more complicated. With the increasing size of the plantations ^ absentee landlordism became more general, a larger number of planters was forced to resort to white managers, and in many instances the supervision of the slaves was left to negro drivers."* The local government often found it difficult to impress upon the planters the urgent need of keeping close watch upon their slaves. Upon an owner's taking possession of a plantation, his first care was to have his negroes clear a plot of ground and plant such things as maize, yams, sweet potatoes, beans and cassava upon it. The negroes were expected to raise all their own food, except for such low-grade fish or defective Irish beef as might be allotted to them when the food supply ran short. ^ A very few plantations were devoted mainly to "provisions," particularly on St. Thomas, but never to exceed four per cent, of the total number.^ In course of time each negro or negro family was allotted a plot of ground, and not infrequently the negroes were permitted to sell the surplus for themselves. In the busy season the negroes' working day was long and hard, though no harder than the lot of many a white farm hand of to-day in the Mississippi valley during the harvest and threshing season. At about four o'clock in the morning the ^ The size of the average plantation on St. Thomas in 1725 was nearly twice that in 1691. * Usually referred to as Bomba negroes. sBredal to Directors (July 8, 1718), B. & D., 1717-20. Provisions are generally referred to as Kaast or Cosl in the documents. " In 1725, out of a total of one hundred and seventy-seven plantations on St. Thomas, seven were used for producing provisions. Cf. Appendix H, p. 318. THE SLAVE AND THE PLANTER 159 negro driver, or bomba, would rouse the sleeping slaves by ringing a bell or blowing a tuttue, or conch shell. The working day began at daybreak, and at eight or nine o'clock they were allowed half an hour in the field for a breakfast consisting of corn bread and salt meat with perhaps a little sugar-cane juice if rations were short. The noon intermission from twelve to half past one gave them a chance to prepare their meal and to rest during the fierce midday heat. The day's work usually ended at sundown, though in harvest season they often con- tinued until nine or ten in the evening feeding live-stock, carry- ing wood to cook-house and water to cisterns and distilleries. Saturday afternoons and Sundays they had to themselves. The constant influx of fresh bosal negroes from Guinea helped to keep alive the negroes' native customs and super- stitions. Witches were especially dreaded. The glance of a witch into the eyes of a new-born babe was believed to be likely to take away its breath and to cause it to die. A hungry witch might even devour an infant that was not protected from its gaze. The chief influence that helped to eradicate these be- liefs was the presence of the Moravian missionaries. Despite bitter opposition from local officials as well as from planters, they kept up their beneficent labors from the time of their first landing in 1733 until they became a permanent factor in the life of the islands. They labored incessantly, whether in the fields or in the meeting houses, to teach the simple, ignorant slaves the precepts of Christ.^ After over two decades of Moravian missionary efforts the Danish Lutheran church finally established a regular mission on the islands in 1755. Respect for the property of others was not a virtue to which the West Indian slave could truthfully lay claim; hence the various repressive measures by which the local authorities attempted to check the vending of goods by negroes except when written permission had been granted by their owners.^ '' The classic account of early Moravian missionary efforts in the West Indies is that of Oldendorp (q. v.) which forms the basis for the earlier pages of H. Lawaetz's Brodremenighedens Mission i Dansk-Vestindien (Kobenhavn, 1902). * The first of these appears to have been issued March 29, 1688, by Adolph Esmit. CJ. Governors' Orders, Bancroft Collection; Martfeldt MSS., Vol. I, 160 THE DANISH WEST INDIES Such goods were too frequently found to have been stolen from the slave's owner or from some neighboring planter. The planters' most constant difficulty was with runaways. Although St. Thomas was but a small island, it did not reach its maximum cultivation until towards the end of the first quarter of the eighteenth century. The result was that with the increasing severity that accompanied the development of the St. Thomas plantations, slaves were constantly disappearing into the "bush" or wild forest. In order to cope with this problem the planters were early organized into a sort of militia whose members were assigned to do duty, either on horseback or on foot, in the various parts of the island. This planter-police was especially useful during the War of the Spanish Succession in guarding against raids on St. Thomas plantations by lawless elements from among the belligerents.^ Not infrequently hunts for runaways (maron-negers) were organized in M'hich slaves who could be trusted were employed to do the rough work. The chief means of communication between the more remote and inaccessible plantations and the harbor on the south side was by canoe. The mountainous character of the island and the torrential downpours to which it was subject rendered the making and repairing of roads a costly matter; but the numer- ous "bays" with their convenient beaches lent themselves to the keeping of canoes and small sailboats. The latter were frequently used by white men who with a few negroes would sail off to Crab Island, for instance, the best turtle-fishing ground near St. Thomas. When the slave-hunt in the bush became too successful, it is not strange that the hunted negroes, who were often proficient in handling the canoes, should take to the boats and pull for Porto Rico. There, just beyond Crab Island, was a promised land from which rarely indeed was a slave returned. The government at St. Thomas labored in- Placaierfor St. Thomas. The preceding paragraphs on negro life on the planta- tions are drawn mainly from an article by J. C. Schmidt, an employee on the Princess plantation owned by Governor-General Schimmelman. It appeared in Samleren for 1788 (2. B.) under the title Blandede Anmcerkninger, samlede paa og over Ejlandet St. Kroix i Amerika. 9 In Kopibogfor St. Thomas, 1703-15 (July 22, 1704) is a list of the various planters, etc., with their duties and places to which they were assigned. THE SLAVE AND THE PLANTER 161 cessantly to prevent an exodus of slaves from the island. From the days of John Lorentz to the end of the Company's career, numerous ordinances, mandates, and the like were issued cau- tioning planters to keep their canoes chained up, and threaten- ing them with fines and worse if they failed to obey.^*^ The question of the return of fugitive slaves formed during the greater part of the history of the Company the principal theme of the relations between St. Thomas and Porto Rico. The instances where slaves fled from Porto Rico to St. Thomas were so exceedingly few that it is impossible to escape the con- clusion that the St. Thomas planters, with their more intensive cultivation and their desire to gain a competence in a short time, treated their slaves far more harshly than the Spanish planters, ^^ The Spanish argument for refusing the return of fugitive slaves was rather ingenuous in that they held that the slaves came over to be baptized. In a claim against the Spanish nation made out in the Company's oflSce in Copenhagen in 1745 and evidently intended for use by the Danish envoy at Madrid, the number of slaves that had escaped from both St. Thomas and St. Croix to Porto Rico was fixed at three hundred. These were of course " the best and most valuable of the Com- pany's and the inhabitants' slaves." ^^ The arrival of each new Spanish governor became the signal for sending over a deputa- tion from St. Thomas to congratulate him and to inquire whether or not he brought with him orders from his king con- cerning the fugitive slaves. Although the Danish governor usually sent over presents in the form of table delicacies and was offered others in return,^^ he received no runaway negroes nor any equivalent for them. These claims for fugitive slaves appear never to have been satisfied during the Company's existence, and were indeed not adjusted until 1766. lo Extracts for 1703-09 (October 2, 1706), Martfeldt MSS., Vol. VI. Numer- ous similar orders were issued at later times. ^^ In the census list for 1715-16 occurs the item "twenty-four fugitive slaves," which seem, however, to have been slaves escaped from St. Eustatius. ^^ This did not include slaves stolen in 1702, nor two shiploads that stranded on the Honduras coast in 1710. Dir. K. B., 1733-54 (May 11, 1745). ^' See, for instance. Governor Francisco Dania's letter to Governor Magens (February 10, 1709) in C. B., 1703-16. Cf. Alberti, Slavehanddens Eistorie, 238. 162 THE DANISH WEST INDIES The matter of doling out punishment to unruly negroes had its serious difficulties. It early became apparent that with the estabhshment of sugar planting as a fixed industry, the punish- ment of slaves would have to be done under the supervision of the Company's officials. In theory the "Danish law" of Christian V was supposed to apply, but the local officials were given considerable leeway in its administration, with the result that punishments were inflicted pretty much according to custom and necessity. The planter would recommend what he wished done, and the privy council with the governor would issue the final order. One planter's request, made in 1704, that a slave be punished for running away by having his foot chopped off, was considered too severe, so the poor wretch was only "hamstrung." ^^ Sixteen years later another negro belonging to the same planter was punished with the amputation of a foot, and his owner was reimbursed with an indemnity of 120 rdl.^^ From 1720 onwards, indemnification of planters for legally killed or injured negroes appears to have been regularly re- sorted to, a special tax being levied on the planters for that purpose. ^^ Occasionally a case for which no law could be found to apply was appealed to the directors in Copenhagen, and judgment requested. This occurred once when a planter's daughter had had illicit relations with a negro belonging to another planter. The West Indian officials recommended corporal punishment and life imprisonment for the woman, and burning [alive?] "according to the custom of the English and the Dutch" for the man. The negro appears to have escaped, though the king's sentence seems to have been solemnly pronounced from the pulpit, both in the West Indies and in Guinea. The woman's fate is not revealed.^'' The privy council of St, Thomas, itself a body of planters, was naturally inclined to give the planter the benefit of the doubt when his relations with his slaves were called into ques- "i. P.. St. Th., 16H-1711 (April 21, 1704). ^'N.J.forirm (May 18). " In 1743, a planter who thus lost a slave received 170 rdl. Roy. Libr., Uldall. Saml., No. SOfol. (October 21, 1743). " P. Manager's note to Directors (May 26, 1732). B. & D., 173S-3h THE SLAVE AND THE PLANTER 163 tion. When in 1735 a prominent planter had shot one of his slaves so that he died shortly after, his explanation that he acted in self-defense was accepted without serious question, though not without an elaborate argument based on the Mosaic code and the king's law.^^ The many slaves who must have been well cared for and humanely treated have left but few traces behind them in the records; with them the arm of the law had little or nothing to do. As in all plantation societies the hardest work and harshest treatment fell upon the field slave. In 1733, the very year in which the slave insurrection on St. John broke out, the Com- pany's oflBcials on St. Thomas complained that it was nearly impossible to get any work out of former Governor Suhm's ^^ house negroes, whom the Company had taken over, " unless we permit them to seek a master themselves." ^^ They reported at the same time the safe arrival at St. Thomas of a negress be- longing to the Company, but insisted that she had come back from Denmark so lazy that they doubted if they could ever get her to work on a plantation again. "So we will have to see," they wrote, rather resignedly, "how the Company can secure any interest on that capital, for to sell her out of her family would bring with it bad consequences." ^^ This is a small gleam, in- deed, yet it throws its faint light upon the more humane side of the slave-owner's nature. The rum shop laid its blighting influence on the land almost from the beginning. Tavern brawls were frequent, and the murders and assaults for which the taverns furnished the scene gave an unpleasant variety to the judicial labors of the local authorities. In a land where soldiers received their regular allowances of "kill-devil" -^ and where many of the slaves were allotted their weekly portion, it is not strange that ordinances should have been issued strictly forbidding tavern keepers or J8 Kop. & Extr. S. P., St. Th., 1735-52 (October 24, 1735). " Henry Suhm was governor of St. Thomas and St. John from 1727 to 1733. See Appendix A, p. 286. 20 Governor, etc., to Directors (April 16, 1733), B. & D., 1732-34. 21 Ibid. 22 Gardelin papers, passim., Bancroft Collection. 164 THE DANISH WEST INDIES other inhabitants from selling intoxicants to negroes.-^ The idea that alcoholic drinks helped to acclimatize the new arrival had a firm hold on the popular mind. Negro feasts and dances were considered a constant menace. It is easy to understand why the whites should especially fear a negro mob crazed by drink. The legislative device of prohibition by law was not to be seriously applied to the negro until after slavery had ceased to exist, and then in the present chief home of the American negro, the southern United States. Insurrection among its slaves has always been considered the most terrible experience that a slave-holding society could suffer. Whether in Rome with its slave risings, in Sicily or on the Italian peninsula, in Virginia with Nat Turner, or in a sugar colony in the West Indies, the prospect of a general servile uprising has equally alarmed the ruling class. It was during the first governorship of John Lorentz in 1691, a year after the first serious insurrection reported in the English colony of Jamaica, ^^ that clearly defined rumors of a negro plot against the whites are first heard. "^ During those early years, when the greater number of the slaves on St. Thomas were native Africans, it is not strange that threats should have been breathed against the governor's life and that planters and Company officials alike were constantly on the lookout for conspiracies among the slaves. Cruelty on the part of an individual planter was likely to be rewarded by his slaves running away. Planters and officials must have realized the economic advantages of good treatment of so valuable a part of their plantation invest- ment as their slaves. It was likely to require something more than individual cases of cruelty to bring about actual insurrec- tion. The most persistent motive that led to general unrest among the slaves was lack of food. When months of drought ruined the crops of maize, sweet potatoes, and other foods which the 23 S. P., 1699-17 H (March 19, 1706); cf. Martfeldt MSB., Vol. II (Mandate of Governor Moth's bound with Martfeldt's notes, dated December 11, 1741). '^^ Southey, Chronological History of the British West Indies (2 vols., London, 1826). II, 158. ^^ Lorentz's Journal (February 28, 1691). THE SLAVE AND THE PLANTER 165 negroes were expected to raise for their own sustenance, the planters were obHged to buy provisions from outside sources if they were to save their negroes' lives and prevent them from rising against their masters. In 1725-1726 the drought was unusually severe and protracted. A number of the planters let their slaves starve to death; others gave them extra hol- idays, with the natural result that the blacks stole right and left and became exceedingly difficult to manage."® Since open resistance to the whites was the worst of crimes, it is not sur- prising to find recorded in the Company's books for 1726 that seventeen slaves distributed among thirteen planters had been executed and were debited to the community at a price of about 120 rdl. each.^ The planters secured the equivalent for their losses in fresh slaves from the next incoming Guinea cargo. ^^ In the time that elapsed between the War of the Spanish Succession and 1733, when the first serious rebellion began in the Danish islands, the Northern War had brought the activi- ties of the Company almost to a standstill. Besides this the money stringency in the commercial world following the collapse of John Law's Mississippi Company made the revival of trade in the West Indies very slow. The Company had managed nevertheless to assist a group of planters in occupying the small, mountainous, but fertile island of St. John.^^ St. Thomas reached its maximum slave population and its maximum num- ber of plantations during its government by the Company, about 1725. St. John's plantations had risen from thirty- nine in 1720-1721 to eighty-seven plantations containing a slave population of 677 in 1728. By 1733 there were one hundred and nine plantations with one thousand and eighty- seven slaves on St. John. In other words, there had been an increase of sixty per cent, in the number of slaves dur- 26 5. & D., 1724-27 (November 22. 1725); S. P., St. Th. (May 26, 1725); P. B. 0., 1683-1729 (December 18, 1725). 2' N. J. for 1726 (June 29). This may represent the slaves executed since 1723, as the planters were requested in 1725 to send in lists of slaves who had been condemned to death or severe punishment since that date. Cf. Martfeldt MSS., Vol. I, "Placaterfor St. Thomas" (1684-1744). 28 Mandate of April 12, 1725. Martfeldt MSS., I. 29 See above, pp. 127-130. 166 THE DANISH WEST INDIES ing those five years, but of only twenty-five per cent, in the number of plantations. Clearly St. John was rapidly forg- ing ahead as a sugar island. St. Thomas, on the other hand, had begun to decline as a plantation colony; much of its ground had been under cultivation for half a century. Many of its planters, as the census lists show, secured planta- tions on St. John which they managed by means of hired over- seers, they themselves remaining on St. Thomas.^" The difficulty so often experienced by planters in securing honest and capable managers (Mesterknegte) intensified the dangers of absentee landlordism. It was not always possible for all the plantation owners to keep their plantations supplied with white overseers despite the Company's threats of fines and confiscation. The uprising of the slaves on St. John began late in Novem- ber, 1733. During the spring and summer preceding there had been a long period of drought, followed in July by a destructive hurricane which had inflicted considerable damage upon the already suffering crops as well as upon buildings and shipping.^^ A plague of insects had destroyed many of the products of the islands, and the negroes were threatened with famine. Another storm in the early winter was especially severe on the maize crop on which the negroes largely depended for their food. In order to check the disorders among slaves which such a suc- cession of disasters naturally encouraged, Philip Gardelin, '0 Land Listefor St. Jan, 1733; ibid, St. Thomas. 1733. '^ The governor and council reported two ships, thirteen barks, two schooners, and two two-masted boats, many canoes, sloops, and ships' boats to have been washed ashore and practically destroyed. Martfeldt MSS., Vol. VI, 227 et seq. (July 28, 1733). In the report (Generalbrev) sent by the St. Thomas govern- ment to the Directors on June 18, 1733, it is stated that because of the drought, the Company's plantation on St. John yielded only sLxty-two hhd. of sugar, where one hundred and fifty hhd. had been expected. B. & D., 1732-3^. THE SLAVE AND THE PLANTER 167 who had risen from the posts of bookkeeper and merchant for the Company at St. Thomas to the position of governor, issued on September 5, 1733, a mandate whose terrible severity reflects the prevailing tension between master and slave.^^ Governor Gardelin's mandate provided that leaders of run- aways should be pinched thrice with red-hot irons and then hanged. A negro found guilty of conspiracy was to lose a leg, unless the owner requested lightening the sentence to one hundred fifty lashes and the loss of the negro's ears. Slaves failing to report a plot of which they had knowledge were to be branded in the forehead and to receive one hundred lashes besides. Informers of negro plots could secure cash premiums and have their names kept secret. Runaways caught within a week were to be punished with one hundred fifty lashes; those of three months' standing were to lose a leg; if they re- mained away for six months, it would cost them their lives. Thievery, and assistance of thieves and runaways, were to be punished by whipping and branding. A negro raising his hand against a white man must be pinched three times with a hot iron; whether he should be hanged or merely lose a hand was left to the discretion of his accuser. The testimony of a reputa- ble white man against a negro ordinarily sufficed; in case of doubt the negro might be submitted to torture. A negro meet- ing a white man on the road was to stand aside until the latter had passed him. The carrying of sticks or knives, witchcraft among negroes, attempts to poison, dances, feasts and music, loitering in the village after drumbeat, — all were provided against. Free negroes implicated in runaway plots or found to have encouraged thievery were to be deprived of liberty and property, and after receiving a flogging, to be banished from the land. This mandate with its nineteen paragraphs was to be proclaimed to the beat of drum three times each year.^' ^2 Host, Efterretninger, 85 et seq. 23 J. P. Knox {Historical account of St. Thomas, New York, 1852), pp. 69 et seq., gives a crude, inaccurate translation of this mandate, dating it January 31, 1733. B. V. Petersen (Historisk Beretning, Kjobenhavn, 1855) pp. 49 et seq. follows Host's summary word for word, but uses Knox's date. Cf, Oardelin Order-book (September 9, 1733), Bancroft Collection. 168 THE DANISH WEST INDIES Thus did the authorities attempt to strike terror into the hearts of the restless, half-famished negro population. On Monday afternoon, November 23, 1733, a very badly frightened soldier and some panic-stricken refugees from St. John appeared in the fort at St. Thomas harbor and poured into the ears of the astonished governor and his council a most fearful tale. Early that morning twelve or fourteen of the Company's negroes had come up the path on the mountain- side to the fort overlooking Coral Bay on St. John, each of them with an armful of wood. When the sentinel shouted, "Who is there?" he received the answer, "Negroes with wood," and opened the door. Rushing inside, the negroes pulled sugar- cane knives (Kapmesser) out from the wood and murdered the soldier on the spot. Meantime other negroes had assembled and together they rushed in upon the sleeping corporal and his six soldiers, killing all but one (John Gabriel) who in the early twilight managed to save himself by crawling under a bed, and later escaped through the bush and down to a canoe by the seashore. With the garrison out of the way the negroes pro- ceeded to raise the flag and fire three shots from the cannon at the fort. This was the signal for a general slaughter on all the plantations on the island. The ranking magistrate on St. John, John Reimert Soedt- mann,^^ and his stepdaughter were among the first victims of that fateful day. A band of negroes, including some of Soedtmann's own, routed them both out and put them to death in the early morning. Soedtmann's wife was saved by the cir- cumstance of her being on a visit to St. Thomas. Roaming about from plantation to plantation in that dim tropic dawn they slaughtered such whites as they could find, planters and overseers, women and children. As the bloody work proceeded, the band increased their numbers. The Company's and Soedt- mann's negroes were joined by others;"^'' and by the middle of the afternoon a body of eighty desperate blacks, half of them ^* Host (p. 91) refers to him mistakenly as Christian Soetman. *^ Among the others were the negroes of former Governor Suhm, of town- judge Lorentz Hendricksen and of Pieter Kroyer. Gardelin MSS. (Novem- ber 23, 1733); cf. Martfeldi MSS., Ill, "Om Rebellionen paa St. John." THE SLAVE AND THE PLANTER 169 with flintlocks or pistols, the rest with cane-knives and other murderous weapons, were ready to attack those whites that re- mained. Though murder was rife, its course did not run ab- solutely without control. One Cornelius Bodger, the surgeon on St. John, and his two young step-sons were saved, — the former because of his medical skill, the latter because the rebels hoped to make these boys their servants. Someone's interces- sion at the last moment saved the life of a former overseer of the Company who accepted with alacrity the invitation of the rebels to leave the island.^^ The surviving planters, with such negroes as remained faith- ful, had in the meantime collected at Peter Deurloo's plantation on the northwest corner of the island. The approach to " Deur- loo's Bay" was easily guarded, and the fugitive planters were within fairly easy reach of St. Thomas. While the St. Thomas oflScials and planters were making such preparations for their relief as they could, a small band of whites ^'^ under the leadership of Captain of Militia John von Beverhoudt ^^ and Lieutenant John Charles, together with a score or more of their best negroes, were hastening with feverish activity to prepare for the rebel onslaught. The women and children were quickly transported to nearby islets. A number of the planters on the south side and on the west end of the island were warned by friendly slaves in time to permit them to join the men at Deurloo's or to seek safety in their canoes. The negroes had met some resistance from a planter in "Can- eel" Bay.^^ They finally drove him off and stopped to plunder ^ This was Dennis (or Dines) Silvan. He fled to Tortola, the English island lying within sight of St. John. " P. J. Pannet in his Relation dated December 4 {Werlauff MSS., No. 22, Royal Libr., Copenhagen) gives the number at Deurloo's as about seventeen whites and twenty negroes, while the Company's officials in their letter to the Directors of January 5, 1734 {Martfeldt MSS., Ill), give forty whites and about twenty-five negroes as the number of those on the defensive against the rebels. ^^ Also spelled Bewerhoudt, Beverhout, Beverhoudt. Among the other white inhabitants at Deurloo's plantation were John Runnels, Timothy Turner {Thorner), William Zytzema, and Peter Sorensen. Gardelin MSS. (Novem- ber 23, 1733.) ^^ John Jansen lived with his wife on a cotton plantation belonging to his 170 THE DANISH WEST INDIES his plantation, consequently they did not descend the mountain path toward Deui'loo's plantation until 3 o'clock in the after- noon. When they came they found themselves confronted by , the few cannon with which the plantation was furnished. Fear- ing to face the cannon with their charges of ball, they betook themselves to the bush, from which they emerged at intervals to fire blindly and clumsily at their ertswhile masters. Had they rushed their opponents at the start the negroes might at the expense of a few lives have mastered the plantation and captured its defenders. Instead they kept up their desultory firing during the greater part of the night and resumed it the following morning with scarcely any loss to the whites. The arrival of the news at St. Thomas had paralyzed all. Wives trembled for their husbands, mothers for their children. Gov- ernor Gardelin shared the general consternation. It was not until former Governor Moth appealed to Gardelin not to aban- don the children of his government to the barbarity of their heathen slaves that a boat with sixteen or eighteen soldiers, led by a sergeant and a corporal, was provisioned with food and ammunition and sent to the relief of the St. John planters. Several Creole slaves with guns accompanied the party. The arrival of the reinforcements which were commanded by William Barens, a well-to-do Dutch planter of St. Thomas,^'' put new heart into the besieged party. Further reinforce- ments, consisting largely of negroes belonging to the Company and to planters on St. Thomas,^^ enabled the planters to retake the fort and disperse the negroes to the woods. Urged on by the Company's officials, the soldiers and planters on St. John began a war of extermination. For a time the negroes managed to use the Suhm plantation as their rendezvous,'*^ but before the Christmas season they had been pretty effectually scattered mother which was 3000 x 1500 feet in size. Three "capable" slaves and four children constituted his labor outfit in 1733. L. L., St. J., 1733. *" He was credited in the census of 1733 with more than forty slaves. •" Gardelin reported sending twenty-one of the former and twelve of the latter. Gardelin to Sergeant Thomas Magens (November 25, 1733). Gardelin MSS., Bancroft Collection. *^ Pannet's Relation. THE SLAVE AND THE PLANTER 171 over the island. Attempts by various stratagems to capture any considerable number of them failed. A white planter, one William Vessup, who had murdered a neighbor some months before and whom the authorities had failed to apprehend, was given to understand that his assistance in the slave-hunt would be welcomed by the government. ^^ The negroes proved too wary to permit themselves to fall into the trap he prepared for them. Their shortage of ammunition had even led them to ofiFer Vessup ten negroes if he would get them as many barrels of powder.^'* Enough negroes were killed or captured, however, to cause Governor Gardelin to express the fear that the decay- ing bodies of the dead rebels might bring a seventh misfortime — the plague — upon the stricken colony.''^ The planter Peter Pannet states in his account of December 4 that thirty-two rebels had actually been executed, and that others were being tried.^^ The fear that the rebellion might spread to St. Thomas and Tortola not only roused the St. Thomas planters to contribute some of their slaves to the hunt on the sister island, but led their English neighbors to lend a helping hand. With many of their plantations ravaged, their crops neglected or destroyed, their cattle running wild or furnishing food for rebel slaves, it is small wonder that the St. John planters asked the Company to bear a substantial share of the burden of putting down the trouble and even requested that they should be exempted from taxes for a term of years.^^ After nearly ten weeks of vain effort a certain Captain Tallard ^^ of an English man-of-war visiting Tortola sent sixty men to St. John to join in the pursuit; but an ambush in the night resulted in the wounding of four English sailors and the consequent withdrawal of the English ^^ Gardelin MSS., William Vessup, who had owned a large plantation (4700 x 4040 feet) on St. John, had killed one Carl Henry Kuhlmann. The murderer's family remained for some time on the Danish islands but in very poor circum- stances. ** Pannet's Relation. 45 Gardelin, etc., to Directors (January 5, 1734). Martfeldt MSS., Vol. III. 4® Pannet's Relation. " Account of St. John rebellion (July 23, 1734) in Martfeldt MSS., Vol. III. « Or Toller. 172 THE DANISH WEST INDIES forces.^® On February 17, that is, not long after this disap- pointment, the St. John planters again appealed for assistance from the English. On Sunday, March 7, another English cap- tain, John Maddox, came from St. Kitts and landed on the island with about fifty volunteers,^'' though his entire party was reported to Governor Gardelin as consisting of seventy men.^^ A carefully worded contract was drawn up specifying with pre- cision the duties of both parties and enumerating the rewards to be given for slaves captured. The attorney for the govern- ment, "fiscal" Ditlof Nicholas Friis, was sent to St. John to see that the contract was adhered to. Such elaborate pre- cautions proved quite unnecessary. After a vain and wearying search Captain Maddox suddenly came upon the rebels on the eleventh day (March 18), but he was taken by surprise, for the negroes killed three of his men and wounded five others without any loss to them, so far as could be ascertained.^^ Maddox's men stood not upon the order of their going; they fled at once and left the island on the following day. Stratagems, attempts at poisoning, and the armed forces of Danes and English had failed alike to dislodge or exterminate the desperate slaves. In the extremity of their despair the Danish colonists turned to the French on Martinique. A French boat was lying in the harbor, and three or four days after Maddox's departure, the French skipper set sail for Mar- tinique with the Company's bookkeeper, John Horn, on board. Horn's instructions permitted him to offer the French four-fifths of the remaining rebels — (their numbers were estimated at a hundred men and women) — if they could catch them. Twenty of the worst ones were to be handed over to the Company, evidently for exemplary punishment. The St. Thomas gov- ernment pledged itself to furnish provisions for anywhere from « S. P., St. Th. 1723-35. The first appeal to the Tortola authorities was made by Gardelin in a letter to Markox at Spanishtown, dated November 29, 1733. See Gardelin MSS. under that date. '^° Om Rebellionen . . . March 16, 1734. Martfeldt MSS., III. The arrange- ment seems to have been made on February 18. Cf. Gardelin MSS. (Febru- ary 18, 1734). " Gardelin to Bewerhoudt (March 9, 1734). Gardelin MSS. " Om Rebellionen . . . May 4, 1734. Martfeldt MSS., III. THE SLAVE AND THE PLANTER 173 one to two hundred men.^^ Its envoy was provided with a fund of 600 rdl. to be expended as Horn saw fit. When two French barks anchored in St. Thomas harbor on the morning of April 23 with the bookkeeper John Horn and two hundred and twenty Creoles and experienced officers on board, the oft-disappointed colonists began to see their hopes re- vive. With renewed energy and resolution the governor and the inhabitants set to work to insure the success of this final effort. With a splendid enthusiasm the French had offered, wrote Gov- ernor Gardelin to John Beverhoudt on St. John, to send as many as six hundred men to the assistance of the Danes. The planters contributed seventy-four West Indian negroes to assist in the chase, though the governor had asked for a hundred and fifteen.^^'' Why the French should respond so joyfully it would be rather difficult to explain were it not for certain European con- ditions. France was preparing to take up the cause of Stanis- las Leszczynski, father-in-law of Louis XV, in his attempt to secure the Polish throne. France, which had scarcely re- covered from the collapse of the Mississippi Bubble, was in serious need of money. She was also anxious for Denmark's neutrality in the coming War of the Polish Succession. In this extremity a shrewd director of the Danish company turned the trick by offering the French envoy 750,000 livres for the island of St. Croix, with Denmark's neutrality thrown in. But the news of the transfer and of Denmark's friend- ship reached the French islands through their home govern- ment considerably before the directors at Copenhagen got ready to send a ship to St. Thomas. Nor do the French from Martinique appear to have divulged to the Danish authorities at St. Thomas the mainsprings of their zeal.^^ To the dis- ^^ Horn's instructions included various alternative proposals. He was em- powered to hire a vessel, engage a hundred men and to buy provisions for them on the Company's account. Cf. Gardelin MSS. (March 21, 1734) for these instructions. ^^ Gardelin MSS. (April 23 and May 3, 1734) gives a list of the sixty-eight planters. ^^ For a detailed account of the acquisition of St. Croix, see Chap- ter X. 174 THE DANISH WEST INDIES tressed planters and Company it was the fact of assistance and not its motives that mattered. On the day following their arrival the French under their commander Longueville were promptly dispatched to St. John. The Danish governor lost no time in sending on planks for the soldiers' barracks and fresh meat for food.^® Crown attorney Friis was ordered to St. John to take charge of the negroes as they were captured. He was to try and judge half of those caught and the others were to be sent to St. Thomas for trial. The French commandant was to preside over the drumhead court-martial when it should be called, but a Danish represen- tative was to be present.^'^ A force of twenty-five or thirty Danes under Lieutenant Froling was got together and sent over to work in conjunction with the French. ^^ Within three or four days of their arrival the French forces were encamped and ready for their grim labors. Only five days before the arrival of the French on St. John, a party of about forty rebels had made a fierce attack, lasting an hour and a half, upon the burghers who were encamped on Deurloo's plantation. They managed to set the supply magazine on fire, but suffered a loss of three killed and six badly wounded. ^^ From April 29 when they met their first party of rebels to May 27 when they returned to St. Thomas, the French force clung tenaciously to the heels of their quarry until they were unable to find the trace of a single live rebel. During the first three weeks they had to march up hill and down dale, through bush and bramble in an almost continual downpour of rain. By working in shifts they completely wore out the energies of the rebels, some of whom m lack of guns had armed themselves with bows and arrows .®° On May 9 they learned that the ne- groes were assembled on a certain point or small peninsula of land. The band escaped, but a wounded boy showed the ^^Gardelin to " Commandeur Sergiant" Ottingen (April 23, 1734). Gar- delin MSS. " Gardelin to Friis (April 24, 1734). Gardelin MSS. ^8 Gardelin to Froling (April 24, 1734). Ibid. ^9 Om Rebellionen . . . (May 4. 1734), Martfeldt MSS., III. 80 Domme afsagt over Negere (May 21, 1734), B. & D.. 1732-3i.. THE SLAVE AND THE PLANTER 175 French where eleven rebels lay in the bush, dead by their own act. A week later eight rebels gave themselves up in the hope of averting the captured rebel's fate. Two more were killed with a single shot, and two were found murdered. Of the rest there was no trace until May 24, when a report came in that twenty-four dead rebels had been found on an outjutting point of land in an unsuspected place, with their muskets broken.^^ They were reported as having lain there for perhaps a fort- night. The Danish officials in their reports to the directors could not praise highly enough the courage of the French on the field and their uniform courtesy everywhere. "The fatigues that the French have undergone," wrote the governor in his report to his masters, "from the first day that they came to St. John cannot be adequately described. . . . The obligations that we are under to the French officers merits a far greater reward than we are able to give them. The commandant himself marched with his men for four days through forests and valleys, up steep mountain-sides, and in a continuous slush and rain, with no roof above him but the sky. Next to God, they [the officers], because of their tireless effort, deserve the credit for the present peace. Their bravery and persistence and the cheerfulness with which they encouraged their men, who began very early to tire from their strenuous efforts, will we trust be properly rewarded in high places. . . ." ^^ On their arrival at St. Thomas on May 27 Commandant Longueville and his officers and men were shown every attention and courtesy. An offer of 5,000 "French guldens" was politely refused by the French officer. After five days of celebration the French, accompanied by John Horn, embarked for Martin- ique. There, in turn, the Danes were treated by the French officials with marked cordiality and deference.®^ This happy outcome, happy so far as the whites were con- cerned, was marred by a bitter quarrel between the local govern- ^' This may be the group that tradition, as recorded by Host and those follow- ing his account, has magnified to three hundred. See Host, op. eit., p. 96. e^ Om. Rebellionen . . . (July 23, 1734). Martfeldt MSS., Vol. HI. '^ Ihid. 176 THE DANISH WEST INDIES ment and the planters, each side trying to blame the other for the uprising with a view to being relieved of part of the expense. But the end of the rebellion was not quite at hand; for early in August — ^two months after the French had left — the report came in that a party of fourteen negroes and negresses, led by one Prince ^^ was still at large, though without firearms. To avoid an expensive "maroon hunt" Theodore Ottingen, an officer who had taken part in the suppression of the rebellion since its beginning, managed on promise of pardon to lure the fifteen remaining rebels to their former owners' plantations.^^ On the pretext that they would have to be appraised, every one of them was seized at a given signal on the morning of August 25 and brought to St. Thomas, Prince was not among them, for he had — fortunately for himself — been beheaded, and his head was a trophy in Ottingen's baggage. Of these fifteen rebels four "died" in prison before they could be brought to trial, four were condemned to be worked to death on the St. Croix fortifications, and the rest were done to death in various ways "such as they deserved because of their gruesome deeds," as the official letter has it.^^ With this piece of treachery, as it would be called in this age, a success for which the responsible officer received high praise from his superiors and a lieutenancy on St. Croix, the insurrec- tion of 1733-1734 on St. John came to an end. Besides those killed in conflict and those belonging to the Company, twenty- seven negroes were estimated to have been tried and executed .^^ A list made out in February, 1734, just before Maddox's ill- fated attempt, showed one hundred forty -six negro men and women implicated in rebellion at that time. It is clear that the story of the three hundred negroes found dead in a circle on a mountain near "Brims Bay" is pure fancy. It was first told by Host®^ whose account of the rebellion is based partly on ^* A negro belonging to Madame Elizabeth Runnels. '* See Gardelin'fl instructions and letters to Ottingen in Gardelin MSS. (Au- gust 9. 16, and 21, 1734.) 68 Om RebeUionen . . . December 28, 1734. Martfeldi MSS., Vol. III. 6» Ibid. '* Host, EJterretninqer, 96. A recent repetition of this story is to be found in Keller, Colonization, p. 500. THE SLAVE AND THE PLANTER 177 documents and partly on hearsay and has been repeated numer- ous times since. When the time for stock-taking came, it was found that planters were entitled to remuneration for thirty slaves that had been condemned to death or to work in irons,®^ and for six others — two belonging to St. John and four to St. Thomas planters. These six had been killed while fighting for their owners.^" Of ninety-two plantations listed by Theodore Ottingen probably late in 1734 or in 1735, forty-eight were recorded as having suffered damage, forty-four as having escaped it. Of the forty- eight, thirty were being cultivated when the report was made; of the forty-four not damaged, thirty-two were being cultivated. On forty-one plantations, valuable buildings had been partly or wholly burned down by the rebels. The money loss was estimated, according to Host, at 7,905 rdl. a considerable sum for so small an island. ^^ As to loss of life by the white popula- tion, probably not a fourth of the whites were killed by the negroes. But this human hurricane had been far more devastat- ing than any sent out from Nature's workshop, for it had not only destroyed men and their labor of years, but hardened their hearts and greatly delayed the prospect for more normal and human relations between master and slave in the Danish islands. It was perhaps fortunate that the acquisition of the fertile island of St. Croix occurred so shortly after this event, for this gave a welcome opportunity for the recuperation of the de- moralized planters and turned the attention of men to new problems. With the development of St. Croix the economic center of gravity was gradually to be shifted to the new island, and the awful experiences of 1733 and 1734 were destined soon to become receding memories. The government and colonists had learned a lesson in vigilance which it would be hard to forget. As reflection took the place of passion, perhaps they saw still more clearly the efficacy of ^* Planters received 120 rdl. each for all full-grown slaves legally condemned to death. ^» S. P., St. Th. 1735-52 (October 22, 1736). ''^"Specification paa de Plantagier ..." (1734?). B. & D., 173S-S4; Host, 97, 98. 178 THE DANISH WEST INDIES humaneness. At any rate, it was a quarter of a century before the Danish colonists were again seriously threatened with a slave insurrection, and then it was on the new and rapidly de- veloping island of St. Croix. The story of the attempted re- bellion of 1759 belongs to the post-Company history of that island. CHAPTER IX THE PLANTER AND THE COMPANY The powers of government which Christian V placed in the hands of the directors of the Danish West India and Guinea Company were almost as absolute within their West Indian sphere as were the powers of the Danish king within his Euro- pean dominions. This was necessarily so, for the venture was primarily commercial. Its purpose was to furnish a profitable field of investment for men with capital; hence the need of concentrating the management of the Company's resources in few hands. The absolutism which Christian V inherited from his father was based upon the theory of Divine Right. The directors of the Company, on the other hand, received their powers from a very worldly body of shareholders to whom they rendered account and by whom they might be removed. The directorates of the Danish East and West India com- panies at the beginning were in a sense committees delegated to the work from the recently established Board of Trade. The king, as the most powerful shareholder in the Company, appointed the three original directors himself, but entirely from among the members of the Board of Trade. Acting with these directors in an advisory capacity and representing in a fairly direct manner the interests of the bulk of the shareholders, was a body of men known as "chief shareholders." From 1671 to 1733 the membership of the board of directors rose from three to seven; that of the chief shareholders, from two to five. The part played by two able directors, Juel and Moth, in guiding the Company through a maze of commercial misfortunes and diplomatic difficulties, has been brought out in a preceding chapter.^ In the immediate supervision of affairs on St. Thomas, these men were given practically a free field. ^ See Chapter III, above. For lists of officials see Appendix B. [ 179 ] 180 THE DANISH WEST INDIES When matters which especially afiPected the stockholders in general came up, such as the need of securing additional funds to enlarge the Company's activities, the situation was presented to the General Assembly of the Company, where each holder of a full share of stock had one vote.^ Serious problems con- nected with the Company were sometimes referred by the king to a special commission appointed (as was the case during the first two decades of Christian V's reign) from the membership of the Board of Trade, or they were turned over (as was the case from 1690 to 1705) to special bodies known from their place of meeting as "Commissions in the Council Chamber of the Royal Castle." The majority of the members of such commissions were usually officials of the Company. In 1704, early in Frederick IV's reign, the Board of Trade was revived, and four years later it was combined with the Police Board of Copenhagen into the Board of Police and Trade which continued down to 1731. On at least two occasions, in 1715 and in 1720, this body submitted to the king reports on petitions from St. Thomas planters.^ The dimensions of Denmark's commercial and colonial enter- prises were never such as to permit the Board of Trade to develop into a body which could be compared in its specialized advisory functions to the Board of Trade and Plantations in England. When William III founded the latter board in 1696, the greater number of the English colonies had already passed out of the control of chartered companies. The active control of the business of the Danish West India and Guinea Company rested, as has been indicated, almost solely upon the directors. They selected the governors and chief officials both in Guinea and in St. Thomas, subject only to confirmation by the king; they found captains for their trading vessels and pro- vided ministers to care for the souls of employees, planters, and slaves. The directors through their factor in Copenhagen were expected to find a market either at home or abroad for African ivory and West Indian sugar, cotton, and indigo.^ They were ^ See above, p. 34. 3 See below, pp. 190-191. See also Appendix F, pp. 306-314. ■• Parts of the cargoes were usually offered at auction to local buyers. THE PLANTER AND THE COMPANY 181 obliged to keep in close touch with the Dutch money market and to buy insurance for both ships and cargoes from Dutch insurance firms. In disputes between planters and Company officials in the West Indies, they were expected to act as arbiters unless the appeal was made directly to the king; in any case they were consulted before judgment was rendered. They were supposed to maintain the authority and dignity of the king among the colonists and with their various foreign neighbors. Although the directors were given practically full power in the general management of the Company, they were forced in turn to give considerable latitude of action to their West Indian officials. The "Gdvernor and Council of St. Thomas" were to be sure provided with most elaborate sets of instructions in- tended to cover every emergency, but the remoteness of the island from Denmark and the difficulty of keeping in close touch with it by post led the island officials to take more and more liberties with their orders and sometimes to use their positions for peculation and graft. For instance, as a result of his opera- tions during the later years of the War of the Spanish Succession, Governor Crone was accused of collusion with the governor of Porto Rico and of gross fraud in the conduct of the Company's affairs. He died before the suit against him came to an end, but one of the members of his council. Christian Seeberg, treasurer at St. Thomas, was finally convicted of fraud and forced to pay a large fine. Governors Bredal and Gardelin owed their advancement to their reputation for honesty and to their ability to expose corruption in the management of the Com- pany's affairs. The chief official besides the governor consisted in the be- ginning of the merchant or factor, the bookkeeper, and the secretary. After John Lorentz's death in 1702, the factor Joachim von Holten who had failed to secure the governorship ^ ad interim, was made "chief factor" (Opper-Kjobmand) by way of solace. In 1703 the office of treasurer (Casserer) began to appear in the list of officials.^ This continued to be the com- ^ Claus Hansen was elected as governor ad interim by the council {Interims- Vice-Commandant) February, 1702. « Martfeldt MSS., Vol. VI, p. 207 (June 10, 1703). 182 THE DANISH WEST INDIES position of the council, or privy council (Secrete-Raad), as it came early to be called, until the reorganization of the Company after the purchase of St. Croix. With the governorship of John Lorentz the Company began the policy of procuring its adminis- trators from officials who had had experience in actual service in the Company's government at St. Thomas. Lorentz himself had begun as an assistant and was secretary and ex officio mem- ber of the council when Heins' death called him to the governor- ship. His successor Clans Hansen had been lieutenant at the fort and a council member. In fact, of the eight governors who held office m St. Thomas from 1702, when Lorentz died, to 1733, when Gardelin became governor, only two had not had their preliminary training in St. Thomas. One of these. Otto J. Thambsen, had been a commander (Schoutbynacht) in the Danish navy; and the other, Henry Suhm, had been in charge of Fort Christiansborg on the Guinea coast.^ Neither of these men found his work congenial or was able to get on well with the inhabitants of the colony. The success of the Company as a commercial venture de- pended very largely upon the ability and integrity of its West Indian representatives. In order to procure those full return cargoes on the advantageous sale of which the Company relied mainly for its dividends, the West Indian government needed to keep on good terms with the planters. Whenever a planter re- ceived better offers from Dutch or other skippers than from the Company, it became a difficult and delicate matter to force him to part with his produce. Although in theory the Company's officials held all administrative, legislative, and judicial powers in their own hands, they were obliged in practice to pay very real heed to the desires of the islanders. The relations between government and planters were affected by a variety of circumstances. Too high duties or other annoy- ing trade restrictions led the planters to attempts at evasion. In this they were aided by the numerous indentations or "bays" which made smuggling easy. Threats of shortage in provisions through drought, hurricanes or other causes sometimes forced the local government to take prompt measures for the relief of ' Cf. AppeTidix A, p. 285. THE PLANTER AND THE COMPANY 183 the inhabitants. During the severe drought in St. Thomas in 1725-1726, when negroes were dying for lack of food,^ the St. Thomas government admitted free of duty all incoming provisions except liquors. The request of a delegation of planters that outgoing goods likewise be freed from duty was not granted.^ At that time St. Thomas was mainly dependent upon New York for its lumber and provisions. The duty had previously been five per cent, on incoming and six per cent, on outgoing goods, according to the St. Thomas market price; and as recently as May 18, 1724, Governor Thambsen had issued an order granting to New York skippers the special privilege of importing provisions at five per cent, duty, calculated on the cost price in New York, and receiving payment in sugar and cotton on which no export duty was required. ^° The home authorities were rather slow to admit the necessity of consulting the inclinations of the colonists in the selection of their West Indian governors. Governor Lorentz was the choice of the planters, and the directors gladly confirmed his election by the council; but Thormohlen's governor, Delavigne, suc- ceeded so poorly in winning the good will of the planters that the colony might have gone to ruin except for Lorentz's timely return. On the latter's death the council appointed eight of the leading planters to act with it in selecting a successor. The council nevertheless proceeded to elect the merchant Joachim von Holten to the governorship, regardless of the planters' desires. The result was a mass meeting of all the planters on the day following, called, as the records of the privy council rather euphemistically report, "at the order of the honorable council." On the insistence of eighty planters, of whom twenty-one signed a vigorously worded petition with their marks, the "honorable council " reconsidered the election and chose the planters' candi- date. Lieutenant Glaus Hansen. The directors confirmed the election, but they took particular pains to remind the planters that the election of a governor was none of their concern. ^^ * See above, p. 165. 9 S. P. for St. Th. (October 3, 21, 23, 1725). " P. B. 0., 1683-1729 (May 18, 1724). " Kop. og Extr., S. P. for St. Th.. 1699-17U. "Litra S" (June 12, 13, 1702); MaHfeldt MSS., vol. VI, p. 207 et seq. 184 THE DANISH WEST INDIES On the death of Governor Hansen's successor, Joachim von Holten in 1708 the privy council actually called in twelve in- habitants to assist them in electing a governor. ^^ The War of the Spanish Succession, with the West Indies as the scene of much of its sea-fighting, furnished a golden opportunity for venturesome neutrals; and especially on St. Thomas had the planters and traders become wealthy and influential through dealing in captured ships and cargoes brought in by the priva- teers of the warring nations. The fact that the governor rarely succeeded in outliving his term of office had resulted in giving the local officials and planters their opportunity to take a hand in naming their chief executive, at least until the directors could be heard from. Governor Erik Bredal who succeded Michael Crone ui 1716 in- sisted so strongly on being relieved of his office that in Sep- tember, 1723, the directors found themselves for the first time in many years nominating and electing a governor. ^^ The re- cipient of this signal honor was Otto Jacob Thambsen, Com- mander in the Royal Navy. He was awarded the unusually large salary of 1200 rdl. per annum. On his arrival late in April, 1724, he found the books ia great confusion, the secre- tary quite useless, customs duties uncollected for years back, the council refractory, and the planters unwilling to do the directors' bidding.^^ After ten weeks at St. Thomas he wrote to his masters: "You must not suppose that because I do not complain, I find it enjoyable here ... I pray that the gentle- men will not take it amiss if I remark that St. Thomas and my office appear to me like the lion's cave, where all the footprints pointed in and from which none pointed out."^^ The directors who often exhibited a painful obtuseness could hardly miss the point, but before they could take any action, the sickness of the incumbent appears to have compelled the privy and the com- mon councils to elect a successor whom they found in Captain ^""Martfeldt MSS., Vol. VI, 1703-1709 (December 31, 1708). *^ See list of governors in Appendix A. 1* Thambsen to Directors (May 16, 1724), B. & D., 17S1-U: S. P. for St. Th. (May 25, August 18, 1724). " Ibid., (July 14, 1724), B. & D., 17S1-U- THE PLANTER AND THE COMPANY 185 Frederick Moth who in the position of chief factor had com- mended himself to the directors. ^^ The common or burgher comicil mentioned in connection with the election of Governor Moth, appears to have originated in 1703. It was certainly in existence at that date, for in their instructions of March 27, 1703, the directors requested that in case the governor was unable to settle disputes between the inhabitants, he should refer the case to the common council {det ordinaire Raad) over which the secretary ^^ was to preside and which should consist of six reputable planters. From this council or court the case might be appealed to the privy council of St. Thomas sitting as a superior court (Opper-Ret).^^ Cases involving "life, honor, or blood," or money sums of more than 200 rdl. might be appealed to the directors. ^^ The capitalist planters that arose on St. Thomas as a result of the conditions brought about by the War of the Spanish Succession showed themselves willing to go to considerable lengths to make their wants and grievances known to the authorities. Two memorable instances illustrate the increas- ing economic independence of the planters and the growing consciousness of their importance. One of these occurred in 1706-1707, just before the St. Thomas "boom" reached its height, and the other in 1715-1716, when the reaction which frequently follows a general war had brought with it a period of economic depression at St. Thomas. It was early in 1706, about the time that Joachim von Holten was elected governor,^" that the planters began to make definite plans to send over delegates to present their demands in per- son. They had previously sent two communications to the directors, but had received no reply. FinaUy a little while be- fore the scheduled departure of the Company's ship, which oc- ^^Martfeldt MSS., Vol. VI, 1723-1731, pp. 297 et seq. (November 21, 1724); ihid.. Secrete Raads Resolutioner . . . fra 1723-1739 (August 18, 1724). ^' Christian Seeberg or Soebierg, later convicted of fraud. ^* In 1703 this superior court consisted of Governor Hansen, chief factor J. von Holten, bookkeeper Diedrich Magens, treasurer R. Henningsen, and secretary C. Seeberg. Martfeldt MSS., Vol. VI. 1703-1709 (June 12, 1703). " Ibid. 20 von Holten was elected in February, 1706. 186 THE DANISH WEST INDIES curred during the first week in April, the planters held a meet- ing, appointed two of their number, Andrew Zinck and Anthony Zytsema, to act as commissioners, and prepared for them an elaborate set of instructions with the demands enumerated in an imposing list of sixteen paragraphs. The instructions were signed by sixty-nine planters of whom eight signed with their marks. The signers included practically all the influential planters. ^^ A resume of these demands will serve to show the sort of con- ditions and regulations by which the planters of St. Thomas felt themselves aggrieved. They began by urging an appeal to the Danish government to bestir itseK to secure the St. Thomas vessels that had been seized by the French, English, and Spanish during the war. A number of the planters owned vessels with which they had carried on various kinds of trade, both permitted and forbidden. The St. Thomas inhabitants rightly felt that something might be gained if the home govern- ment could secure exemption from seizure of vessels not carry- ing contraband. But in such a titanic struggle, nothing but a generous display of force could make the powers involved accede to any re'quest that Denmark might make, especially when it touched upon their own interests. They desired, as St. Thomas planters continued to desire for the next forty years, the return of slaves that had escaped to Porto Rico. This presupposed their expressed hope that Denmark might again come into peaceful relations with Spain, something that was not likely to be speedily brought about, since Denmark had not even had an envoy at Madrid after the beginning of the Spanish Succes- sion war.^^ With respect to matters of local taxation they asked for the revocation of the charges known as "sixth" and "tenth" taxes, amounting to twenty-five per cent., which were laid upon the property of persons leaving the island. These were especially 2' B. & D., 1706-10. The instructions are in Dutch and undated. The copy in the Danish State Archives was apparently secured by the governor and sent with his comment to the directors by the ship on which the commissioners sailed. " Exir. af Gen. Brev fra St. Th., Punkt n (April 3, 1706), C. B., 1690-1713. THE PLANTER AND THE COMPANY 187 burdensome to those Dutch planters who had come from St. Eustatius and other islands during the War of the Augsburg League.^^ They proposed instead a four per cent, tax on slaves taken out from the colony, as was common on the French and English islands. Not only did they ask that the governor and privy council should act with six reputable planters in the de- cision of local matters, but they suggested that no taxes should be laid for local purposes except such as were found necessary by the governor, privy council and the "common council." They were, in short, demanding representative government, and with it that most precious prerogative of freedom-loving societies, the power of self-taxation. In concluding their list of demands and grievances the planters intimated that too heavy taxes might nearly denude the island of its white people, who because of the great heat could not work more than three or four hours a day.^^ It is probable that the planters, in presenting through their envoys such a formidable list of demands, deliberately requested much in the hope of getting a little. The things asked for con- formed neither to the interests of the shareholders as they saw them nor to the theories of government then prevailing in the absolutist state of Denmark-Norway. It is small wonder that the two deputies returned with nothing but a few vague prom- ises to show for their trouble. The St. Thomas planters were not backward in disclosing their disappointment. In fact, they assumed so threatening an attitude that the two delegates, Zytsema and Zinck, were obliged to write to the directors ask- ing the latter to extend them their protection.^^ The mission was apparently by no means barren of result, for in their letter of November 3, 1706, the directors granted to St. Thomas in- habitants the right to sail with West Indian goods to any place in Europe except the Danish dominions. ^^ In return for this 23 See above, pp. 69, 84, 109. 24 B. & D., 1706-10. 26 Ibid. (April 4, 1707); C. B.. 1690-1713 (April 6, 1707). 26 Cop. og Extr., S. P. for St. Th., 1699-17 U (April 2, 1708); Martfeldt MSS.. Vol. VI, 1703-1709 (April 2, 1708). Pending further instructions from the di- rectors, Hamburg was also excepted from freedom of trade. 188 THE DANISH WEST INDIES privilege the directors tried to induce the planters to assist the Company in securing full return cargoes. But the Com- pany's policy of forbidding exports while any of its ships were in the harbor was never popular among the planters. The credit for achieving this wished for result was claimed by Direc- tor Jacob Lerke in the letter in which he congratulated Governor von Holten on his accession to office.-'' From this letter it ap- pears that the "sixth" tax above mentioned was abolished by the directors, likewise through Lerke's efforts.^^ The taxes on imports and exports fixed by the governor and privy council as a result of the directors' orders were as follows: on goods leav- ing St. Thomas, six per cent.; on incoming European goods, four per cent. ; on incoming West Indian goods, two per cent. ; on all provisions from New England, four per cent.^ The results of the planters' mission of 1706 were on the whole meager enough, yet in 1714-1715, when the planters felt their situation again becoming desperate, they proceeded as before to send a delegation to Copenhagen. The pressure of hard times was already being felt in the West Indies; the home country was fully occupied with the Northern War against Sweden under Charles XII; in St. Thomas prizes and confis- cated cargoes ceased being brought into the harbor. The Spaniards on Porto Rico and the larger islands upon whom the planters depended for cash were suffering severely, for it had been more than two years since the Spanish fleet had visited them.^° What cash the planters were able to get hold of went for provisions; they were concerned with keeping alive the slaves they had, rather than with buying new ones. When under these conditions the Company insisted on re- taining the hated twenty-five per cent, tax on the property of persons leaving the island, feehng among the planters ran high. In numerous secret meetings the Company and its St. Thomas " B. & D., 1717-20. copy (November 5, 1707). ^^ The letter mentioned "de gepretendeerde 6% penningjhet wdcke uyt de brief kan gesien warden, is opgehoven," which, if the copy be accurate, may possibly refer to the sixth "penning" tax. But the tax seems to have remained in force nevertheless. 23 Cop. og Extr., S. P. for St. Th., 1699-171^ (April 2, 1708). '« B. & D.. 17U-17 (August 10, 1714). THE PLANTER AND THE COMPANY 189 representatives came in for most severe denunciation. In May and July, 1714, leading citizens made a strong plea to the gover- nor and council requesting the return of various former priv- ileges which they had enjoyed in Governor Lorentz's time and before, and they threatened in case of refusal to send their dep- uties to Denmark to lay the matter directly before the king.^^ This threat was finally carried out when, early in 1715, a com- mission of three influential planters, George Carstensen, Jacob Magens and John Johnson de Windt, set out for Copenhagen to represent the planters at the Danish court.^^ The independent spirit shown by the West Indian planters had alarmed the local officials, who were quick to scent a conspiracy against the gov- ernment. In their report to the directors, the governor and council charged one James Smith, son of the erstwhile Branden- burg factor Peter Smith,^^ with being the main author of the disturbance, the inheritance of a portion of his father's fortune having affected his interests. In their desire to expose the character of the ringleaders, the local officials alleged that James Smith had been treasurer of the Scotch Darien Company,^^ and that when its trade had been ruined by the English, he had escaped with the treasury's money. ^^ The delegates from St. Thomas arrived in Copenhagen in the summer of 1715, determined to secure some definite con- cessions and not to permit any such failure as had occurred in 1706. Besides the remission of the twenty-five per cent., and the substitution for it of the usual six per cent, tax on all goods exported, they petitioned to be permitted to ship out their products to whatever port they pleased. They asked, as in 1706, that representatives of the planters be consulted by the governor '1 B. & D., 17H.-17 (July 11, 1714). Those signing the commimication of July 11 were: L. Beverhoudt, Johannes Seits, Jan Jansen de Windt, Daniel Jansen, David Bourdeaux, Johannes Cramieuw, Hans Kroyer, Tobias van Wondergem and Ja[me]s Smidt (Smith). ^2 Vest. Reg., 1699-17 J^6 (April 14, 1716). George Carstensen became the founder of a distinguished line of Danish nobility, the Castenskjolds. He was a nephew of Governor Lorentz. 3» See above, pp. 113, 115. ^* See above, p. 119. 35 B. & D., 17U-17 (August 10, 1714). 190 THE DANISH WEST INDIES and council on matters pertaining to the land and its inhabitants. They requested permission, on behalf of the members of the Reformed or Calvinist faith, for the latter to elect their own minister. They asked as had the delegates of 1706 that the government take measures to secure satisfaction from Spain for slaves escaped to Porto Rico and for ships seized by the Spanish, French, and English during the War of the Spanish Succession. They requested more efficient assistance from the Company in the prevention of runaways and a remission of the interest on slaves bought in 1707.^® These various desires and grievances were presented in the form of memorials or petitions to the directors and to the king. The memorial to the former was dated September 2, 1715, and to this the directors made reply on October 28 following. ^^ King Frederick IV referred the matter for further investiga- tion to royal commissions, including the Board of Police and Trade. The St. Thomas delegates remained in Copenhagen through the winter of 1715-1716 and succeeded in getting definite statements from both the Company and the crown on all the points in dispute. A commission was appointed by the king on April 14, 1716, consisting of privy councilors Christian Sehested and Frederick Christian Adeler, supreme court judge and councilor in chancery Christian Berregaard, and Jens Kuur, a member of the Copenhagen city council.^^ This body really acted as arbiter in the dispute between the planters and the Company. The king's resolution on each of the disputed points was handed down on August 16, 1716. The mission of 1715-1716 was certainly productive of result. The tax on the property of persons leaving St. Thomas was reduced from twenty -five to ten per cent. Trade was thrown open to St. Thomas inhabitants on payment of six per cent, for outgoing, and five per cent, for incoming goods. On these terms the inhabitants of St. Thomas were to be permitted to trade with all places except the Danish European lands and '" It is not clear just why this was asked for. Manager MS., 119. '^ Comj). Prot, 1697-17SJf (October 28, 1715). 38 Vest. Reg., 1699-17^6 (April 14. 1716). Assessor and Ca?icellie-Raad were the Danish names for Berregaard's offices. THE PLANTER AND THE COMPANY 191 Hamburg and Bremen, but were expected to assist the Company in securing full cargoes, though at market rates, instead of the discount of one-sixth which the directors had held out for. The planters' attempt to secure a legal standing as a legislative body for their common court failed, although the king ordered that their decisions were to be appealed to the directors, thus depriv- ing the governor and council of their judicial functions. The king approved the directors' proposal to issue a letter of presenta- tion (Kaldsbrev) to any suitable Reformed Church minister nomi- nated by the St. Thomas congregation. With regard to slave refugees in Porto Rico, to runaways on St. Thomas, and to seiz- ures made by various nations during the late war, the authori- ties joined in promising assistance. The interest on the debt due for slaves purchased in 1707 was not remitted, but reduced from eight to six per cent. Speedier handling of probate cases was promised. ^^ This outcome, on the whole favorable to the planters, was partly due to the vigorous championship of their interests by a committee of the Board of Police and Trade, which the king had deputed to report upon the case.^° The whole-hearted sympathy which this body showed towards the planters indi- cates an intelligent grasp of commercial matters considerably in advance of that generally held in Danish administrative circles of the early eighteenth century. The planters' victory was gained in the face of bitter opposition from Governor Michael Crone, who had counselled banishment and fines for the leaders if actual revolution was to be averted and the Com- pany was to be saved from ruin.^^ In view of Crone's question- able dealings with privateers and the care with which he looked after his own fortunes, while he neglected the interests of the ^^ For the king's resolution on each of the matters in dispute, see Martfeldt MSS., Vol. VI., " Udtog af en Kongelig Resolution . . ." (August 24, 1716). Cf. Manager MS., pp. 120 et seq. 40 The members were: Niels Slange, Johan Bertram Ernst, Andreas Franck, Christian Braem, Morten Munck, Markus Johansen, and Abraham Klbcker. Politi og Commerce Collegiets Memorial Bog, vol. 21 (1716-1720), in City Hall archives, Copenhagen. See Appendix F, pp. 306-314, for translation of this report. " Crone to Directors (February 19, 1715). B. & D., 17U-17. 192 THE DANISH WEST INDIES Company, it is possible to comprehend why the king's commis- sioners disregarded the governor's advice. In fact, two of the St. Thomas delegates, George Carstensen and Jacob Magens, were appointed by the directors to examine into Governor Crone's official stewardship.^^ Crone, happily for himself, died before the investigation could be instituted. Troubles between planters and those governing them were not confined to St. Thomas during the years after the War of the Spanish Succession. The class of planter-capitalists which in Walpole's time largely dominated English colonial policy seems during these years first to have become conscious of its power in various West Indian islands. Governor Erik Bredal of St. Thomas, in a letter to the directors dated March 13, 1718, reported that the Portuguese had exiled their governor to St. Thomas, possibly the Portuguese island by that name off the Guinea coast of Africa, that the French on Martinique had driven off their " general, " and that a similar fate had met the Dutch "general" on St. Eustatius. The times were indeed "quite fatal" for West Indian governors. Bredal wrote from first-hand knowledge, for he himself had had to imprison a planter who had proposed sending him to Porto Rico.^^ The increased freedom in trade resulted in a short-lived " boom " in St. Thomas. Despite the attempts made by French, Enghshand Spanish to restrict trade to their own nationalities/* and despite numerous seizures by Porto Rico authorities,*^ St. Thomas traders were willing to assume risks which the Com- pany could not. New England shipyards furnished vessels by means of which St. Thomas planters ran the gauntlet of pirates and men-of-war, and not infrequently evaded successfully the vigilance of the West Indian authorities whose business it was to guard the interests of their European masters.*^ On the ^^Comp. ProL, 1697-1734 (October 25, 1715). Crone had connived with Governor Rivera of Porto Rico in carrying on forbidden trade. Cf. Bredal, etc., to Directors (November 24, 1716), B. & D., 1717-20. ^3 B. & D., 1717-20 (March 13, 1718). The planter's name was Pieter Krul. ^^ lUd. (June 11, 1719). ^° Ihid. (February 12, 1719). ^ Ibid. (March 13, 1718). Among others, Lucas Beverhoudt had a vessel built in Boston for trade between the West Indies and Holland. THE PLANTER AND THE COMPANY 193 Danish West Indian as on the Dutch and other islands, smug- gling early became a fine art, one of the approved ways to wealth and affluence and even to titles of nobility. The results of this more liberal policy were soon reflected in increase of trade, especially with the Dutch and with the English colonists on the mainland, who were adepts at wriggling through the meshes of eighteenth-century commercial regulations. The visiting Dutch traders, always willing to sell their wares on credit, were eminently successful among the St. Thomas plant- ers. An era of extravagance ensued, which the Company tried in vain to combat. Plantation magnates sent their children to the northern English colonies or to Europe for their schooling, and when they had acquired independent fortunes the plant- ers themselves retired to Holland or Denmark to enjoy them. The conditions under which these distant colonies were settled and developed give their fiscal history peculiar interest, and likewise complicate it not a little. Besides the duties on imports and exports already referred to, the planters had to pay certain direct, and a considerable number of indirect, taxes. In order to encourage planters to come to St. Thomas and St. John, it had been necessary to promise them eight years of exemption from poll and land taxes.^^ No one was free from militia duty, however, though a number sent proxies. The planters preferred serving in the militia to supporting a con- siderable body of Danish troops. ^^ Of the latter alternative, there was little danger, for the Company had difficulty in keep- ing a full complement of men at the fort, and those employed were too frequently the riffraff of Copenhagen, who were often such inveterate imbibers of kill-devil that they became worse than useless. "They are indeed so wretched," wrote Governor Bredal in 1716, " that they cannot be trusted any longer at their posts; they get so drunk that they fall off the walls where they stand on duty, some falling to their death, some so injuring themselves that they are unable for a long time to do their work. Others desert their posts in the hope of getting a chance to leave *^ See above, p. 69, for reference to Governor Adolph Esmit's order. ^^ See above, p. 101, for Thormohlen's experience with the planters. 194 THE DANISH WEST INDIES the place. . . ." ^^ Few soldiers ever lived to return to Denmark, and very few became landowners, though a number became managers of plantations. So long as the planters were compelled to ship their products to Europe in the Company's vessels, an excessive freight rate became itself a species of tax. A form of taxation most heartily detested by the colonists, however, was the sort that was levied through underpaying the planters for their products. It was to evade such taxes that the latter fought persistently for greater freedom of trade than was being allowed them, and for a place in the local law-making body. The one tax that gave the planter least reason for just complaint because of any measurable inequaUty in its incidence, was the poll and land tax.^" The slaves represented the planters' chief investment, and the ability of the owners to pay could generally be cal- culated with reasonable accuracy by the number of slaves in their possession. The colonists were naturally concerned chiefly in securing the best price possible for their sugar, cotton, indigo, tobacco, and other products. The highest prices were generally to be obtained from Dutch or English interlopers; hence in order to insure cargoes for the Company's ships, the privy council would sometimes proceed to raise to the necessary level the duties on goods exported. Planters who were in the Company's debt were usually obliged to offer their produce to the Company before trying to sell it to any outside buyer, but well-to-do planters did not fear at times to refuse to sell the Company any sugar whatever.^^ Under such circumstances, the local offic- ials were occasionally forced to borrow from a visiting skipper the sugar required to make up a cargo.^^ The directors had insisted from the first on the prior right to buy all plantation products,^^ but they were forced as time went on to relax that end of their monopoly little by little. Finally in 1724 the Com- « B. & D., 17U-17 (April 29, 1716). 60 See above, p. 196. " S. P. for St. Th. (July 9, 1714). 62 B. & D., 17U-17 (August 10, 1714). w Martfeldt MSS., Vol. VI, 170S-1709 (AprU 2, 1708). THE PLANTER AND THE COMPANY 195 pany gave up its monopoly of all trade at St. Thomas except that in slaves, permitting the ships of all nations to buy and sell there on payment of the six per cent, export and five per cent, import tax fixed in the royal edict of August 24, 1716.^* This appears to mark the beginning of St. Thomas as a free port. After the acquisition of St. Croix, the question of how the sugar and cotton prices should be fixed became one of prime political importance in the Danish islands. Before 1735 the planters tried to secure current prices for their products by un- ojBBcial means, since they had no recognized legislative powers. As a source of income the Company's magazine at St. Thomas played some part. It was impossible to retain the monopoly of the retail trade so long as Danish ships could not furnish the island with all its needed supplies and provisions. Planta- tion implements came in large part from English and French sources, and provisions chiefly from New England and New York. During the Spanish Succession war, when numerous prizes and prize cargoes were brought to St. Thomas for sale, the Company lost a good deal of its retail trade to those local planter-merchants who were willing to undertake war risks. By 1725 it had given up almost all of this trade except its traffic in slaves. It was the duty of the local factor to keep the officials in Copenhagen informed concerning the goods likely to be in de- mand in the West Indies. A list of articles found enumerated in the Company's books for 1717 will give an idea of the con- tents of its magazine. Among the provisions on hand were salt beef, pork, maize, sweet potatoes, palm oil, cassava, pepper, spices, cacao, tea, bread, flour, butter, sweetmeats, wine, vine- gar, beer (Lybsk 01) kill-devil, and spirits (aquavita). There were also to be found pitch, rope, sailcloth, and thread for the use of ships in the harbor; shingles, lumber, brick, tile-stones and nails for building houses, and tallow for lighting them. For the planter's wife and daughter the factor had in stock laces, linens and cotton prints. To the planter himself, who rode on his daily inspection tour, the magazine offered a saddle.^^ " See above, p. 152. Ibid., 17S3-1731 (October 21, 1724). ^^N. J.for St. Th. for 1717. 196 THE DANISH WEST INDIES Closely associated with the Company's fiscal policy, but less firmly under its control, was the matter of money. Part of the metal dug out of Spanish mines in America was diverted by Dutch and other interlopers into the channels of West Indian and European trade. Spanish merchants gladly parted with hard Spanish pieces-of -eight for negroes or provisions; their own skippers could not keep pace with the supply, and Span- ish planters were willing to pay good prices for those com- modities. The greater number of the coins that were in cir- culation in the West Indies in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries bore on their face the titles of the king of Spain. Spanish milled dollars circulated freely in the trade of Boston, New York and Philadelphia with the West Indies long after the English colonies had gained their independence. Within each of the different groups of colonies, the money of the home state was supposed to circulate. Hence various kinds of coin crept into general use, to the confusion of commerce and the joy of the professional money-changer. St. Thomas suffered its most severe financial disturbance during the years of universal money stringency following the Peace of Utrecht. As early as 1715, the planters on St. Thomas were unable to pay their export and import dues in coin.^^ Two years later, shortly after the Company's treasurer, Christian Seeberg, had been accused of wholesale peculations by Governor Bredal, the latter reported that there was no money left on St. Thomas. "There is no trade with the Spaniards," he wrote, "and the English have secured the little money that is left, so that the land is poorer than it has ever been. People who are rated as capitalists do not have enough money for the daily ex- penses *of their households. In order to pay our militia and others of our servants, our only resource lies in doing as is being done in Carolina and Canada: namely, to make use of paper bills with the Company's seal in place of money. ..." The only other alternative, as the governor intimated in the same letter, would have been barter in sugar and cotton, hardly convenient substitutes for small change. To make legal seiz- ures for debts owed by planters, would merely have brought the ^ 5. A D., niJf-17 (July 23, 1715). THE PLANTER AND THE COMPANY 197 Company slaves and furniture, which could not have been used in paying the Company's employees.^'^ The crisis was thus tided over by paper money issues, but not without inconvenience and loss. In 1722 Governor Bredal issued an order requiring possessors of "false paper bills" to present them for signing within fourteen days, on pain of con- fiscation.^^ In 1724, in the seventh year of their use. Governor Frederick Moth and his council took measures for the with- drawal and confiscation of the old notes, which were scarcely recognizable any longer, and proceeded to the issue of new ones that were less easily raised. ^^ The governor and council de- cided to issue 2,000 bills of each of the following denominations : one, two, four, and eight reals .^° Counting eight reals to each piece-of -eight brings the sum thus issued to 3,750 pieces-of- eight, which was equivalent to the same number of rixdoUars. Two years later a new issue worth 1,000 rdl. more replaced the above,^^ but the planters began to demand twenty-five per cent, higher prices for their produce when paid in paper money. This caused the local officials to take measures for the redemp- tion of the bills by accepting them at their face value in pay- ment of debts to the Company. On March 21, 1727, Philip Gardelin, the factor at St. Thomas, requested the retirement and destruction of the paper money. His suggestion was ac- cepted, and after a decade of experience the Company went back to a hard money footing.^^ The financial stringency that had prompted the experiment had disappeared. The Company had avoided the disaster that befell the French and English companies of this period by refraining from issuing more paper money than it was able to absorb in the course of its business. Far more permanent as a medium of exchange were the so- 57 Bredal to Directors (September 27. 1717). B. & D., 1717-20. ss MartfeUt MSS., Vol. I, 1684-1744 (July 27, 1722). 69 S. P. far St. Th. (May 11, October 12, 1724); Martfeldt MSS., Vol. VI, 1723-1739 (October 12. 1724). «« S. P. for St. Th. (October 12, 1724). «i Ibid. (July 30. 1726). ^2 Ibid. (March 21, 1727). The half-tone engravings of Danish and colonial coins planned for this volume have had to be omitted, as the Danish museum coin collections have been stored away until the close of the war. 198 THE DANISH WEST INDIES called "Seeberg dollars." The silver ware and plate of the de- faulting treasurer had been cut into convenient sizes and stamped, and some of the money thus created continued in circulation after the Danish West India and Guinea Company had passed out of existence. In spite of wars and panics, the Company had during the first third of the new century not only held St. Thomas, but had acquired and settled St. John. It had seen the rise of a class of capitalist planters, and had at the same time been able to pay its shareholders a twelve per cent, dividend in 1714 and salaries to the directors and chief participants for their service from 1696 on.^^ In 1721 it had been able to pay an eight per cent, dividend, but no "Solarium proportionaliter." No further div- idends were declared until 1734, when the purchase of St. Croix made other arrangements necessary. With two little islands in its possession but both gradually decreasing in fertility, with a restless planter population which insisted most strenuously upon its rights, and with a trade that could scarcely supply more than one or two ships a year with cargoes, it became evident to live Danish business men that a fresh start of some sort would soon have to be made to prevent utter stagnation. The opportunity came when French interest in the affair of the Polish Succession suggested to French states- men that Danish neutrality and Danish money might be se- cured by offering to Denmark-Norway the all but abandoned island of St. Croix. The acquisition of this fertile island marks the beginning of a new era in Danish West Indian history, which it will be the purpose of the succeeding chapters to describe. 8^ Manager MS., 117. CHAPTER X THE ACQUISITION OP ST. CROIX The acquisition by Denmark of the island of St. Croix in 1733 may properly be viewed in the nature of a windfall. This small but precious tropical fruit fell into Denmark's lap during one of those capricious diplomatic storms which shook the chanceries of Europe from 1723 to 1733. During this decade an intriguing and ambitious Italian woman, Elizabeth Farnese, seated on the throne of Spain as the consort of the incompetent Philip V, "was the pivot upon which the diplomacy of Europe turned." Failing in her efforts to bring about a marriage alliance between France and Spain, Elizabeth through her minister, the Dutch adventurer, Ripperda, managed to effect an alliance with Austria in 1725 by which among other things Spain was to secure the restoration of Gibraltar and Minorca, and Austria was to receive Spanish support for her Ostend East India Company. This reversal of alliances, which brought together two of the chief opponents of the Spanish Succession war, threatened the revival of the empire of Charles the Fifth. By way of restoring the "balance of power" and averting the dangerous consequences of such a combination, the represent- atives of France, England, and Prussia met at Herrenhausen where later in the same year they formed what became known as the League of Hanover. They were subsequently joined by Sweden, Denmark, and the United Provinces. It was the marriage of the young and weakly Louis XV to Maria Leszczynska, the daughter of Stanislas Leszczynski, ex-king of Poland, that had definitely terminated Elizabeth's schemes for a French-Spanish alliance. The inopportune death of Augustus II of Poland on February 1, 1733, left France as the chief champion of the rights of Stanislas to the Polish throne. The question of the aged, peace-loving Cardinal Fleury, "Must we ruin the king to aid his father-in-law? " was ignored. France [199] goo THE DANISH WEST INDIES consequently found herself in the difficult position of guarantor of a royal candidate who was opposed by the arms of Russia and Saxony, both of which states were actively backing the Saxon candidate, Augustus. Since Austria supported Russia and Saxony, Cardinal Fleury expected Sweden to attack her inveterate enemy, Russia, while he looked for Denmark, which controlled the entrance to the Baltic, at least to remain neutral. This would permit the French fleet to enter the Baltic and thus come to the aid of Stanislas. The negotiations of France with Denmark were carried on by Count Plelo,^ who had been sent to Copenhagen in 1728, where he had become very popular because of his knowledge of Danish history and his acquaintance with northern literary and scien- tific men.^ Plelo's task was not an easy one, for only eight months before the death of the Polish king Denmark had con- cluded a treaty of friendship and alliance with Russia and Austria at Copenhagen, with a view towards securing a favor- able settlement of the vexing questions concerning Denmark's relations with the duchies of Schleswig and Holstein. Under these conditions, the Danish court was obliged to move with circumspection. Austria must not be offended, for Holstein was within the Empire; France must not be turned away en- tirely, for there was no telling when French support might be- come very desirable for Denmark. The Danish king. Chris- tian VI, managed to draw out the negotiations until March 27, 1734, when he definitely refused the French offer of alliance; ^ but meantime the island of St. Croix had been purchased from France for the Danish West India and Guinea Company. This enabled France to secure needed funds for carrying on her war in Poland, and the Danish company to gain a new and fertile island. The ten or twelve years following the collapse of the Missis- sippi and South Sea companies were years when money went * Louis Robert Hypolite de Brehan, Comte de Plelo. ^ It was during P161o's stay in Copenhagen that Ludwig (Louis) Holberg, Denmark-Norway's great dramatist and historian, was laying the foundations of a national drama in the Danish capital. * For conditions preceding the purchase of St. Croix, see L. Koch, Christian den Sjettes Histone (Kjobenhavn, 1886), pp. 257 ei seq. >- T^ — . >^ '- • I- >/' i' THE ACQUISITION OP ST. CROIX 201 into hiding and was exceedingly difficult to coax out. A time when it was common to resort to paper money to carry on the minimum of necessary trade was not favorable to the prosperity of commercial companies. Under the successors of Governor Bredal,^ the Danish West India and Guinea Company, unable to pursue an aggressive commercial policy, gradually relin- quished its monopoly in favor of private traders and proceeded to collect as many as possible of its outstanding debts. Even in the slave trade, its one remaining source of profit, headway was very difficult. A number of poor crops, due to drought and other causes, left the planters with little surplus to invest in slaves. The East India Company too was practically at a standstill. Its low estate was ascribed mainly to the Northern War and to the plague in Copenhagen in 1711. In the course of an in- vestigation Frederick IV sent a letter under date of November 9, 1726, to the investigating commission asking them to report upon the advisability of uniting the two India companies.^ The commission was dissolved in 1728 without having achieved any tangible result.® When Christian VI came to the throne in 1730, the prospects for the India companies began to improve. As crown prince. Christian had already shown a live interest in these ventures. In the East India Company he hadiheld the presidency and on April 12, 1732, within two years after his accession, that com- pany was reorganized as "The Royal Chartered East Indian or Asiatic Company." ^ The West India Company's opportu- nity for rehabilitation came when the directors saw the chance to buy the island of St. Croix from France. In 1732, at the time that Plelo's negotiations with the Danish * Commander Otto J. Thambsen was governor for a few months in 1724; Captain Frederick Moth, until 1727; and Henry Suhm, until 1733, when Philip Gardelin became governor (February 21). ^The committee consisted of August Friderich von John and Daniel Ben- jamin Weyse, with Andreas Hoyer as secretary. Hist. Saml. og Studier . . . H. Rordam, ed. (Kjobenhavn, 1878), 4 B. HI, pp. 144 et seq. ^ E. Holm, Danmark-Norges Histarie i Frederick IV's sidste ti Regeringsaar, pp. 439 et seq. '' Kay Larsen, De dansk-ostindiske Koloniers Historie, 1, 73. 202 THE DANISH WEST INDIES court were under way, the directorate of the West India Com- pany consisted of Ferdinand Anthon (Count of Laurwigen), councilors of state Severin Junge and Christian Berregaard, Hans J. Soelberg, and Gregorius Klauman. The chief partic- ipants were Frederick Seckman and the mayor of Copenhagen, Frederick Holmsted.^ When the president, Laurwigen, pre- sented his resignation to the shareholders on September 12, 1732, the latter immediately began the search for another "high minister" and instructed councilor of justice Frederick L. Dose to sound "his High Excellency," privy councilor Charles Adolph von Plessen in the matter.^ From September until the following April (1733), von Plessen kept his own counsel, but he set to work informing himself on the state of the Company and the possibilities for its improvement. Von Plessen had conferred with Holmsted during the interval and had found that the Company was scarcely able to pay interest on its debts, and the stockholders still less able to secure returns on the capital invested. He had "studied such pro- posals, ways, and means as could be suggested, not only to assist, rescue, and support the Company, but also [such as would help] to place it on a sounder basis." ^^ Commerce to and from the West Indies, "especially in these times of general peace" was indeed according to Holmsted's admission entirely demoralized; St. Thomas bought its goods direct from other lands, while the Company was forced to pay the planters 4}^ '^dl. per hundred pounds for their sugar, and from eleven to thirteen shillings a pound for their cotton, higher prices than the planters themselves could secure in Europe, especially for the sugar. These observations, which von Plessen and the directors communicated to the shareholders at their meeting on May 8, 1733, led his High Excellency to the conclusion "that the lands of the Company are too small and its inhabitants too few and that the colonial administration is on too limited a scale and has not from the beginning been established upon a sufficiently ' Manager MS., pp. 132 et seq. 9 Comp. ProL. 1697-173/f (September 12, 1732). 1" Ibid.. (May 8, 1734). THE ACQUISITION OF ST. CROIX 203 well-ordered footing or upon a plan properly suited to carry on commerce successfully with these lands." The only way out that appeared to von Plessen lay in the possibility of the Com- pany's securing the neighboring island of St. Croix, which was at the time in the possession of France. The suggestion thus skillfully presented by a man so distin- guished in rank and prestige must have taken the assembled stockholders by surprise, for they had received no dividends since 1721, and many of them had in fact advanced to the Com- pany in 1723 loans amounting to thirty per cent, of their stock, and received in return the Company's notes yielding six per cent, interest.^^ The sort of confidence instilled into the minds of the Company's "general court" as they listened to the courageous proposals of a high official who was willing to stake his reputation upon the success of his scheme, must have been comparable to that produced in a meeting of the board of di- rectors of a run-down railway in these days when a Hill or a Morgan offers to pull them out of the slough. When von Plessen appeared before the stockholders in May, 1733, the entire plan as he presented it was known only to the king, who had given it his approval, to Holmsted and himself and to "a couple of confidential friends whom Mr. Holmsted had employed," and of course to Count Plelo. Although se- crecy was still enjoined, he was able to announce that Holmsted had brought the negotiations to the point where the island could be secured for 164,000 "French crowns" (ecus?). This included the advantage of an "alliance or treaty" with France, providing for "mutual obligation and neutrality in all cases, perpetual friendship in America regardless of the situation in Europe, and mutual defense and succor if need be against all who might attempt to disturb the American establishments, colonies, and commerce of these nations. . . ." Whether or not a treaty of alliance actually was contemplated in these preliminary negotiations is not entirely clear from the minutes of the Company. It was assumed by those who had begun the negotiations that the island was well worth buying. Von Plessen estimated " Comp. Prot., 1697-1734 (May 8, 1734) ^9. 204 THE DANISH WEST INDIES that the island when surveyed would be found to contain not fewer than 800 large plantations besides many smaller ones; that it would yield cacao, indigo, and coffee, as well as sugar and cotton; and that the land was of such a high quality that the plantations would be worth from 500 to 1,000 rdl. from the beginning. He expressed the belief that there would be no lack of purchasers, and that the 164,000 rdl. needed would come back within a few years. Granted that the shareholders were willmg to concede the value of the island, the questions of next greatest importance were those which dealt with the readjustment of the Company's internal affairs on the basis of the new conditions. How were the shares in the new investment to be distributed? What special privileges should purchasers of the new shares enjoy? How should the Company provide for the payment of the pur- chase price? To what extent should trade be free and on what branches of commerce should the Company hold the monopoly? At what price should the old shares be estimated and how should holders of shares in the recently established refinery be treated? All of these questions were suggested by von Plessen at the general assembly held on May 8, and he sketched out tentative answers, but the shareholders were not ready as yet to express their opinions on every one of them. They did however vote in favor of the purchase, and made arrangements for securing voluntary subscriptions to stock, the preference to be given to holders of the old shares. On May 13 the various groups met once more in general as- sembly. During the five-day interval, a committee of share- holders ^^ had discussed the mooted points with the directors ^^ and the chief participants,^^ and the following resolutions were presented, and received the approval of the assembly when it met on May 15. (1) The Company's old shares, about eighty- four in number, with a par value of 1,000 rdl. each, were to be 1- " Councilors of Conference" Lars Benzon and Christian Berregaard, and Councilors of State Phillip Julius Bornemann and Thomas Bartholin. '^ Councilor of Conference Severin Junge, Hans Jorgen Soelberg, and Grego- rius Klauman. " "Chancery director" Frederick Sechman and Frederick Hohnsted. THE ACQUISITION OF ST. CROIX 205 reduced to 500 rdl. a share, by way of encouraging the buyers of shares in the Company and the refinery; (2) the value of the shares in the sugar refinery was to be raised from 600 to 1,000 rdl. each, and persons investing for the first time were to have the right to buy them; (3) after June 11 the above shares were to be combined into single shares on the basis already resolved upon, and the profits from Company and refinery put into the common treasury; (4) the possessor of each old share was to advance 2,000 rdl. towards the purchase of the island, and to receive in return two plantations on St. Croix, each of them 3,000 feet long and 2,000 feet wide; (5) the 2,000 rdl. was to constitute part of each full share and be combined with the 1,000 rdl. in refinery, and 500 rdl. in Company, shares; (6) it was agreed that the stockholders should have the opportunity If they desired it of selling the plantations assigned to them before the Company began disposing of its plantations; (7) those failing to fall in line were given the chance to dispose of their refinery and Company shares within eight days on pain of confiscation; (8) the outstanding debts were not to be inter- fered with; (9) the dividends on the sugar refinery and the old shares were fixed at seven per cent, beginning with June 11, 1733, but from the 2,000 rdl. investment, each was to receive such returns as the tide of fortune might bring him; and finally (10) after the shares should all have been paid up, the Company pledged itself not to force any shareholder to advance money to the Company against his will.^^ Thus was the Danish West India and Guinea Company once more reorganized to meet the demands of a new time. Many things had happened since Governor Lorentz urged the directors to take up the activities laid down by Thormohlen and Arff, and counseled them to push with vigor the promising Guinea trade. While the reorganization of 1697 was made chiefly with a view towards the slave-trade, that of 1733-1734 looked rather in the direction of plantation development and of the monopoly in the business of refining and distributing sugar In Denmark- Norway. 15 Comp. Prot, 1697-1731t (May 13, 1733). Manager MS. (pp. 140 et seq.) follows the minutes of the Company almost literally here. 206 THE DANISH WEST INDIES The treaty with France, which was concluded at Copenhagen by Plelo and Holmsted June 15, 1733, and ratified by Louis XV just thirteen days later, provided for the purchase of St. Croix from the French by the Company but said nothing of any alliance with France/® It arranged for the payment of 750,000 livres ^^ in French coin, half to be paid in cash on the exchange of ratifications and the remainder in eighteen months. In their general assembly of August 8, the shareholders were oflBcially notified by the directors of the consummation of the treaty, and they accepted the directors' plans for raising the money. The time that was to be allowed to the holders of the old shares to participate in the new plan was extended, so that those within the city were allowed another fortnight, and those in the provinces, six weeks, to pay up the required sum. Holders of old shares were to be given six months' time before they were to be required to give a final answer to the notification of the directors. Meantime the king, through privy councilor and director of finances Christian Louis von Plessen (brother of Charles Adolph), had offered to loan the Company such sums as might be necessary to complete the payments to France. ^^ The plans of the directors for taking over St. Croix from the French "general " at Martinique, for having the island surveyed and laid out into "quarters" and plantations, and for giving four instead of two plantations to those investing 2,000 rdl., were presented to the assembled shareholders, and accepted by them in their meeting of September 26, 1733.^^ By way of assuring the reorganized Company a market for its West Indian cargoes, the king had issued an order on July 4, 1733, providing that private refineries should be required there- after to buy their raw sugar from the Danish islands as long as that source of supply held out.-° This move in the Company's ^^ For full text of treaty and pleinpouvoirs, see Host, 98 et seq. " This amounted in Danish coin to 141,926 rdl., 52 si., according to Comp. Prof... 1697-17Slf (September 26, 1733). 18 Comp. Prof., 1697-173J, (August 8, 1733). 19 Ibid. (September 26, 1733); Mariager MS., p. 145. ^° No one refinery was to be allowed to lower the price of sugar without con- sulting the others. This was evidently intended to protect the Company's refinery established in 1728. THE ACQUISITION OF ST. CROIX 207 favor was followed on December 11 by royal permission to arrange for the purchase of either or both of the two privately owned refineries in Copenhagen,^^ and for their incorporation into the Company. Within four years the Company's monopoly of the refining business was practically complete, subject only to restrictions imposed by the king in the public interest. The quality of the sugar was to be maintained at as high a standard as hitherto, its price was to remain at a reasonable ratio with the current price of raw sugar, and the Company was to be al- lowed to put up a brandy and liquor distillery in which syrup and sugar, and not grain, were to be used.^^ When the Company was ready to take actual possession of St. Croix, the capital it had at its disposal was as follows : 733^ old (reduced) shares @ 500 rdl 36,750 rdl. m}4 sugar refinery shares @1,000 " 117,500 " 147 St. Croix shares @ 500 " 73,500 " 2^ The available capital, which amounted to a total of 227,750 rdl., represented nearly three times the amount invested in the Company before its reorganization was begun. The enthusiasm and practical business sense of Frederick Holmsted and Charles Adolph von Plessen had overcome the apathy of a considerable part of the investing public. They had seen to it that the Company's interests in Denmark were properly safeguarded and coordinated with its interests in the West Indies. It is proper at this time to turn to the West Indies and to the circumstances connected with the occupation of St. Croix itself. While these weighty matters were being considered in Copen- hagen, St. John, which had been settled only about fifteen years before,^* was about to become the scene of the terrible slave in- surrection, the course of which has already been pointed out.^^ For six awful months, while the directors were laboring to in- duce shy investors to place their funds in West India Company ^^ These were owned by the Weyse and Pelt families. 22 Manager MS., pp. 147 et seq. " Ibid,, 150. 2* See above, p. 128. « Chapter VIII. 208 THE DANISH WEST INDIES stock, the planters of St. Thomas and St. John were struggling for their very existence. The part played by the French from Martinique, who learned of the sale of St. Croix before the Danes on St. Thomas received the information, and how they helped to put down the rebellion, have hkewise been discussed in the preceding pages. St. Croix had already had an eventful history. According to Bryan Edwards, the English historian of the West Indies, Dutch and English settlers occupied it in 1625.^^ They appear to have been joined there by some French refugees from St. Christopher (St. Kitts). A civil war between the factions re- sulted in the expulsion of the Dutch and the French shortly before 1650. In August of that year, a Spanish expedition from Porto Rico drove off the English. ^^ The Spaniards had hardly established themselves there before de Poincy, the lieutenant- general of all the French islands in America, sent a force of about one hundred and sixty-six men from St. Christopher's to oust the Spaniards. The effort succeeded, and the settlement of St. Croix by the French was begun by a group of three hun- dred colonists who were sent thither the following year.^^ From 1651 to 1664, when the French West India Company was established under the initiative of Colbert, St. Croix was under the proprietorship of the Knights of Malta, who, how- ever, ruled it in the name of Louis XIV. In 1695, while Louis was defending himself against the English and the Dutch and their allies of the Augsburg League, the entire colony was moved to San Domingo.^ From that date until the Danish pur- chase, it is referred to in maps and texts as an abandoned island. The /Company's servants on St. Thomas had for some time cast longing glances towards St. Croix, whose deserted hill- sides they could see faintly on the horizon from the slopes that rose to the northward from St. Thomas bay. In 1725, Governor Moth, in a letter to the directors, mentioned having heard a -^ History of the British West Indies, I, 184. ^'' Du Tertre, Uistoire des Antilles, I, 448 (quoted in J. Knox, op. cit., 27). 28 Du Tertre, 1, 409-413, II, 32, 33, 37 (quoted in Mims, Colbert's West India Policy, 44). -' Keller, Colonization, 498; J. Knox, op. cit., 39. THE ACQUISITION OF ST. CROIX 209 report that the English intended shortly to occupy the island.^" In the following year, Moth wrote that "Ste. Criids [St. Croix] still lies uninhabited. If said island belonged to the Danes, or could be secured by them, the Company would in time become powerful, and I assure [you] that there would be no dearth of inhabitants as soon as permission for its settlement should be granted. "I have heard that some distinguished gentlemen in Denmark have oflfered 100,000 rdl. for it, which sum it is easily worth, but I take the liberty to explain to the gentlemen [the directors] that in case Ste. Criids fell into the hands of private persons and was granted freedom [of trade] by the king, then St. Thomas and St. John would be ruined within three years; but on the other hand, if the Company could receive it, both lands [St. Thomas ^^ and St. Croix] would be the gainers." ^^ This zealous servant of the Company lived to see his hopes realized, — he became, in fact, the first chief instrument for their realization, when the directors in their instructions dated November 16, 1733, named Frederick Moth as the first governor of St. Croix. The Company's ship Unity which bore these in- structions and other orders, did not arrive at St. Thomas until June 11, 1734, almost an entire year after the conclusion of the treaty. She had been obliged to put in for repairs at a Nor- way port on her outward journey, which she had begun on December 3, 1733.^^ No sooner had Captain Moth received his commission than he 30 B. & D., 17U-27 (July 7, 1725). 3^ St. Thomas and St. John were always considered as a unit for administra- tive purposes. 22 Ibid. (March 6, 1726). '* Manager MS., pp. 156 et seq. 210 THE DANISH WEST INDIES I commenced preparations for taking over St. Croix. The negro I, rebellion on St. John had recently been brought under control i through the cheerfully rendered assistance of the French; and i to many planters who had suffered in consequence of the in- surrection, this new island offered the prospect of recouping their lost fortunes. A bark was presently sent off to Martinique to deliver to the general and intendant there a copy of the orders of Louis XV.^* Because of the danger from hurricanes during the summer months, the French authorities suggested postponing the formal transfer until winter, but expressed their willingness to let the Danes begin actual occupation at once. On August 31 the Lutheran and Reformed ministers held services in their respective churches for the benefit of the pioneer band that was to leave on the following day. On the two barks and two smaller craft which sailed to St. Croix on this responsible mission, there were, besides Captain Moth and his party (which included several negroes loaned by St. Thomas planters), a number of men sent out on the Unity by Charles Adolph von Plessen to begin immediately the cultivation of the plantations allotted to that influential statesman. Thus did his High Excellency show his faith in the Company's future by his own good works. On September 5, the httle band had finished clearing a place near the Basin on the northern side of the island for the fort, which was to be called "Christianswsern," ^^ and on the following day, when the cannon had been placed there, the minister who had accompanied the party preached a sermon, the royal flag was planted, and the king's commission to the new governor was solemnly read as the cannon fired a salute.^^ Four months later, after the French officials from Martinique had arrived, occurred the formal transfer from France to Den- mark. Captain Bonnoust ^^ and his party arrived in the harbor > 3* Manager MS., 157; Gardelin MSS. (June 23, 1734). The bark, which sailed about June 23 was in charge of skipper Patrick Laughlin, and the busi- ness in the hands of a "Mr. Vass," perhaps Emanuel Vass, a Jew, the only person of that name given in the St. Thomas census for 1733. '^ Weern = defense. ^' Manager MS., 158. ^' " Pierre Elaude Frangois Anthoine Preinley, Herre af Bonnoust." Host, 125. THE ACQUISITION OF ST. CROIX 211 of the Basin of St. Croix on the morning of January 8. They saluted the Danish flag, which had been planted on the point of land near the fort, with nine guns, which the Danes answered shot for shot. On the tenth, after Bonnoust had come ashore with a lieutenant of marine ^^ and a notary public, the oflScial ceremonies took place. A French inhabitant of St. Thomas, one Pierre Joseph Pannet,^^ acted as interpreter. About forty St. Croix inhabitants were designated by Moth to append their signatures to the acts of possession that were drawn up.*® After exchange of full powers and the declaration of Governor Moth that no French inhabitants were settled upon the island. Captain Bonnoust, by virtue of the authority vested in him by the Marquis de Champigny ,*^ governor and lieutenant-general of the French Windward Islands, placed Frederick Moth, as the legally designated governor, in full possession of the island in accordance with the terms of the treaty concluded at Copen- hagen on June 15, 1733. By way of symbolizing the authority thus officially conferred upon him, Governor Moth had his soldiers march to the fort under arms, and fire nine cannon shots as the Danish flag waved overhead. He then extinguished a lighted candle, fire was again lighted, plants and herbs were pulled out of the ground, branches were broken from the trees, the water in the brook was tasted, stones were thrown, — all the acts were performed which were needed to indicate that free, full, and perpetual possession of the island had been taken in the name of the Danish West India and Guinea Company under the authority of the Danish king.42 Von Plessen and Holmsted had reason to feel proud of their '8 Marie Barth^lemy Benard. Host, 126. ^ Or Panel; the author of the Relation of the St. John insurrection of 1733. See above, p. 169, (n. 37). ^ Among the persons acting with Moth in various official capacities were Diderich von Ottingen, lieutenant on St. Croix, secretary Lorentz Nissan, surgeon Cornelius Bodger, and militia captain William Chalville. Manager MS.. 159. *^ " Herre Jacques Charles Brochard, Ridder, Herre til Champignee, Nauvare, Poincy, Marquis de Ste. Marie." Host, 124. ^2 Manager MS., 158; Host, 124 et seq. 212 THE DANISH WEST INDIES work. Louis XV expended all that St. Croix had brought him, and more, in a futile attempt to aid his father-in-law. Den- mark, on the other hand, thanks to the devoted labors of the above two men, received the title to a fertile island, which has « remained in her possession almost without interruption to the present day. CHAPTER XI THE COMPANY UNDER THE NEW CHARTER With the acquisition of St. Croix, the Danish West India and Guinea Company looked forward to a revival in its business affairs. The prestige and enthusiasm of von Plessen and Holm- sted did much to raise the hopes of the shareholders, but several years were likely to elapse before the new colony could be ex- pected to yield an appreciable return. Not only was the ex- pense of the St. John slave uprising to be met, but measures had to be taken to prevent the recurrence of such a catastrophe. St. Croix had to be surveyed and a supply of new settlers se- cured. The purchase of the new island, and the privileges giving the Company the right to establish a sugar refinery and distillery, prompted Christian VI to grant the reorganized company a new charter on February 5, 1734, to take the place of the provisional charter of two years before.^ Besides retaining the three West Indian islands, the Company was given all rights to "Crab and other American and African islands." ^ If it so desired, it was to continue in possession of Christiansborg in Guinea, on pay- ment of the usual dues "to the king of Aquambu and the Cabusiers of Orsa." The private sugar refiners of Copenhagen were forbidden to buy foreign sugars, and were either to agree with the Company as to the price or pay the current rate brought by St. Thomas sugar in the Amsterdam market, plus the cost of forwarding it to Denmark. Only in case of a shortage were the refineries to be permitted to import sugar, and then they were to pay 10 sk. duty for each hundred pounds.^ Under the terms of the new charter, the Company was given ^ The " interim " charter or octroi was issued on February 22, 1732. 2 See Host, Efterretninger om Oen Sand Thomas, pp. 115 et seq., for an abstract of the entire octroi. [2131 214 THE DANISH WEST INDIES a monopoly of trade with its islands, and exemption from the Sound and other duties,^ though it was to pay two and one-half per cent, duty on goods imported into Copenhagen and only one per cent, on those exported from Copenhagen to foreign ports. ^ This was evidently intended to encourage foreign trade and thereby to bring more money into the state. The ships, moneys, or effects of the Company were not to be subject to seizure during war or peace .^ The Company was authorized to try all cases arising within its jurisdiction, in a court consisting of three of its own share- holders. Appeals to the supreme court could be made only in cases involving life or honor. Judgments in disputes between the Company and the inhabitants of the islands might come up for review before a body composed of three shareholders, other than the above, and four judges of the supreme court.^ Wherever the charter failed to cover the situation, the Danish laws were to be considered applicable.^ The appointments of Reformed and Lutheran ministers of the gospel were, like those of governors, to be confirmed by the king.^ Toleration of be- lief continued to be granted, but only the two faiths above- mentioned were permitted to hold public worship.^" With respect to fiscal matters, some curious provisions were made. Interest was to be fixed at such rates as might be agreed upon between the Company and its creditors, ^^ and "tenths" and "sixths "might be assessed or not as the Company desired. ^^ Evidently the Company did not propose that the claims made by the planters in 1715 should be revived. The executive authority in the colonies was to rest with the * " Compagniets Varer skulle i Kjobenhavn og (Jresund vcere frie for Told Con- sumtion, Accise og andre Paalceg, og deres Skibe vare frie for Last- og Havne- Penge, etc" Host, 117 (H 9). i^lIlO. "Ulii. ' H 13. 8 If 28. 9 Ts 18 and 21. '0 If 18. " II 17. 12 If 33. THE COMPANY UNDER THE NEW CHARTER 215 governor and his council, but in place of the former burgher council or court, there was authorized a lower or town court, and a higher court consisting of the governor and four members of the lower court.^^ The directors in their "orders and pro- visions" of November 16, 1734, issued a list of privileges to planters, in which the rights of the burgher council were speci- fied in detail. The first members were to be appointed by the governor, and thereafter one was to be retired every three years. Whenever a vacancy occurred, the place was to be filled by the governor from a list of three planters submitted to him by the remaining members of the council. The burgher council was given the right of conferring with the governor and his council whenever it had any matters to propose concerning the common welfare. These matters were to be presented in writing, and might be forwarded to the di- rectors by the first ship, whether the governor in council offered any reply or not. Although it might thus make its desires known to the authorities in the islands and in Copenhagen, the burgher council had no power of initiative except at the written order of the privy council or the directors. ^^ The directors were to find that once they had granted the right to advise, it would be exceedingly diflBcult to prevent the planters from becoming virtual legislators. The problem of securing planters for the three hundred planta- tions which it was proposed to lay out at St. Croix was one of first importance to the Company. The early attempts of the king and the leading stockholders to begin actual work on the pieces of ground allotted to them was an encouraging sign. A few English settlers ^^ who had moved to St. Croix before the Danes secured it, signified their willingness to pay for their land, and others from Barbados and the "upper islands" indicated their readiness to come if the conditions laid down were not " If 28. " Udtog af den Ordre og Anstalt. . . ." (November 16, 1734), 1fl6. Mart- feldt MSS., Vol. III. 1^ A number of the English were reported to have removed to Tortola and Spanishtown, after Moth's arrival at St. Croix. Gardelin, etc., to Directors (December 28, 1734). MaHfeldt MSS., Vol. VI. gl6 THE DANISH WEST INDIES too severe. They were quite opposed to paying the 40 rdl. an- nual land tax asked for by the directors, though the tax was not to be paid until the close of the seven year exemption period. ^^ Occasionally poor men who had only from three to half a dozen slaves applied for a chance to buy small tracts, but they were delayed by the instructions of the directors, who wished first to dispose of the two hundred and fifteen sugar plantations be- longing to the shareholders.^'^ The penniless man, were he ever so hard-working, could hope for little in the West Indies, which deserved then perhaps more than at present the appellation of "a rich man's heaven and a poor man's hell." A number of families sent from Germany to St. Croix cost the Company more than they were worth. Ex- cept for three families that deserved to be called industrious, the men proved to be drunkards, and the women, dirty, lazy, and immoral. "We therefore do not wish to risk," wrote the governor and council, "recommending the sending out of any additional families of that sort." ^^ The proposal to encourage refugee debtors to come to St. Croix was not favorably enter- tained by the local authorities, who, eager to secure sober, in- dustrious folk, suggested that they should not exceed twenty- four years of age, and that not fewer than one hundred be sent with each ship "if it is to do any good, inasmuch as half of them will no doubt die off.''^^ As the surveying of sugar and cotton plantations neared its completion in the summer of 1735,^" work on the forts was pushed forward on all three islands. On St. John, where the Company had been taken severely to task by the planters for the inadequacy of the fort during the recent insurrection, a fort one hundred feet in length, furnished with bastions the guns of which could command Coral Bay, was in process of ^^ Udtog aj den Ordre og Anstalt . . . (November 16, 1734.) Martfeldt MSS. Vol. Ill; Gardelin, etc.. to Directors, August 8, 1734, B. & D., 17SS-Sh 1' Gardelin. etc.. to Directors (August 8, 1734). Martfeldt MSS., Vol. VI. 18 Moth, etc., to Directors (July 21. 1737). Martfeldt MSS., Vol. VI. 19 Ibid. (July 23, 1735). 2" Thomas '"Haves" (Howes?), an Englishman from one of the neighboring islands, took charge of the work, being aided by a force of negroes from St. Thomas. THE COMPANY UNDER THE NEW CHARTER 217 construction. In 1736 it represented an investment, according to the Company's books, of 2,700 rdl. It was the St. Thomas fort, however, in which the governor and council took especial pride. The increasingly strained relations between the English and the Spaniards, neither of whom looked with favor on Den- mark's purchase of St. Croix, made stronger fortifications at St. Thomas seem imperative. "The fort is now ready, God be praised," was the joyful announcement sent on to the directors in March, 1735, "and in such condition that the English them- selves who come here must confess that there is not a fort like it in all the upper islands. ^^ It can now be defended by a small force of 30 to 40 men." Christianswsern on St. Croix, located near the Basin on the north side of the island, was not finished until about 1740. It was a fairly pretentious structure, 200 feet square.^^ The plantations as surveyed were usually three thousand feet long by two thousand feet wide. To prevent a depression in the real estate market, stockholders were forbidden to sell the ground allotted to them at less than 1,000 rdl. for a sugar plantation, and half that sum for a cotton plantation.^^ But the terms of sale seemed too high for many of the intending settlers. In March, 1736, the government reported that in conformity with the demands of the intending English settlers, it had reduced the price of sugar plantations from 1,000 to 500-600 rc?^., one-sixth to be paid each year, with interest at six per cent, on the unpaid balance. The cost of cotton plantations was similarly reduced, the price being fixed at 20 to 40 rdl. for each million square feet, according to the suitability of the soil. Such slaves as were brought in by new planters were to be admitted free of duty. The years of exemption were reduced from seven to three for settlers who cared to take advantage of these terms. ^^ The directors, moved by the plaints of their representatives 2^ Ober-Eilande appears to have referred to the Leeward Islands. 22 Moth, etc., to Directors (September 1, 1737). Martfeldt MSS., Vol. VI. 2' Udtog af den ordre og Anstalt . . . (November 16, 1734), paragraphs 12 and 13, Martfeldt MSS., Vol. III. 24 Kop. iSc Extr.. S. P. for St. Th., 1735-52 (March 26, 1736). Of the two hu ndred and fifteen plantations allotted to shareholders, eighty-seven had been assigned when the above resolutions were made. 218 THE DANISH WEST INDIES in St. Thomas, who bewailed the decreasing ratio of whites, provided for a poll tax of one rixdollar for each full-grown slave, omitting the former tax on the white inhabitants. The attempt to secure a land tax of 40 rdl. for each plantation of 6,000,000 square feet was given up, and the authorities contented them- selves with 12 rdL^'^ After its relinquishment of the slave-trade, the Company hoped to augment its revenues by means of its plantations, especially those that were being begun on St. Croix. During the nine years from 1726 to 1734, inclusive, the Company's Sugar Plantation on St. Thomas had yielded a measurable profit for only five seasons, so that the average annual gain was just 1,335 rdl. During the same period, the New Quarter Plantation went through four profitless seasons, in three of which it incurred an actual loss; yet its average gain was 1,011 rdl.^^ This profit was the estimated net result of an investment which was set down in the census for 1735 at a total of 14,121 rdl. for the former plantation and 14,530 rdl. for the latter.^^ The showing was admittedly meager, in view of the nearly two hundred negroes in the Company's possession on St. Thomas, but these negroes were used for a variety of purposes besides planting. Thirty or forty were usually at work on the repara- tion of the fort; half a score made up the warehouse force, which was doubled when the ships came in; ten more were required by each of the Company's ships when it lay in the harbor ready for its cargo; there were six carpenters, eight masons, four smiths, a water carrier, a tambour, and a provost; a skilled sugar boiler attended to the juice as it came from the mill; a 25 Udtog af den Ordre og Anstalt . . . (November 16. 1734). Martfeldt MSS.. Vol. Ill; Land Listefor St. Croix, 1742. ^^ Negotie-Journaler for St. Thomas. 2' The 14,121 rdl. of the Sugar Plantation's capital was distributed as follows: slaves (25 men, 39 women, 46 children), 7,755 rdl.; beasts (2 horses, 4 mules, 2 asses, 11 cattle), 366 rdl.; the plantation, with boiling house, warehouse, and manager's dwelling, 6,000 rdl. See above, pp. 130-133, for 1690-1704. The New Quarter plantation, valued at 14,530 rdl. included slaves (41 men, 55 women, and 24 children), worth 9,305 rdl.; beasts (2 horses, 5 mules, 1 ass, 5 cattle); and plantation with outfit, 4,800 rdl. Negotie- Journal for St. Thomas, 1735. THE COMPANY UNDER THE NEW CHARTER 219 cooper made pipes and hogsheads from Carolina and New Eng- land hoops and staves; two trusted slaves ran the Company's bark; a few old domestic negresses who refused to do any planta- tion work added their numbers to the Company's quota; and a force of twenty or thirty negroes furnished wood both for fuel and for ballast in the Company's ships. ^^ It was clear enough that, after deducting for women, children and incapacitated slaves, the Company's plantations were not likely to command the labor required to bring a maximum return. Despite the fact that the income from the Sugar Plantation fell, during the years from 1735 to 1745, to less than half of what it had been during the preceding decade, the Company hung grimly to it through its entire corporate existence, al- though in the last six years (1749 to 1754, inclusive) the planta- tion showed an annual deficit.^ With the New Quarter planta- tion the Company was more fortunate, for during the last eleven years — that is, up to the date of its sale in 1746 — it yielded an average annual return of 1,136 rdl. It required no especial perspicacity to see that Company ownership and operation of plantations were not likely to fulfill the expectations of the shareholders. Since the slave trade had been left to private initiative on the reorganization of the Com- pany in 1734, it became increasingly clear that the directors would have to look to the control of the Danish-Norwegian mar- ket for its profits. The first essential step in the direction of monopoly was taken when the Company in 1737 acquired con- trol of the two competing refineries owned by the Pelt and Weyse families.^° But other forms of competition had to be met before appreci- able profits could be diverted into the Company's treasury. As early as 1735, the king had trebled the duties on refined sugars, candies, loaf sugar and sirups.^^ At about the same time : namely, *8 Gardelin, etc., to Directors (August 8, 1734), B. & D., 1732-3^. ^ The average net return from the Sugar Plantation during the years 1735- 1745, inclusive, was 489.9 rdl.; for the entire period of 1735-1754, it was only 189.5 rdl. '"' See above, pp. 206, 207. ^^ The duties were raised from 5 to 15 sTc. for each pound of sugar, and from 6 to 15 m. for each 100 pounds sirup. Mariager MS., p. 169. 220 THE DANISH WEST INDIES on April 25, 1735, the king published a mandate allowing Danish subjects the right freely to trade with the Danish possessions in Guinea and in the West Indies, and the privilege of taking the colonial produce to foreign ports and to all Danish-Norwe- gian ports except Copenhagen.^^ Although the king's magis- trates in Norway and in the Danish provinces had been particu- larly instructed to encourage trade in the sugar refined by the Company, they found it impossible to prevent the smuggling of foreign refined sugars, especially in Norway, where the fiords invited illicit trade. The Norwegian magistrates advised the abolition of the sugar duties,^^ which were actually reduced to their former level. The Company, which seemed quite able to meet the domestic demand, found its Norwegian consign- ments of sugar perceptibly rising,^^ The royal mandate of 1735 had not had the desired effect in stimulating trade; so in a mandate issued on June 18, 1743,^^ private traders were allowed to sell their West Indian cargoes in Copenhagen as well as elsewhere. With those taking up this trade or signifying their intention of doing so, the Company entered into an arrangement on December 3, 1745, with the idea of preventing needless competition. The outsiders were to be allowed to send various East Indian and Chinese wares, and linens, as well as provisions and some "heavy goods"; and these might be sent from Amsterdam and other places besides Copenhagen.^® But trade was by no means free, even to Danish subjects, who were to pay the usual five per cent, duty on incoming, and six per cent, on outgoing cargoes. They were allowed to com- plete a cargo in a foreign island, to be sure, but if they brought it into the harbor of a Danish colony, they would still be required to pay the six per cent, export duty. On goods sold by the Company in the West Indies for the private adventurers, a 32 Manager MS., p. 168. The owners of ships taking part in this trade were to pay 2 rdl. for each ton (Laesf), apparently whenever they received the passes and privileges necessary for each voyage. ^^ Their communications were dated April 25, 1740, and June 28, 1741. '^ Manager MS., pp. 172 et seq. '' Ifnd., MS., p. 191. 3« Ibid,, MS., pp. 175 et seq. THE COMPANY UNDER THE NEW CHARTER 221 commission of eight per cent, was charged, of which four went to the Company, and four to the West Indian officials.^^ Traders who thus disposed of their cargoes were required to secure their return cargoes from the Company's West Indian warehouse; only if that was impossible were they allowed to supply their wants in the open market. Slaves brought from the Guinea coast by non-Company skippers were to be sold at auction without delay, and return cargoes to be secured in the mode above-mentioned. The ships of the Company and of private traders were to have prefer- ence over those of foreigners in the getting of cargoes.^^ Not yet satisfied with their terms, some of the merchants, on April 4, 1746, proposed further modifications; they asked among other things for complete exclusion of foreigners from the trade. The aggressiveness of the private adventurers finally prompted the directors to propose a plan of cooperation which would virtually bring the energetic traders into the Company. The king, or at any rate that Board of Trade and Agriculture^^ which acted for him, had lent so sympathetic a hearing to the demands of the merchants that the directors, in a communica- tion dated October 3, 1746, actually suggested that the king follow the example of the monarchs of France and England, and take over the colonies himself. It was curious enough that the first proposal for the discontinuance of the Company should come from its own directorate. The alternative suggestion made by the directors in the same communication was the one actually followed. The "Plan and Convention of Union," which provided for pooling the interests of shareholders in the Company with those of private traders, was published February 6, 1747. So far as Denmark was concerned, the plan succeeded brilliantly. In the general assembly of the Company, held on March 4, the ^' Manager MS., p. 178. The governor and bookkeeper were each to receive one, and the merchant or factor, two per cent. ^* Manager MS., pp. 180 et seq. ^* General-Landets-Okonomi-og-Kommercekollegiet (1735-1768) continued the commercial functions of the Board of Police and Trade {Politi-og-Kommerce- kollegiet, 1708-1731) and commanded the services of some of the most dis- tinguished men of the state. 222 THE DANISH WEST INDIES directors were able to announce that the number of shares in the Company's "circulating fund," as the new capital stock was called, had been increased from three hundred and sixty- eight to one thousand, and those in the sugar refinery from one hundred and seventeen to two hundred and fifty, — all within the space of a few days. On March 27 an edict was published abrogating all private trade with the colonies and on April 12, 1747, the old and new shareholders of the Company met to set the new scheme in operation. This reorganization had increased the resources of the Company by 316,000 rdl., and those of the refinery by 66,500 rdl., or more than one hundred fifty per cent.^'' Results so highly pleasing to the stockholders of the corpora- tion were likely to be viewed in a different light by colonists who felt that this was simply another scheme to promote the interests of the Company at their expense. The center of co- lonial opposition was naturally to be found in the recently acquired and nearly virgin island of St. Croix, where plantation industry had made rapid progress and where in 1741 were to be found about three hundred Englishmen *^ who were none too amenable to Danish law or Company regulations. A brief survey of the rise of the planting industry on St. Croix will reveal those evidences of economic strength that made the enlargement of the Company's capital appear feasible in 1746- 1747. The first census on St. Croix was taken in 1742, on the expiration of the seven year exemption period. In that year two hundred sixty-four plantations were recorded on the books with the names of the owners, and at least two hundred forty of these were surveyed. Although the normal size of a planta- tion on St. Croix was two thousand feet in width and three thou- sand feet in length, making 6,000,000 square feet, the average size of St. Croix plantations in 1742 was slightly less than 5,000,000 square feet.'*- Only one hundred twenty of the entire number were listed as "sugar plantations," while one hundred «« Comp. Prot., 1741-54 (April 12, 1747). ^^ H. J. O. Stoud, letter to C. A. von Plessen, January 11, 1741 (Kirkchist. SamL, 4 R. 2 B., p. 56). ••^ The average area was 4,913,100 square feet. \ THE COMPANY UNDER THE NEW CHARTER 223 twenty- two were set down as "cotton plantations." Over one thousand nine hundred slaves,^^ large and small, were credited to the island. What the nature of Danish West Indian society was during these years of struggle between England and Spain for domina- tion in the Caribbean Sea, is disclosed but meagerly in the Company's records. This paucity of information is in part atoned for by two letters: one written in 1738 by Soren Som- mer, who appears to have been sent out from Denmark to serve as a manager on one of von Plessen's plantations; the other by a Lutheran minister, H. J. O, Stoud, who came to the islands late in 1740. Sommer was a man of mediocre attainments, but apparently an honest observer. In a letter ** written at St. Thomas shortly after his arrival he comments upon the high prices of cattle, poultry, provisions, and especially of linens.''^ The prices on St. Croix are higher than on St. Thomas, he explains, because goods must all come nid St. Thomas. He finds decent people rather scarce, and seems surprised that "white women are not expected to do anything here except drink tea and coflPee, eat, make calls, play cards, and at times sew a little." Nearly all the women would consider it quite beneath their dignity to go into the kitchen even to supervise it. The men are as leisurely as the women, but take their comfort in the bil- liard houses, and, he might have added, in the taverns, in which enormous quantities of intoxicants were consumed, and which the governors found to be constant sources of disorder. ^^ One thousand, five hundred fifty-nine " capable " slaves, thirty-one defect- ives or " manquerons," and three hundred sixteen children. ^ Soren Sommer's letter to parents, d. St. Thomas, April 29, 1738. Ny. Kgl. Saml. 764. ^^ Among the prices quoted by Sommer are the following: a bull, 60 to 70 rdl,; a cow, 30 rdl.; a sheep or goat, 4 rdl.; a goose, 1 rdl.; a turkey gobbler, 1 rdl., 3 m.; flour per bbl., 6-8 rdl.; salt meat, 9-12; beer, 8-10; Bourdeaux red wine, per hhd., 30 rdl.; Provengal wine, 20 rdl.; Madeira wine, per pipe, 60-100 rdl.; 3 marks was the charge for a very ordinary meal, while 1 rdl. was the usual charge per day. Linen selling in Denmark at 3 m. could bring 1-2 sldl. in St. Thomas. It must be remembered that prices were affected by England's being at war with Spain at this time. 224 THE DANISH WEST INDIES Few if any of the Lutheran ministers who took up the arduous duties of caring for the spiritual needs of this motley and tur- bulent population left a deeper impression upon the communi- ties which they served than Hans Jacob Ottesen Stoud.^^ During his nine years of service (1740-1749) he managed to buy three cotton plantations/'^ with which he was able to augment a very slender salary .^^ What was equally out of the ordinary for a minister was his election to a place on the privy council (of St. Croix?) where he was particularly concerned with matters appertaining to religion and education. Stoud's interest in his surroundings began with his arrival. In a letter to Charles Adolph von Plessen early in 1741, he ex- presses himself with great freedom on local conditions, especially in St. Croix. He divided his time between his congregations on St. Croix and St. Thomas, spending four weeks alternately at each place.^^ He pays his compliments to the population, which, he finds, has little respect for the laws of God or man. Concerning the three hundred or so of Englishmen on St. Croix, he says that "they must rather be looked upon as traitors and rebels than subjects and inhabitants of this country; for they have during my stay caused such tumult by threatening to leave the land in order to fight for their king against the Span- iards,^° that we should not have dared to remain here without securing help from St. Thomas. They dare, indeed, to threaten the lives of us Danes if they cannot get what they want, for they know that we are but a handful, sixty persons in all, as compared to their great power. ..." Like Sommer, he notes the high prices of provisions, and sug- gests encouraging Norwegian ships to sail to the Danish islands, ^^ For a brief sketch of his life, see H. F. Rordam, " Kirkelige Forholde paa St. Croix 1741 " (Kirkehist. Sand-., 4 R. 2 B., pp. 67 ct seq.). ^' They contained 6, 3, and 2J<£ million sq. ft., respectively. In the census for 1743, he is taxed for 13 working slaves, and is credited with three who are under age. '^ His salary at first was 220 rdl. Rordam, " Kirkelige Forholde," p. 61. '"' During his stay at St. Thomas, he usually gave one Sunday of each month to St. John. «» The "War of Jenkins' Ear" began in 1739. THE COMPANY UNDER THE NEW CHARTER 225 for they could bring lumber as well as provisions.^^ He finds sick people sleeping in the same room with well people, and dying from want of proper food. "You high lords!" he exclaims in indignation, "I heard much whining and complaining while at home because of the small profit which this land yields, but may God have mercy upon you and save this country and us all from curse and disaster because of the many souls who have so innocently lost their lives in such a fashion." ^^ As a result of Stoud's vigorous representations of local needs, ground for a hospital was actually bought on St. Thomas in 1743. The present hospital on that island, which stands on the site then selected, thus owes its origin to Stoud's energetic measures. In his busy life and despite the lack of text-books, Stoud even found time to instruct a half hundred blacks in the art of reading and in the rudiments of religion. The Moravians had indeed begun their self-sacrificing labors nearly a decade before, but this appears to have been the first instance where a Danish Lutheran minister has done missionary work among the negroes on a measurable scale. Systematic missionary work with the blacks was not begun until the close of the Company's career. While Stoud was no doubt largely right in looking on St. Croix in these early years as "very poor," especially from the viewpoint of the men who had to work on a meager wage, people with capital could, if they were enterprising and if fortune smiled on them, rise very rapidly. During the interval from 1742 to 1745 the number of plantations on St. Croix re- mained practically stationary, for little idle land was left, but the number of slaves increased from nineteen hundred and six to twenty-eight hundred and seventy-eight, a gain of fifty- one per cent, in three years. The outbreak of war between ^^ "In these times candles cost 2 marks the pound; butter, 24 sk.; 1 hen, 24 sk., at least; 1 pot of beer, 24 sk., 1 pot of wine, 2 to 3 m.; 1 bbl. salt meat, 10 rdl. and poor at that; 1 lamb, 2 to 3 rdl.; an egg, 2 sk.; a cow, 40 to 50 rdl.; a horse 100 to 150 rdl. I am not mentioning furniture and clothes and other things equally necessary which are all fearfully expensive, in fact are not procurable most of the time." " Kirkehist. SamL, 4 R. 2 B., p. 58. 226 THE DANISH WEST INDIES France and England had led Governor Schweder and his council to remit the duties on slaves imported into St. Croix, and thus encourage planters to move thither from the dis- turbed area.^^ For St. Thomas, on the other hand, the en- tire period from about 1725 up to the Company's reorgani- zation in 1747 was one of decline, if the slave population be a reliable index. Among the early settlers of St. Croix was a Dutchman from St. Eustatius by the name of Peter Heiliger.^* The possessions of this man and those of others of the same name, as recorded in the census lists, may be taken fairly to represent the condition of the prosperous planter during the last decade and a half of the Company's hfe. In 1742 four members of the Heiliger tribe held five cotton and four sugar plantations totalling fifty milhon square feet in area, and commanding the labors of ninety-five slaves. Three years later the family plantations had increased by nearly sixteen million square feet, and the family store of slaves by forty-four. ^^ Peter Heiliger had boasted to the gov- ernor that he did not expect to retire from planting until he and his brothers had amassed four hundred slaves. ^^ Although this increase suggests a fairly healthy state of affairs among an arbitrarily selected group of planters, it was scarcely as large as the rate of increase for the entire island. The prices of sugar and cotton were naturally facts of the most vital concern to the life of the West Indian planter, to whom it must often have appeared that the chief business of the Com- pany was to see how far below the current West Indian price it could force the planter to sell his goods. During the depression following the Peace of Utrecht the price of sugar at St. Thomas had gradually declined from 5 rdl. per hundred pounds until finally it reached its lowest point in 1739, when it brought but " Secret-Raadets Breve . . . 1739-^7 (Martfeldt MSS., Vol. VI). ^* Or Heyliger. He had been governor of St. Eustatius, and had apparently moved to St. Thomas with his slaves on the outbreak of the war between France and England. See letter of Governor and Council to Directors, January 31, 1744 {Martfeldt MSS.. Vol. VI). ^^ Land Lister for St. Croix. These census lists are the sources for the statistical information in this chapter except where otherwise specified. " Martfeldt MSS., vol. VI, pp. 123 et seq. THE COMPANY UNDER THE NEW CHARTER 227 3 to 33/2 '"'dl. The cotton market was slightly better, for whereas cotton brought 13 to 14 sk. per pound in 1716, it commanded a price of 14 to 14}/^ sk. in 1739.^'' In 1741, not long after John Heiliger and his brother had come over from St. Eustatius, the price of sugar had risen to 4-43/^ rdl. per hundred pounds. To what extent, if any, this increase was due to the outbreak of a war in Europe which involved both England and France, it is difficult to say. The increased prices secured by planters for their sugar were no doubt a chief cause in bringing about the increase in the slave population already noted. Other influences were at work which tended to draw the attention of Danish statesmen to the necessity of providing a new set of navigation laws for West Indian trade, or, indeed, of entirely reorganizing the Company. By waging war against Spain over the matter of "Jenkins' Ear," England had lost her chance of carrying on legally that trade with Spain which had been secured to the South Sea Company by the Asiento of 1713. With the opening of the War of the Austrian Succession, when it appeared inevitable that England would be drawn into the war against France, Danish statesmen began to incline toward the latter state. By a treaty made in 1739, England had secured from Denmark the promise of six thousand Danish troops to be provided under certain contingencies, but when it appeared that these troops were desired rather to help England hold Hanover than to assist Maria Theresa of Austria in her struggle with Frederick II of Prussia, the Danish ministers,^^ who were anxious to keep out of the complications, decided to cultivate the friendship of his most Christian Majesty. On March 15, 1742, the very day following the expiration of the treaty with Eng- land, a treaty of friendship was concluded with France.^^ These events in Europe had their significance for the Danish ^' Udtog af Sekrete-Raads Protokoller, 1710-20; Udtog of . . . Breve til Direc- tionen, 1739-^7. Martfeldt MSS., Vol. VI. See also Appendix K. ^^ Berckentin and Schulin. ^^ E. Holm, Den dansk-norske Stats Stilling under Krigene i Europa 17^0-^2 {Kjobenhavn, 1891), p. 55. This treaty marks the beginning of a policy of friendship with France which continued for twenty-three years, and was sup- ported first by Schulin and later by J. H. E. Bemstorflf. Ibid., p. 60. 228 THE DANISH WEST INDIES West India and Guinea Company and its islands. The mandate of June I85 1743, gave to private traders an opportunity to carry on with the Spanish islands an illicit trade which would be quite beneath the Company's dignity to enjoy. On July 25, 1742, there went out from San Ildefonso a royal order signed by the Spanish king's minister, Campillo, requesting that the Porto Rico government should cease disturbing the Danes in their possession of St. Croix and St. Thomas, and should permit them to buy — ^for cash — such Porto Rico wares as they might desire.^** But the matter of the restitution of the slaves escaped to Porto Rico from St. Thomas was not clearly provided for and it re- mained the chief stumbling block in the relations between the Danes and the Spaniards .^^ A similar order was issued on May 12, 1745, with equally meager results. When in 1746 a canoe containing eight slaves belonging to Governor Colomo's ^^ secretary, Manuel de Pando, landed on the west end of St. Thomas, the Danish authorities acted with alacrity to prevent the slaves from returning. Could the tide of fugitive slaves have been induced to turn towards St. Thomas rather than from it, Spain might have made a more serious effort to effect a settle- ment through diplomacy .^^ But the Spanish authorities prob- ably knew that the Danes gained more from forbidden trade than they lost from escaped negroes. In concluding the treaty with Louis XV in 1742, Christian VI had had his eye on conditions in northern Europe rather than on those in the distant tropics. Governor Schweder and his council, in one of their first letters to the directors^* after the s" Vest. Dir. K. B., 1733-54. This communication, which is of course only a copy, and is uncertified, was addressed to Matthias Abadia, then governor of Porto Rico. " Manager MS., p. 198. ^' Juan Joseph Colomo succeeded Abadia as governor about 1745. ^^ The accumulated claims of the Company against "the Spanish Nation in America" were estimated in 1745 at 335,911 rdl,. This included 104,443 rdl. for two ships lost in Honduras Bay in 1710; 81,467 rdl. for negroes stolen in 1702; 150,000 rdl. for three hundred negroes escaped from St. Thomas and St. Croix, not to mention inliabitants' ships that had been seized and confiscated. Vest. Dir. K. B., 1733-54 (May 11, 1745). 8^ Udtog af . . . Breve til Directionen, 1739-47 (July 3, 1744). Martfeldt MSS., Vol. VI. THE COMPANY UNDER THE NEW CHARTER 229 resignation of Governor Frederick Moth, called attention to the absence of any Danish-English treaties among the documents recently received from home, for "these are the ones of which we can make the best use, inasmuch as it is the English alone who have molested us of late. . . ." Later in the same year (1744) an Enghsh privateer, one "Dromgool," entered St. Thomas harbor one night and seized and made off with a French sloop or small bark.^^ A Spaniard ^® who had secured Danish passports and had become a naturalized Danish citizen, was seized by an English privateer and brought to Antigua, although the Danish authorities at St. Thomas insisted that he was carrying non-contraband goods. The Antigua admiralty court actually made plans for sending a commission to St. Thomas in order to investigate the Spaniard's status. Against such an infringement of its sovereignty the St. Thomas government naturally protested .^^ These examples will serve to illustrate the unstable conditions again obtaining in the West Indies as the result of a European war. If the Company wished to be in a position to share some of those advantages which enterprising skippers had shown themselves able to secure, it clearly needed to augment and revitalize its resources.®^ Von Plessen, who had assumed the presidency of the Com- pany in 1735, remained in its service until 1749, and in March, 1750, his place was taken by Adam Gottlob Moltke. During these years von Plessen had upheld the interests of the Com- pany against many kinds of opposition, from that of the enter- prising ship-owner Bjorn to that advanced by as experienced a skipper as J. N. Hoist, who in a communication to the king not only delivered a scathing arraignment of the Company's admin- istration but volunteered his opinions on matters of justice and religion as well as commerce and colonial administration.^^ «5 Martfeldt MSS., Vol. VI, September 25, 1744. ^ "Don Francisco Hinestroca Martinez." See ibid. (April 28, 1745). " Udtog af . . . Breve til Directionen, 1739-47 (April 28, 1745). ^^ One of the constant diflSculties was with soldiers and marines, who were likely either to fall victims to the fever or to desert to a foreign ship for the sake of the higher wages offered. See ibid. (July 3, 1744). Martfeldt MSS., Vol. VI. ®' " It is a well-known fact that all monopolies are injurious to a country in 230 THE DANISH WEST INDIES Administrative difficulties in the islands added to the cares of the directors. Christian Schweder, a lieutenant of artillery in Copenhagen, was selected in 1743 to take the place of Moth, whose stewardship was not giving satisfaction 7° Besides these disorders within, the Company had suffered serious losses in ships. During twelve years (1735-1746, inclusive) five of its ships, two of them with full West Indian cargoes and their entire crews, were completely lostJ^ With the adoption of the plan of union between the Company and its active commercial rivals, the opposition in Denmark was for the time being silenced. The position of distinguished leaders like von Plessen was strengthened by the fact that sev- eral of them had become actively engaged in the planting busi- ness on St. Croix; they had retained and developed plantations secured as a bonus with each share of a specified size. So the situation was not so very different from that in the English sugar colonies where it was said in 1760 that "Many Gentlemen of the West Indies have seats in the British House of Com- mons." "^^ The Danish West India planters did not lack ad- vocates in Danish government circles,'^^ although they were certainly not "represented" there in any modern sense. The royal edict clinching the reorganized Company's monop- oly of the trade with the West Indies was issued in March, 1747, and the news reached the West Indies during the summer. When the inhabitants learned that the king had forbidden that the highest degree, likewise all monopolistic companies except the Asiatic com- panies. ..." On what basis Hoist arrived at this interesting conclusion is not clear; apparently he was expressing a generally accepted current opinion. Thottske Sand., No. 515 (September 11, 1746). Roy. Libr. For Bjom, see E. Holm, Danmark og Norges Historie, III B., p. 236. '° Comp. Prot., 1741-54 (April 8, 1744). Schweder's health broke down before he had been in office many months, and he was succeeded by Christian Suhm. '^ Manager MS., pp. 205 et seq. For earlier losses, see above, p. 152. '2 Remarks on the Letter Addressed to Tioo Great Men (London, 1760), quoted in Beer, British Colonial Policy, 175^-65, p. 136. "^ Among the Danish owners of St. Croix plantations in 1745 were the king (four cultivated plantations), C. A. von Plessen (six plantations), and "Com- mandeur" Captain Lovenorn (six). The other original grantees had apparently Hold their West Indian holdings. THE COMPANY UNDER THE NEW CHARTER 231 trade by private ship-owners which had been permitted by the edict of April 25, 1735 and subsequent mandates, they became well-nigh desperate. A third of a century had passed since the last delegation had been sent by Danish West Indian planters to present their case before the high and mighty lords of trade in Copenhagen. The projected restriction of their freedom to trade and to dispose of their produce seemed to strike at the very roots of their hard-earned prosperity. Schweder's successor. Governor Christian Suhm, and his council were alarmed at the opposition raised by the king's edict, and expressed their fears for the ruin of the islands and the Company's trade.^^ All sorts of threats of reprisals against the Company were in the air, — flight, boycott, hoarding of the sugar on hand and in prospect, to prevent the Company's ships from securing cargoes, — "for they insist absolutely on being masters over their own property," wrote Suhm, "and on enjoy- ing the same sort of liberties as the French and English subjects have. . . ." The report that the Danish planters were known in neighboring islands as "the Company's negroes" would, they feared, frighten off planters who might desire to move to the Danish islands.''^ The thing most feared by the planters as a result of the new navigation laws was that the ships from New York and New England would cease entirely to come to the Danish islands. Not only did the vessels from New York, Providence and Boston bring provisions (flour, dried codfish, etc.), but such plantation requisites as hoops, barrel staves and bottoms, planks, shingles, "Suhm and council to Directors (February 3, 1748). Martfeldt MSS., Vol. VI, pp. 76 et seq. '^ To the Company's complaint that the price of cotton and sugar had been set at too high a figure. Governor Suhm replied that formerly, when sugar brought only 4j^ rdl. per 100 lbs. and brought a net revenue of only 2J^ rdl. per 100 lbs. in Holland, the planters were able to secure a good slave for 100-150 rdl., while now they must pay 200-300 rdl. at auction. During the same period, the cost of mules had risen from 30-50 to 80-100 rdl. or more; a good horse from 30-50 to 200-300 rdl; staves, from 12-16 to 35-50 rdl. per 1,000; English hhd. hoops, from 14-18 to 40-60 rdl. per 1,000; planks, from 16-20 to 35-40 per 1,000 feet; shingles, from 3 rdl. to 6-7 rdl. and from 18-20 to 30 rdl., accord- ing to size. All of these " are things belonging to a plantation." Martfeldt MSS., Vol. VI, pp. 76 et seq. 2S^ THE DANISH^WEST INDIES and horses,^^ for many of the mills which crushed out the cane- juice were run by horse or mule power. These North American skippers naturally insisted on being allowed to secure sugar and molasses cargoes in return for their lumber and provisions, and were prepared to pay good prices for them. The prospect of having so important a competitor legislated out of the West Indian field alarmed the planters deeply. The chief instrument by which the planters made known their grievances was the burgher counciH^ which usually con- sisted of four to seven members who met with the governor and privy council to consider matters of general interest. They kept a copy of the records of these joint meetings, and not infre- quently did they meet by themselves to consider ways and means. The directors, who had scarcely realized what a disturbance their distant colonists could raise, made haste to stem the tide of disaffection. The planters promptly sent two of the leading members of the burgher council to Copenhagen. One of them was a planter of unusual shrewdness named John William Schopen.'^^ The directors responded to the planters' grievances with reasonable promptness. They made some concessions on July 24, 1748, but these proved inadequate, so on August 27, 1749, they met once more in their general assembly to consider some mode of solution. They insisted on the Company's prior right to buy the products of the islands at such price as the local market and that of the French and English islands justified. This price was to be fixed at least once a year, or as often as the Company's ships came for cargoes, by "the Government" and the burgher council, meeting jointly .^^ Although the burgher '"^Kop. & Extr.. S. P. far St. Th.. 1735-52 (November 12, 1748). " See above, p. 185. In 1748 the following planters held seats in the burgher council: P. J. Pannet, A. Lerke, Jean Malleville, H. Specht, Pieter de Windt, Johannes von Bewerhoudt Glaudison, and Johannes de Windt. Cf. Kop. & Extr., S. P. for St. Th., 1735-5S (November 12, 1748). The records of their proceedings, being non-official, are not to be found among the Company's ar- chives in Copenhagen, at any rate not at the State Archives. '^ Mariager MS., p. 196; Host, Efterretninger om Oen Sand Thomas, p. 139. ''^Comp. Prat., 1741-5^, " General-Forsamling'' of August 27, 1749. Cf. Mariager MS., p. 196. THE COMPANY UNDER THE NEW CHARTER 233 council was usually the larger body, and the majority vote was to decide the market price, a sufficient number of the burgher council members usually withdrew in order to make the number in each council even when they convened to fix the prices. As a further concession the Company permitted the purchase of "provisions and other things necessary for plantation cul- tivation from New York and other places in New England" for plantation products, but specified that all other trade with foreign lands must be carried on through Copenhagen alone. To this the privy and burgher councils meeting in joint session objected that the desired quality of certain necessaries, such as Irish beef, butter, candles, sugar kettles for the plantations, sugar-mill repairs, hoes, sugar-hatchets, and axes, could be secured at a reasonable price in England alone. Since 1743, a number of planters had taken advantage of the trading privileges then granted by the crown. But their ship- ping had been so seriously hampered by the Convention Plan of 1747, that the Company attempted in 1749 to conciliate these disaffected interests. The Danish colonists were to be allowed to import such products as cacao, coffee, tobacco, indigo and other dyes, hides and skins, Campeachy and similar valuable woods, free of duty, and on exporting them were to pay but half of the usual "outgoing recognition," — namely, three per cent, on St. Thomas, and two and one-half per cent, on St. Croix.^" But they must export such goods in their own ships and take them to Copenhagen, whence they might be exported to foreign ports. These restrictions did not please the planters, who wished to be able to ship their purchases from outside — to say nothing of their own produce — in any craft lying in the harbor with which agreement as to freight rates could be made; they hoped espe- cially to establish trade with "the Spanish places" in America. The Company's attempt to limit the privileges to those colonists who had resided on the islands for three years, also met with a vigorous protest from the burgher council, which insisted that such a measure would deter intending settlers from coming, *" Goods actually consumed on the islands were to be subject to an import duty of five per cent. 234 THE DANISH WEST INDIES and drive off a number who were already there. They likewise insisted that they should not be limited in their purchase of ships to those made in Danish-Norwegian lands; there were too numerous opportunities in the West Indies for bargains in ships of many sorts for such a rule to appear just.^^ The arrangement whereby the burgher council was permitted to share with the privy council in the fixing of prices on planta- tion produce certainly did not make any less apparent the evi- dences of friction between those governing and those governed. It proved rather an entering wedge which brought in its train so much of trouble for the Company as to be one of the chief causes for its dissolution. In the burgher council the planters had a legally sanctioned instrument which became more effective by use and by which they were able to bring to the Company's attention all manner of alleged abuses and grievances. During the years following the peace of Aix-la-Chapelle (1748) the prices for sugar in Europe tended to decline. The demand in New York and New England, on the other hand, remained so persistent that with a fairly free market the prices in the West Indies continued at about the same level as at the close of the war. The dependence of the Danish colonies upon the New York traders in lumber and provisions made the West Indian government's position peculiarly trying. Nor had those West Indian planters who had shown so active an interest in buying ships and developing a trade of their own, made any appreciable effort at exploiting the Guinea slave trade. In the hope of making up for the low European prices and ostensibly of inducing a revival of the slave trade under the Danish flag, the Danish West Indian government attempted to enforce two new ordinances: the first raising the import tax on slaves imported to the islands in foreign vessels, or bought by the inhabitants in other islands; the second increasing the export tax on sugars sold to New York skippers in exchange ^^ The views of the two colonial councils on the resolutions of 1749 are to be found in Koj). & Extr., S. P. for St. Th., 1735-53 (February 17, 1750). The directors were willing to permit the inhabitants to purchase American vessels only during war time. Comp. ProL, 1741-5^ (February 24, 1751). THE COMPANY UNDER THE NEW CHARTER 235 for their lumber and provisions.^^ The planters saw clearly that the foreign merchants would shift the burden by the simple expedient of raising the prices on their wares. The directors heeded the protest of the burgher council and promptly dis- avowed the actions of their West Indian representatives,^^ The trouble that the Company had experienced with smug- gling during the recent war did not cease with its close. With the establishment of the town of Fredericksted on the west end of St. Croix came the necessity of providing proper means for the collection of customs duties. It was soon found that a customs house was not sufficient, but that cannon must be pro- vided, and so placed as to command the roads where the ships lay anchored. In lack of such a "water battery," ships were accustomed to slip away in the night-time without securing papers or paying their dues,^* The bribing of Danish officials seems not to have been an impossible feat.^^ The increasing ability of the planters to make the Company hear and heed their grievances must not be taken as a sign of economic distress for either party. By 1754 the number of negroes recorded in the census lists had grown to seven thou- sand five hundred and sixty-six, an increase of one hundred and sixty -two per cent, over the figures for 1745. In the town of Christiansted were eighty -three white inhabitants, each of whom owned from a single slave to sixty-six of them. Of in- dividual holdings those of the Heiliger family may be taken as a fair index. From one hundred and thirty-nine slaves in 1745, they increased to five hundred and seventy-eight in 1751, fell to four hundred and thirty in the year following, and 82 Extr. Udskr. af S. P. for St. C, 17U-52 (January 12, 1751). The tax on exported sugar was raised from five to seven and one-half per cent., that on slaves at 4 rdl. for each one imported, and a " premium " of four per cent, on such slaves as were sold at public auction. 8^ The local government had tried to permit the Company's debtors to sell at a higher price than the other planters, but this position they were unable to maintain. ^* General-Forsamlingen (February 24, 1751). Comp. Prot., 1711-5^. 8^ There was considerable stir over customs frauds in 1743-1744. The table of customs dues {Appendixes M and N) gives an idea of the vicissitudes of this branch of the Company's income. 236 THE DANISH WEST INDIES reached the respectable total of six hundred and seventy in 1753.^^ Considered as a whole, these figures do not betoken anything more serious than a fairly rapid growth. The ability of the planters to incur debts increased so rapidly during this period that one is forced to conclude that something approaching a boom must have been on. In 1747 the Company was credited on its books with 136,000 rdl. owed to it by the planters. By 1753, the debts of the planters to the Company had risen to the considerable sum of 562,000 rdl., an increase of more than four hundred per cent, in six years. This state of affairs is only partly accounted for by the increase in the planter population, whose numbers rose from two hundred and seven in 1747 to three hundred and fifty-four in 1753, or at the rate of seventy-one per cent. The rapid growth of St. Croix finally brought about the sep- aration of its government from that of St. Thomas and St. John.^^ In 1751 the latter islands received a small measure of tardy justice when their poll and land taxes were lowered to the same level as those of St. Croix.^^ To trace the Company's business through the mazes of "Ital- ian" bookkeeping in records that are scattered through scores of books and over thousands of pages, and to achieve thereby dependable results, are things which the investigators may de- sire — and even feel he deserves — but scarcely a goal which he may attain. It is, however, worth noting that the "Princess," a St. Croix plantation owned by the Company, was recorded as being three times as valuable in 1753 as it was when the census of 1745 was taken. While the Company's income from poll ^^ In 1754, the last year of the Company, the Heiligers were credited with six hundred and forty slaves, a falling off of thirty. ^^ Host, p. 136. Jens Hansen, who was in immediate charge at St. Croix, refused to submit to the orders of Governor Christian Suhm, even when the latter was at St. Croix. The dispute was appealed to the directors with the splitting of jurisdiction as a result. Hansen remained as governor of St. Croix until relieved by Peter Clausen in 1751. ^8 Proponenda . . . (September 14, 1751), Comp. Prot., 1741-54. The taxes, which had amounted to 2j^ rdl. for each working slave, 8 rdl. for each slave imported, six per cent, on imports and exports, and 2 rdl. 8 sk. for each million square feet, were reduced to 1 rdl., 4 rdi., five per cent, and 2 rdl., respectively. THE COMPANY UNDER THE NEW CHARTER 237 and land taxes naturally kept even pace with the increase in the planting population,^^ its receipts from customs duties re- mained at less than twenty-six dollars for each planter up to 1747, when the receipts suddenly doubled. From that year to the end of the Company's existence, they remained at about forty-six dollars per capita.^'' The unprecedented enforcement of customs regulations which made possible so favorable a showing over so long a period was without doubt largely due to the zeal with which Peter Clausen, who assumed the duties of assistant factor and treasurer in 1748, performed the functions of his office.^^ After a little more than three years Clausen succeeded Jens Hansen as governor of St. Croix,®^ and he continued to fill this office with pomp and distinction long after the dissolution of the Company. Another evidence of the extent to which the Company at- tempted to revive and enlarge its business under the Plan of 1747 is to be found in the number of ships sent out by the Com- pany. Whereas previously to 1747 it rarely had more than three or four ships on the run to Guinea and the West Indies, in 1750-1751 it already had not fewer than thirteen ships in its possession, seven of them intended for the West Indian trade, and four for Guinea.®^ In order to protect the privileged refineries in Copenhagen, of which those of the Company were the chief, an edict was issued by the king on March 31, 1750, absolutely forbidding the importation of refined sugars and sirups into Danish domin- *^ In 1742, eighty-four planters paid 2,807 rdl. in taxes, and the Company took in 1,267 rdl. in duties; ten years later, there were three hundred and thirty-two planters, 8,801 rdl. taxes, and 13,358 rdl. of customs duties. ^° The figures for 1751 appear to have been omitted from the books. " Ekstr. & Udskr. af S. P. for St. Cr., 17U-52 (October 17, 1748). "2 ihii^ (December 22, 1751). ^^ Among these ships with their captains were the brigantine Postillion (Cap- tain Hans Rieman Thoersen): the frigates Vesuvius (Jacob Gronberg); Prin- cess Wilhelmina Carolina (Nicolaj Hoyer); Jmgershorg (Ole Erichsen); Neptune (Captain ?) ; Prince Christian (Captain Pheifif) ; The Crown Prince's Desire (Ole Reinholt); Christiansted (Captain Tofte); The Three Princesses (Ronne); Princess Sophia Magdalene (Jens Knie); Sorgenfrey (Peder Krogh Collin); Christian Frederick (Joh. Fred. Knutzen). Comp. Prot., 1741-54 (April 22, 1760; February 24, 1751). 238 THE DANISH WEST INDIES ions, and requiring the recognized refineries to have on hand a sufficient supply ready for disposal at a reasonable price.^* This measure, taken in the very month in which Adam Gottlob von Moltke assumed the presidency of the Company, was no doubt put forward by that statesman.^^ But the problem of distribution was difficult, especially in Norway, where the many fiords made it almost impossible to prevent smuggling. By contract with the Company, refineries were permitted in Bergen, Aggershus, Christiansand and Trond- hiem in Norway, and in Odense, Randers, Aalborg and Viborg in Denmark, all for periods of thirty years.^^ It appears that within each diocese or district a certain refinery had special privileges, although the Copenhagen refineries retained the right to enter into competition with them.^^ But the end of the Company's monopoly was clearly ap- proaching. The idea of the king's taking over the shares held by his subjects had indeed been broached in a general assembly of shareholders held in 1746.^^ The Plan of 1747 had merely de- layed the inevitable. In 1750, when the Company had eight ships on its various routes, the directors proposed to the stock- holders that the Company avail itself of freight ships, rather than attempt, for the time, to buy other vessels. An over- supply of unsold raw sugar was given as the reason for this proposal. Although they later added several new vessels to the Company's fleet, the loss of three ships in the years 1751- 1752 must have had a depressing effect.®^ ^^ Manager MS., pp. 199 et seq. '^ This is the view held by the Danish historian, Edvard Holm {Danmark og Norges Historic 172(hl8U, III B., p. 236). ^ Mariager MS., pp. 202 et seq. The incorporators whose names were given for the various cities were as follows, — Bergen: burgomaster Garboe; Aggershus and Christiansand: Carsten Tank; Trondhiem: councilor of state Hans Ulrich Moll- man; Odense: Johan Christopher von Westen; Randers: Soren Simonsen; and Aalborg and Viborg: Henrich Ladiges. Within a few years after the dissolution of the Company, not fewer than eighteen hcenses were granted permitting the establishment of refineries in Copenhagen. It was evidently a profitable busi- ness. Cf. E. Holm, Danmark og Narges Bistorie, 1720-18H, III B., p. 164. ^ E. Holm, ibid., p. 164. ^ Comp. Prof.., 17U-5Jf. ^ The ship Christian Frederick (Captain Johan Friderich Knud8en)was burned THE COMPANY UNDER THE NEW CHARTER 239 These losses were followed in 1753 by the news of the misfor- tune suffered by the Patientia, one of the Guinea ships. While sailing along the Guinea coast between El Mina and Cape Coast Castle with a cargo of two hundred and seventy-five slaves, three of the negroes started a mutiny and drove off the crew, after wounding the captain and killing three of the men. The captain and crew were taken aboard an English slaver, the Triton, at Annaboe. With the assistance of the English, they managed after some trouble and great expense to get back their ship and some remnants of their cargo. Captain Erichsen finally arrived at St. Thomas on February 28, 1754,^°° with one hundred and forty-six slaves. ^°^ Before the news of the above disaster had reached Copen- hagen, the St. Croix burgher council, through its capable repre- sentative, John Wilham Schopen, presented to Frederick V an urgent petition that the West Indian colonists on St. Croix be permitted to come under the immediate sovereignty of the king. Such an act would be considered by them as an "inesti- mable act of grace and benefaction," from which they would expect great and permanent results. ^°^ These various hindrances to the continued prosperity of the Company were all set forth by the directors and chief share- holders in their Proponenda of July 24, 1754. This docu- on the Norway coast on September 14, 1751, while homeward bound with a full cargo. The frigate Sorgenfrey (Captain Peder Krog Collin), which had come from Guinea and had been sent out from St. Thomas on September 2, 1751, was never heard of again. The frigate Princess Wilhelmine Caroline (Captain Nicolai Hoyer) while homeward bound from Guinea and St. Thomas was lost on the west coast of Jutland, November 5, 1752. Mariager MS., p. 206. 1"" He had taken on his cargo on September 30, 1753. 101 B. & D. indk. fra Guinea (September 15, 1753); B. & D., St. Th. (Febru- ary 28, 1754); Proponenda of July 24, 1754, Camp. Prat., 171fl-5k- The cargo, when it arrived at St. Thomas, included sixty-seven men, thirty women, thirty- eight boys and eleven girls. Among the other losses were 1,005 rdl. worth of gold, fourteen ivory tusks, and thirty-seven " Creveler. The total loss was estimated at about 20,000 rdl. 102 Proponenda of July 24, 1754, Comp. Prot., 17Ii.l-51f. This and Professor Holm's admirable account {Danmark og Norges Historie, 17S0-18H, III B., pp. 164 et seq.) form the basis of the following account of the dissolution of the Company. 240 THE DANISH WEST INDIES ment was intended to lay the state of the Company's aflfairs and their recommendation of ways and means to bring about its dissolution before the stockholders of the Company. Schopen's petition to the king had been referred to that Board of Trade ^°^ which a few years earlier had pronounced against the absorption of the Company by the king. But the personnel of the Board, as well as the character of the times, had changed. Early in 1752, J. H. E. Bernstorff had become a member, and he is credited by the historian Host, who was a contemporary of Bernstorff, with being the chief ministerial champion of the St. Croix colonists.^"* At any rate, the Board of Trade reported on May 9, 1754, in favor of the plan and suggested how it might be carried out. The debts due the Company in Guinea and the West Indies were estimated at 1,000,000 rdl.', its liabilities (not including the refinery) at 800,000 rdl. But the assets were likely to shrink to something like 600,000 rdl. before they actually could reach Denmark, for prices were high in the West Indies and low in Denmark. Under these circumstances, the directors and chief shareholders recommended, and the Company, in meeting assembled, accepted the offer of the king. So Frederick V took over at their par value the one thousand two hundred and fifty shares of the Danish West India and Guinea Company, which included its refinery stock, and pledged himself to assume its obligations. To cover the expenses of the purchase, the state issued notes to the extent of 2,239,446 rdl., of which 1,250,000 rdl. were set aside for the payment of the Company's shareholders. The Danish government had no intention of going into busi- ness in the Company's stead, but to the great joy of its West Indian colonists it threw open all of the trade formerly enjoyed by the Company to all its subjects, whether they lived in Den- mark, Norway, the duchies, or in the West Indies, This in- 1°' The General-Landets-dkonomi- og Kommercekollegiet was organized in 1735 and continued until 1768, when it was combined with the " Vestindisk-Guineiske Rente- samt Generaltoldkammer" to form the " Generaltoldkammer- og Kommerce- kollegium." 10* Host, Efterretninger, p. 139. THE COMPANY UNDER THE NEW CHARTER 241 eluded the right to take slaves from the Guinea coast and to ship Danish-Norwegian as well as East India Company wares freely to the West Indies. Goods produced in royal lands were not to be imported from other places, and goods loaded on Danish subjects' ships in the West Indies were to go to Den- mark alone. This was all in strict accord with the prevailing mercantilist theory, which insisted on the one hand, that the colonies must supply raw material to be manufactured or pre- pared for consumption in the mother country, and on the other the more recent idea, suggested by the growth of the colonies in wealth and population, that they must furnish a market for the surplus produce and manufactures of the home lands. How the new colonial policy of the Danish state was to work out upon the basis of this new commercial freedom cannot be re- lated here. The story of how that policy adjusted itseK to the rapidly changing conditions that resulted from those gigantic wars in which France lost her New World empire and England her mainland colonies, has not yet been completely told. The West India, like the East India Company had served not only as a field of commercial investment, but as a training ground for those statesmen upon whom an absolute monarch had to depend in the government of his dominions. The coun- cil board of the Company gave frequent opportunity for the display of those talents which were likely to prove of use in other and perhaps wider fields of endeavor. The Company had added two fertile islands to its original New World territory, and had managed to retain continuous control of them through numerous European wars in which the possession of additional West Indian colonies was more than once an important consideration for the larger, trade-hungry nations. With its gaze fixed upon material rather than human interests, the Company had too often pursued a selfish policy, but it had piloted its turbulent and heterogeneously composed colonies through a period of eighty-four years, and handed over to the king a domain the vigor of whose population had been attested time and again by their ability to protest effectively against alleged violations of their rights. SUPPLEMENTARY CHAPTER: 1755-1917 When King Frederick V assumed direct control of the islands in 1754, Europe was on the verge of a general war. This con- flict, in which Prussia and Austria were the principals on land, and England and the Bourbon powers of France and Spain were the chief contestants on sea, developed into a world-wide con- test for colonial and naval supremacy. The control of India, Canada, and the West Indies became the avowed object of the contending nations. During the struggle, — the Seven Years' War, — Denmark-Norway managed to maintain its neutrality and undisturbed possession of its islands in the West Indies. The enforcement of the Rule of 1756, proclaimed by Great Britain in the beginning of the war, worked severe hardships on Danish-Norwegian commerce, for France had thrown her colonial ports open to neutral shipping, a course that gave the neutrals an advantage in time of war that they had not enjoyed in time of peace. The Danish foreign minister J. H. E. Bern- storff became particularly bitter in his denunciation of England's course when English privateers began seizing Danish and Norwegian ships and cargoes from the West Indies on the pre- text that they contained French owned goods. The English, Bernstorff felt, were permitting undue liberties to privateers under cloak of fighting for the "freedom of Europe." By 1759, an agreement was reached by which a skipper was allowed to proceed on giving surety for that part of the cargo which was charged with being French and paying the costs incurred in the case. This vindication of neutral rights was secured in part through the efforts of an expert on international law. Dr. Martin HUbner, sent to London by Bernstorff to repre- sent Danish interests. As a further safeguard the government provided a convoy for vessels returning to Copenhagen from the West Indies. Among the most persistent matters demanding attention on the islands, was the collection of the huge debt owed by the [243] 244 THE DANISH WEST INDIES planters, a debt which the king had taken over from the Com- pany. This task was so zealously performed by the St. Croix factor, Peter Clausen, that the latter was made governor-general in 1766 on the strength of it. The influential English element of the planter population of St. Croix particularly resented the methods employed by Clausen and the government to hasten the liquidation of these debts. Unable to secure an outlet for their grievances in the St. Croix weekly newspaper which had begun to appear in 1770, they found that the local English colonial newspapers had no hesitancy in giving them space to voice their plaints. In a copy of the Caribbean and General Gazette, of February 5, 1774, published on one of the English islands, this appears: ^ "The following little piece, whose greatest merit is that it flows from the Heart, Spurning at dispotic Insolence of Power, was sent by a Correspondent in St. Croix to a Gentleman here. We publish it as a Tribute due to Natural liberty, and to shew our own Countrymen the Happiness they enjoy under the mild Dispensations of the British Laws. When Heaven, indulgent, bless'd this land With peace and plenty crown'd Like heavenly dew von Frock's ^ hand Dispensed his kindness round But base ingratitude soon took place In these pointed times Heaven sent a Scoiuge to all our race To expiate our Crimes In pity to our deplored State Heaven changed the mighty woe All seeing what was wrapt in Fate Must prove our overthrow But what repentance have We shewn To Heaven's indulgent care Tho' Storms and Hurricanes We have known When Roepstorff - governed here ^ MS. bound with The Royal Danish American Gazette (Feb. 5, 1774), Royal Library. ^ Note accompanying poem: ' These Gentlemen, when they governed St. Croix made the Happiness of the People, the rule of their conduct but — ' i DiElNSEL S'.., SAXCTTHOMAS i iiljrilt-u lUfllie.ltfU ; ^; . /3) ^'U^^^'' CP "■^■■iS""' ^V MAP OF ST. THOMAS (1767) (Oldendorp's Geschichte der Mission, Barby, 1777) //f DlKlXSKI. l)j AVINIIX'ROIXS MAP OF ST. CROIX 1767) (.Oldondorp'.s Gescluchic der Mission, Barl_i>-, 1777) [Facing pnpe 24S\ SUPPLEMENTARY CHAPTER: 1755-1917 245 O! be that Name forever dear While age to age shall roll When Storms and Plagues and Famines near Think on his generous Soul In Vain We weep in Vain We Sigh His Loss lament in vain No friendly aid no help is nigh Nought but despair and pain For now behold an impious hand ^ To curse our wretched race Has dealt destruction roimd the land And made the Stamps take place May heaven appeased reverse our fate While Horrors haunt his bed And Sleepless vengeance ever wait To blast his guilty head Amen. After Baron von Prock had turned the governor-generalship over to Clausen, he returned to Denmark. In the course of defending himself against the charge of too great leniency towards the planters, von Prock presented some interesting statistics. The yield of sugar on St. Croix, which amounted to 3,457 hhds. m 1753, fell to 1910 hhds. in 1754. When his term began, in 1755, there were 8,897 slaves; when it ended, in 1766, there were not less than 16,956 slaves; the number had nearly doubled in eleven years. The increase in sugar sent to Europe was even more remarkable. While the governors under the Company had brought the exports from St. Croix from nothing to three and one-half ship loads during the interval from 1733 to 1755, von Prock boasted that he had increased the number of annual cargoes to thirty-eight in 1766, an increase of eleven to one. During a single year of his term, forty-five ships had been sent to Europe from the colonies. Where there had been eight windmills for grinding sugar cane in 1754, there were * ' The present Governor has levied a Tax by Way of Stamp on the Inhabi- tants of that Island, which greatly distresses them, especially those who were born in the British dominions, who forget they live in an arbitrary Government.' ^46 THE DANISH WEST INDIES sixty-three such mills twelve years later/ Where the Com- pany's governors had tried in vain for half a century to come to an agreement with Porto Rico, he had by 1766 succeeded in establishing a "slave cartel" with the governor of the island. It was of course not the retiring governor's business to explain the part played by European conditions in bringing on this prosperous state of affairs. The memory of the St. John insurrection lingered long in the minds of men. Various preventive measures were attempted by the authorities. Negroes were not permitted to gather in groups beyond a certain number and after certain specified hours. Owners were required to keep white managers con- stantly on the plantations. The negro rebellion that threatened St. Croix in 1746 was put down by a free negro, Mingo Tamarin,^ who hunted down the troublesome runaways or Marons, brought them into submission and prevented an outbreak. The next serious trouble occurred under the royal regime in December, 1759, after a second interval of thirteen years. Although no overt act had been committed, the alleged conspirators were punished in exemplary fashion. Some of them "confessed," implicating themselves and others. Gibbet, stake, wheel, noose, glowing tong, — all were employed to impress upon the community the sinfulness of rebellion. Of the fourteen con- demned to lose their lives, one managed to escape by suicide, but his dead body was dragged up and down the streets, thereafter suspended by one leg from the gallows, and finally taken down and burnt at the stake. The remainder suffered from one and one-half minutes to ninety-one hours of torture. Ten others were condemned to be sold out of the island, fifty- eight were acquitted, and six were reported as being still at * The map reproduced on page 248 may have been submitted by von Prock as part of the evidence in his defence. It gives the number of windmills by "quarters" as follows: West End Quarter, 5; the Prince's Q., 12; King's Q., 14; Queen's Q.. 19; Company's Q., 12; North Side Q., "B," 1. ^ Mingo had first been made a "captain" of the free negro "corps" by Gov- ernor Bredal in 1721; he had in 1733 been placed by Governor Gardelin at the head of a band of 300 faithful slaves and free negroes to assist in hunting down the St. .John rebels and in holding the fort there against them. In 1758, he was again honored with the captaincy. Martfeldt MSS., III. SUPPLEMENTARY CHAPTER: 1755-1917 247 large — "free as birds." For each of those captured alive, the reward was 50 rdl., for each one killed, 25 rdl.^ The change in administration had evidently not affected the status of the negro. Yet within a third of a century the first important step to ameliorate the condition of the African race in America was taken in these selfsame islands. In all fairness it must be said that the treatment of the slave was probably no worse in the Danish than in the English, French and Dutch islands. Denmark was the first state to attempt by law to prohibit its subjects from taking part in the African slave trade. This took place in the edict issued by King Christian VII on March 16, 1792. The constitutional provision by which this traffic was prohibited to citizens of the United States did not become eflFective until sixteen years after the issuance of the Danish edict. Curiously enough, a humane owner of large plantations in St. Croix, Ernest Schimmelmann, himself a director in a slave trading enterprise in 1782, was chiefly responsible for putting through this reform inaugurated by the A. P. Bernstorff ministry. The planters who transferred their allegiance from the Com- pany and king to the king alone were a curiously cosmopolitan lot. On St. Thomas and St. John the most persistent element in the population in 1765, when Martfeldt visited the islands, was the Dutch, of which about four-fifths was of Zeeland and Holland origin. The Danes came next in point of numbers, with probably less than half the strength of the Dutch. The remaining less numerous nationalities, given about in the order of their strength, were the French, Germans, English (from the islands), and Irish. The names of two families, one of Holland and one of French extraction, were listed by Martfeldt as "scorched" to indicate mixture with the black population.^ ^ Species Facti over den paa Eilandet St. Croix i Aaret, 1759, intenderede Neeger Rebellion. Werlauff MSS., No. 22, Royal Library. ^ Martfeldt MSS., Vol. III. Twenty of the names listed are marked St. Croix, though the table is headed "Originen af Familierne paa St. Thomas og St. Jans." In a separate list of sixty-eight of St. John's inhabitants, Martfeldt has 21 as having come from St. Thomas, 16 from St. John, six each from "Sab- bath" and Tortola, five from Denmark, four from St. Eustatius, three each 048 THE DANISH WEST INDIES While the planters were being threatened and cajoled to free themselves from debts, now to Dutch creditors, now to the royal treasury, they managed to find entertainment in various places, from theaters to taverns, and other nondescript "houses of diversion." No form of diversion was too venal to carry advertising space in The Royal Danish American Gazette. At Christiansted the planters and their families might for twelve shillings per ticket secure seats in the Bass-End theater. Here at half past six in the evening could be seen the Leeward Islands company of comedians in their performance of King Lear, Hamlet, or Richard HI. The evening usually closed with some dramatic presentation in lighter vein, such as "The Mock Doctor," "Flora, or Hob in the Well," or "The Virgin Unmaskt, or the Old Man Taught Wisdom." ^ Occasionally it was found necessary to check undue curiosity on the part of the blacks by the warning "No negro whatever in the house," while those white people who were privileged to enter the charmed semi- circle were cautioned — in the public press — against attempting to get behind the scenes. Fredericksted in the "West End" also had its theater. Although no utterances against the authorities were allowed publication, individuals not infrequently used this means of venting their spleens against their neighbors. "King Liar" is publicly warned against writing "any more impertinent mes- sages" and against practicing "the servile trade of tale-bearing." One J-c-b C-nt-r, apparently a Jew, is charged with a striking resemblance to Judas Iscariot, and with refusing an invitation to dine "upon a pale looking piece of pork, much the color of his phiz." ^ At least thirteen taverns played their part in the life of St. Croix. Like Governor Clausen, when he labored in the interest of the royal treasury, they too found it necessary from Ireland and St. Martin, and one apiece from Germany, Curagao, Mont- serrat and St. Kitts. * Other titles of popular farces and melodramas are: "The Beaux Stratagem," "The Fair Penitent," "The King and Miller of Mansfield," "The Cheats of Scapin," "Miss in her 'Teens," "The School Master's Ballet," "Damon and Phillida," "The Orphan, or The Unhappy Marriage," "The Inconstant, or the Way to Win liim," "The Reprisal, or the Tars of Old England." 9 R. D. A. G., April 10, 1771. SUPPLEMENTARY CHAPTER: 1755-1917 249 to try to get on a cash basis. Clausen's vigorous administration soon revealed a regular system of smuggling, especially on the south side of St. Croix, opposite to the port of Christiansted.^" An Englishman was found on the island practicing the danger- ous art of counterfeiting. Law-abiding traits and the higher aspects of civilization are not always reflected in the public records or the public press; but it seems clear that the population of the Danish islands was as ingenious and versatile as it was cosmopolitan. If the evidences of wickedness and extravagance are numerous, it must not be forgotten that times were good, and the means of indulgence plentiful. The economic importance of the sugar producing regions was immensely enhanced during the Seven Years' War and the period following. When in the early seventies Alexander Hamil- ton was serving his apprenticeship as a counting-house clerk for the firm of Nicholas Cruger on St. Croix, he was near the economic center of gravity in the New World. The important position that sugar held in the minds of European statesmen is indicated by the fact that in 1763, when England and France were carrying on the negotiations that concluded the Seven Years' War, English statesmen considered seriously whether they should retain Canada or the French sugar island of Guada- loupe, a bit of land but little larger than St, Croix ! Compared with the few cargoes that the Company's officials managed to send to Copenhagen each year, the commercial activities that centered in St. Croix in the latter haK of the eighteenth century were indeed considerable. Up to the out- break of the War of Independence, the mainland English colonies were tremendously active in St. Croix as elsewhere in the West Indies. As the war proceeded, Danish shipping became more and more brisk. These islands had learned to look on European wars as great sources of prosperity, and this war was no exception. The following table, derived from the files of The Royal Danish American Gazette of St. Croix, will give a fair idea of the relative strength of the shipping of the " Amer. Journ., 1770-71 (July 29, 1770, Jan. 3, 1771). 250 THE DANISH WEST INDIES English mainland colonies and of Denmark-Norway entered at St. Croix." Colon. Danish Colon. Danish Total Ships Ships Total Ships Ships 1770 .... 14 7 7 1775 49 20 18 1771 .... 21 5 13 1776 .... 56 8 30 1772 .... 16 10 4 1777 .... 58 5 37 1773 .... 49 35 7 1778 .... 53 3 23 1774 .... 65 34 23 1779 10 — 9 In April, 1764, the year following the close of the Seven Years' War, the trade of St. Thomas with other European colonies in America, was thrown open to the ships of all nations; trade to and from Europe was reserved for royal subjects, and the products of the islands, if sent to Europe at all, could be disposed of only in the harbors of Denmark, Norway, Schleswig, and Holstein.^"^ The European trade of the islands was opened in 1767 to ships of other nations, though at higher rates. This freedom lasted but a decade when during the closing years of the American War, the monopoly plan was again attempted, only to be definitely given up in 1782. Ships of Danish sub- jects were allowed to take their cargoes to any European port. In 1815, the trade of St. Thomas and St. John was freed from all restrictions, so that European skippers were allowed equal privileges with those of America. These changes did not affect the trade of St. Croix, where the royal ordinance of 1764 continued in force until 1823. In that year a royal resolution was published, allowing the importation of provisions and plantation accessories from any foreign port to St. Croix, and the exportation of an equal value of sugar to any such port. One result of this new rulmg was the serious decline of the Copenhagen trade with St. Croix. It was not until June 6, 1833, on the hundredth anniversary of Denmark's possession of the island, that all trade restrictions in favor of Danish ports or Danish subjects were removed, and that St. ^1 The figures for 1770 apply only to the period from August 15 to December 26, those for 1771 to the first five months, those for 1772 to the second half year. Only the first two months of 1779 are included. 12 H. U. Ramsing, "Handel og Skibsfart," in Dansk Vestindien, pp. 852-860. SUPPLEMENTARY CHAPTER: 1755-1917 251 Croix came to share with its island neighbors the distinction of being truly a "free haven." The Peace of Versailles was followed by a serious commercial depression. This affected the West Indian commercial enter- prises no less than it did economic conditions in the United States, which were then being forced into constitution-making by the logic of events that were largely economic in character. This return of good times came very opportunely for those who were interested in the success of the United States under the new constitution. An indication of this general prosperity is seen in the shipping situation in St. Croix in the first two years of President Washington's administration. In 1789, not less than 516 vessels entered at St. Croix. These were of all sizes, from schooners and sloops to brigs and ships. Eighty-two of these entered from ports in the United States, one hundred and twenty-three from Porto Rico, and only sixteen from Danish dominions in Europe. The records for 1790, though incomplete for December, show a similar result. The number that entered was 369, of which ninety-two came from the United States, forty-nine from Porto Rico, and twenty-one from Danish lands. In a single week in April, 1790, twenty-three vessels were en- tered at the St. Croix customs house. ^^ In the Napoleonic wars, Denmark-Norway became prac- tically an ally of the French state. With British sea-power in the ascendancy this meant that Denmark's hold upon her West Indian possessions would become very uncertain at best. The situation indicated by Nelson's bombardment of Copenhagen in 1801, is reflected in the West Indies by the British seizure of the Danish islands in April, 1801, and their retention until February, 1802, when England and France were preparing to come to terms at Amiens. In 1807, when the Danish capital was bombarded the second time, the English once more seized the Danish islands. This time they retained them until the final defeat of Napoleon in 1815, when the islands were handed back to Denmark. The frontispiece to this volume is repro- duced from a drawing made at this time to show the condition of St. Croix after Danish sovereignty had been restored. *^ The Royal Danish American Gazette, for 1789 and 1790. 252 THE DANISH WEST INDIES As a shipping center and distributing point for the West Indies, St. Thomas held a fairly enviable position for the period from about 1820 to 1850. In the decade 1821-1830 the tonnage of ships annually visiting St. Thomas harbor was more than double what it had been during the two decades preceding. An average of not less than 2,809 ships of a combined tonnage of 177,444 called there each year. During the decade 1831-1840, the ships averaged 2,557 and the tonnage 161,408. This was rather less than before, but after 1835 steamships begin to affect the situation. In the years 1841-1850 the number of ships fell to 2,169 a year, but the tonnage rose to 208,281. For 1850, ninety-one steamships are reported. The number of Danish-owned ships increased from 232 vessels of an aggregate tonnage of 17,448 in 1841 to 507 vessels of 35,507 tons displace- ment in 1850. This was an increase of more than one hundred per cent., brought about after Danish shipping had been obliged to compete with foreign shipping on even terms. Commercially St. Thomas was a flourishing port in the forties. Its life centered about the harbor and the town of Charlotte Amalia. Of the 14,000 inhabitants of the island only 2,500, of whom more than nine-tenths were slaves, gained their living from the plantations. In 1839, there were forty -one large im- porting houses on the islands. Of these, thirteen were English, eleven French, six German, four Italian and Spanish, four American, and only three Danish or Danish West Indian. This situation had not seriously changed by 1850. The population was nearly as cosmopolitan in St. Thomas at that date as in the mining camps then opening m California. After the beginning of the second half of the nineteenth cen- tury the ratio of steam craft to sailmg vessels steadily rose. It became possible to an increasing extent for the British and Spanish islands to import their goods direct from the producers. Islands like Porto Rico, Barbados, and Santa Lucia availed themselves less and less of St. Thomas as a staple port. Only as a coaling place does St. Thomas manage to attract attention as the nineteenth century closes. In the opening years of the twentieth century' the increased use of the harbor by the Danish East Asiatic Company and the German Hamburg-American SUPPLEMENTARY CHAPTER: 1755-1917 253 Line has greatly increased the importance of St. Thomas as a coaling station. The tonnage has been larger in recent years than in the golden forties, but cargoes are no longer unloaded on the wharves and in the warehouses, hence tonnage is no index of the commercial situation. The following table shows the situation in St. Thomas harbor for the three-year period 1908-1910. 1908 1909 1910 Ships entered [over 25 tons] 682 690 749 Boats entered [under 25 tons] 1,918 1,877 1,895 Coal imported [in tons] 77,555 103,505 The ships entered in 1910 included 38 war-ships, 446 mer- chant steamers and 265 sailing ships. Two events must be held mainly responsible for the decline in the importance of sugar-cane plantations in the Lesser An- tilles during the nineteenth century. The first is no doubt the development of the process discovered by the Berlin chemist Achard of making sugar from beets. The second disturbing circumstance was the demoralization of the labor market by the abolition, first of the slave trade, and later of slavery itself. For a community that had learned to depend almost solely upon a single staple as a means of livelihood, the shock was all but fatal. The following statistics of population will serve as an index to the economic condition of the islands. ^^ St. Croix 1773 21,809 1796 28,803 1835 26,681 1850 23,720 1860 23,194 1880 18,430 1890 19,783 1901 18,590 During the period of the Napoleonic wars, the rise in the price of sugar led to the practical abandonment of cotton culture ^* Bergsije, den dansJce Stats Statistik (Kjobenhavn, 1853), IV, 600; Folketwl- lingen paa de dansk vestindiske Oer for 1860, etc. St. Thomas St. John Total 4,371 2,402 28,582 4,734 2,120 36,657 14,022 2,475 43,178 13,666 2,228 39,614 13,463 1.574 38,231 14,389 944 33,763 12,019 984 32,786 11,012 925 30,527 254 THE DANISH WEST INDIES on the Danish islands. St. Croix's maximum cotton export was reached in 1792 with 157,000 lbs.; the average annual ex- port for the decade was perhaps 60,000. An attempt at reviving the cultivation of cotton was made in the era of high prices just preceding the Civil War. A fresh attempt was made in the course of that war, when the acreage was increased from sev- enty in 1863 to eight hundred in 1865. In the year 1865-1866, 71,000 lbs. were exported from St. Croix. Again cotton grow- ing fell into disuse, not to be revived until the first decade of the twentieth century. Since the failure of the plan to sell the islands to the United States in 1902, patriotic Danes have or- ganized an association for developing the agricultural resources, — a plantation society called "The Danish West Indies." This corporation has brought cotton culture to a higher point than has been attained hitherto. ^^ Sugar planting probably reached its maximum about 1796.^^ The acreage figures for that year make an instructive com- parison with those for 1847, the year before slavery was abol- ished, and with 1851, five years after abolition.^^ The sugar acreage of St. Thomas and St. John had already dwindled to insignificance by 1851. Si. Croix St. Thomas Si. John 1796 27,655 A. 2,496 A. 1,863 A. 1847 23,971 1,125 843 1851 19,736 The plow was rarely seen on a plantation in the eighteenth century. Emancipation brought the plow; here as elsewhere free labor had to compete with machinery. In 1796, Oxholm reports 119 windmills and 211 treadmills on the islands, of which 115 of the former and 144 of the latter were on St. Croix. The first steam-power sugar mill was erected on the Hogens- borg plantation on St. Croix in 1816, and the second in 1838. Power machinery raised the percentage of extracted cane-juice to seventy; wind or treadmills could yield only fifty-six per ^° Capt. H. U. Rainsing, "Landbrug og Havebrug" ia Dansk Vesiindien, pp. 790-810. 1" P. L. Oxholm, De Danske Vestindiske Oers Tilstand, "Statistisk Tabelle." " H. U. Ramsing, in Dansk Vesiindien, 795. SUPPLEMENTARY CHAPTER: 1755-1917 255 cent. By 1852 there were forty steam-propelled sugar mills on St. Croix. In 1908, there was but a single sugar mill upon each of the islands of St. Thomas and St. John, and only the St. John mill was in operation. A period of drought in the early seventies led to the establish- ment of an elaborate cooperative sugar factory at Christiansted in 1877-1878. It was hoped by centralization to reduce the expense of manufacture. The new machinery could extract eighty per cent, of the juice, and the idea spread to various of the larger plantations. The "Danish West Indies" corporation has carried the idea of centralization in production and manu- facture to a far higher point than has formerly been attempted. In 1910 there were on St. Croix four large factories producing crystalUzed sugar. Six smaller establishments still produced "muscovado" sugar in the ancient way. The annual sugar yield on the two older islands at specified periods was as follows: St. Thomas St. John About 1796 1,300,000 lbs. 850,000 lbs. 1821-26 1,444,000 " 1,100,000 " 1838-40 1,164,000 " 993,000 " As early as 1755, when the period of royal government began, St. Croix was already producing one and one-half million pounds of sugar. This was more than St. Thomas produced at any time in its history. By 1770, the production on St. Croix had increased to about 17,000,000 lbs., nearly twelve times; in the early eighties it had risen to 25,000,000. In the mid-eighties, in that "critical period" preceding the adoption of the American constitution, the yield fell to 16,650,000 lbs. In the opening years of the nineteenth century the annual production rose to about 32,460,000, the maximum apparently being reached in 1812, with 46,000,000 lbs. Since the Napoleonic period the yearly sugar production on St. Croix at various dates was ap- proximately as follows: 1820 24,300,000 lbs. 1860-70 15,730,000 lbs. 1830 23,690,000 " 1872-77 9,300,000 " 1840 20,000,000 " 1874 4,577,000 " 1850-55 15,000.000 " 1880-90 19,000,000 " 1855-60 13,400,000 " 1900-10 24,700,000 " 256 THE DANISH WEST INDIES More advanced methods of cultivation and manufacture have finally brought the production up almost to the point that it was ninety-six years ago, and that from a smaller area. An evidence of this greater eflSciency is seen in the increase in the annual yield per acre from 18,638 lbs. of cane in 1878-1883 to 26,020 lbs. in 1897-1902. The increasing difficulties to which the growing of sugar cane was subjected as the nineteenth cen- tury ran its course, made the islands more and more dependent upon the Danish treasury. Whereas they had earlier in the century been colonies commanding respect, they were like the British islands rapidly lapsing into the position of dependencies calling for state subsidies. With no relief in sight except sub- sidies, it only required a favorable opportunity to suggest the feasibility of selling. Such an opportunity presented itself as a result of the situation growing out of the Civil War. Before taking up the diplomacy that eventually led to the sale of the islands to the United States, a brief consideration of recent local conditions upon the islands should not be with- out interest, especially to American readers. "The Danish West Indies" plantation company above referred to was or- ganized largely from patriotic motives. The impulse came after the collapse of the attempted negotiations for sale to the United States in 1901-1902. With a maximum capital of 1,316,316 kroner ($365,277), and despite the introduction of steam plows, new breeds of live stock, new varieties of plants including the spineless cactus from Burbank's California gar- dens, despite increased rotation of crops, such as banana and alfalfa, despite the advice of British West Indian experts, this plantation experiment has been a losing proposition as a business enterprise. The company's books showed a net gain in only four years of the eleven-year period from 1904-1914, inclusive. The total net loss for the eleven-year period was not less than 618,638.77 kroner ($171,650). The chief reasons advanced for this unfortunate outcome were, a series of unusually dry sea- sons, and a number of severe storms. The company has also had considerable trouble with its labor supply during its career. The demand for workers on the Panama Canal drew many negroes off the Danish as it did off SUPPLEMENTARY CHAPTER: 1755-1917 257 the other West Indian islands. Hence the price of labor rose higher than local conditions would warrant. As on previous occasions, hard times has brought unrest among the negro population. In 1915, the negroes decided among themselves that their condition was so serious that it merited the immediate attention of the Danish government and people. They ap- pointed one of their number, Mr. D. Hamilton Jackson, as their special representative, and sent him to Copenhagen to present their claims for amelioration of their condition. For a time the situation looked so threatening in St. Croix, the center of the disturbance, that the Danish government decided to send a warship to Christiansted. Mr. Jackson's visit received a great deal of attention from the Danish public and press. After his return, in November, 1915, he started a newspaper, The Labor Union, which is still being published. Previous to the outbreak of the Civil War, the interest of the United States in Caribbean lands had mainly been directed towards Cuba by the slave-holding interests which looked there for possible extension of slavery territory. But during the war, the lack of a naval base in the Caribbean Sea proved so costly an experience to the United States in its efforts to prevent blockade-running that the Lincoln administration decided to do what was possible to remedy this situation. The program of Secretary of State Seward included a larger number of proj- ects than was practicable under the confused political condi- tions following the assassination of Lincoln. The expulsion of the French from Mexico and the purchase of Alaska were accomplished, but the purchase of a Canal strip and the Danish West Indian islands was deferred to a later date and then consummated at a far higher cost than would have been neces- sary in Seward's time.^^ Seward broached the purchase project to General Raasloff, the Danish minister at Washington, in January, 1865, but with- out securing any assurance that Denmark was willing to sell. In December, 1865, after Seward's recovery from the wounds ^^ See W. F. Johnson, "The Story of the Danish Islands," in The North Amer- ican Review for Sept., 1916, for a useful summary of recent efforts at purchase. This comprehensive review forms the basis for much of what follows. 258 THE DANISH WEST INDIES he had received at the same time that Lincohi was attacked, the Secretary, with President Johnson's approval, again brought the matter forward. Following the defeat of Denmark by the combined Austro-Prussian forces, and her loss of the duchies of Schleswig and Holstein, the Danish Ministry that assumed control of the government under these circumstances proved willing to consider the matter formally and inquired what the United States was willing to pay. The negotiations were con- ducted mainly in Copenhagen where the United States was represented by George H. Yeaman. After making a personal tour of investigation to the islands and listening to the report of an army officer who had been sent to make an appraisal of their worth, Seward concluded to offer the Danish government five million dollars in gold. By this time (1866), the situation in Europe had undergone a change. Prussia was now engaged in a struggle with her former ally, Austria, for the hegemony of the German Empire, and until that was settled, Denmark, still smarting under the loss of the duchies was not in a position to take a step that seemed likely to be resented by Prussia. The English foreign office under Earl Russell had also shown its distrust of the plan. Another serious obstacle was France. By the treaty nego- tiated with France in 1733, for the purchase of St. Croix, Den- mark had bound herseK not to sell that island to any other power without the consent of the French king. The Mexican situation was seriously straining the relations of the United States with the Emperor Napoleon III, who refused his con- sent to the transaction. Denmark, unwilling to risk the dis- pleasure of France, made an offer in the spring of 1867 for the sale of St. Thomas and St. John to the United States gov- ernment for the sum of five million dollars, and indicated her willingness to sell St. Croix for a similar price, provided France could be induced to give its consent. Minister Yeaman finally made a treaty with the Danish government in October, 1867, providing for the purchase of the two northern islands for $7,500,000. The consent of the Danish Senate or Landsihing was necessary, as was that of the United States Senate. Seward gave his unofficial consent to the holding of an election on the SUPPLEMENTARY CHAPTER: 1755-1917 259 islands to ascertain the will of the inhabitants. He did not wish to hamper Congress in any action it might take to settle the status of the islands. It turned out that both houses of the Danish diet gave their consent, and that the plebiscite on the islands carried in favor of annexation by the nearly unanimous vote of 1,244 to 22. The sole remaining obstacle was the Senate of the United States, and there the chairman of the Foreign Relations Committee was Senator Charles Sumner, the im- placable enemy of President Johnson. A considerable share of the wrath that was piling up against the President had to be borne by the head of his cabinet. To have followed up the purchase of Alaska by the purchase of the Danish islands might have enhanced popularity of the administration, and this was not desired by Sumner and the anti-administration forces. The treaty was consequently pigeonholed. Denmark granted an extension of time for ratification, first to Seward, and then to his successor, Hamilton Fish. But the Grant administra- tion was only less distasteful to Sumner than the one it dis- placed, so on April 14, 1870, the treaty was allowed to lapse, and the government was placed in the position of refusing its assent to a treaty which it had initiated. The United States was saved from an exceedingly embarrass- ing position through the circumstance that Denmark made no attempt to sell the islands to any other power. The Danish government broached the matter again late in Harrison's ad- ministration, during the secretaryship of John W. Foster, but the matter was not pressed because of fear that the incoming Cleveland administration might repudiate the transaction be- fore it had been completed. The third time that the matter was called to the attention of the government of the United States was in Cleveland's administration, but the administra- tion that refused to consider the annexation of Hawaii could not be expected to purchase the Danish islands. Denmark con- tinued its considerate attitude by refraining from seeking other purchasers. When after the Spanish- American war the question of pur- chase came up for a fourth time, the chances for successful negotiation seemed promising. Secretary John Hay, the head 260 THE DANISH WEST INDIES of President Roosevelt's cabinet, and the Danish minister. Count Constantine Brun, discussed the project late in 1901, and a treaty was promptly formulated providing for the pur- chase of the islands at the price first offered by Seward, five million dollars. The French government — now the Third Republic — made no objection to the inclusion of St. Croix. The treaty was negotiated in January, 1902. On February 17, the United States Senate atoned for its previous dog-in-the- manger position by prompt ratification. This time the opposi- tion came from another quarter. The Folkething, the popular house of the Danish Parliament, readily gave its assent but in the Landsthing the treaty failed of confirmation by a tie vote. This adverse vote has been generally assumed in the United States to have been due to German influence. Several circumstances have lent color to this view. During the Spanish- American war, popular opinion in Germany was very strongly opposed to the United States. The attitude of Admiral Diet- richs indicated an unexpected impatience on the part of the German government towards American plans in the Orient. Likewise in the Caribbean Sea that government found itself arousing the apprehension of the United States in its dealings with Latin American states, much as England had done in the Venezuela affair during Cleveland's administration. The rapid development of the great German shipping lines, such as the Hamburg- American, gives the observer no reason to doubt that Germany would welcome the chance to acquire St. Thomas or any other suitable port or coaling station in the neighbor- hood of the Panama Canal. Whatever may have been the actual facts, the treaty was not confirmed by the Danish upper house, and apparently German commercial interests were not displeased with having St. Thomas remain under Danish rule. The reasons for the bungling that took place in 1911-1912 when the scheme was again considered, have not yet fully come to light. Through the injudicious actions of certain private in- dividuals, the diplomatists found themselves obliged to defer formal action to a more opportune time. It is significant of the American position that when the Danish company, that had been formed to deepen and improve St. Thomas harbor, con- SUPPLEMENTARY CHAPTER. 1755-1917 261 sidered the securing of foreign, and especially German, capital for assistance in carrying through its original plans, the govern- ment of the United States promptly indicated that such a measure would not meet with its approval. The plans of the company were modified and carried out on a smaller scale with Danish capital. The plan to sell the islands, when finally disclosed to the Danish public by the Zahle ministry in 1916, met with vigorous and determined opposition. There is no apparent reason for suspecting German influence as a factor of importance in this connection. Several of the most influential anti-German news- papers labored most valiantly to defer the sale, at least until after the war. University professors, economists, men of science, well known religious leaders, men of business, — all classes furnished ardent opponents to the sale of the islands at this time; and these men were probably overwhelmingly anti- German. There appears to have been considerable quiet but effective activity exerted in favor of the proposed sale by some of the leading business men, especially those connected with the Danish East Asiatic Company. When the matter came before the Danish people for their decision in December, 1916, the vote in favor of the ministerial plan for sale stood 283,694 to 157,596. And now, more than half a century after negotiations were initiated, and in the progress of a mighty world war, the United States has finally purchased the Danish West Indian islands. The purchase price, $25,000,000, represents a greater sum than has been paid for any of its acquisitions, not excepting Louisiana and the Philippines. The islands passed under the sovereignty of the United States on January 17, 1917, when Secretary Lan- sing and Minister Brun exchanged ratifications of the treaty of cession. The United States flag was hoisted on the three " Virgin Islands of America " on March thirty-first. Rear- admiral James H. Oliver was named as the first American governor. It is nearly two hundred and fifty years since the oldest of the islands first came into Danish possession. As they have long been economically American, they will henceforth be polit- 262 THE DANISH WEST INDIES ically American. Their future lies in the lap of Fate and of the Congress of the United States. In annexing them the United States has acquired a harbor that shares with Samana Bay, San Domingo, the distinction of deserving — to quote the words of Admiral Mahan — "paramount consideration in a general study of the Caribbean Sea and the Gulf of Mexico." The United States has taken another distinct and important step towards establishing American influence in the lands that lie to the north of Panama in securing the Leeward gateway to the American Mediterranean. lRjbbe^ajns sea MART NIQUE O'i ?3' EMT Q P- '■ BARBAwkl <> ^> TOBAflO^ LANDS [Facing page 262] 'ate and of the m the United Samana Bay lote the words in a general Mexico." The mportant step mds that he to gateway to the BIBLIOGRAPHY The chief repository of first-hand material dealing with the Danish West India and Guinea Company is the Danish State Archives (Rigsarkivet) in Copenhagen. The entire official records of the Company, except such portions as are to be found in the Landsarkiv, are piled high on the shelves of the topmost story of the archives building, where their repose has rarely been disturbed. The materials in the Landsarkiv, or provincial archives, consist chiefly of official documents dealing presum- ably with the local history of the Danish islands. It appears that these records were brought to Denmark from the West Indies only about twenty-five years ago, but have suffered so from climatic conditions and the ravages of tropical insects that they are not available for the use of scholars. The Gardelin and Schweder letter-books now in the Bancroft Collection at Berkeley, California, were presumably a part of these local archives. The Company's records kept at Copenhagen do not appear to have been accessible until J. F. Krarup, who became assist- ant in the state archives in 1870 and first secretary and registrar in 1882, proceeded to arrange and label the materials. The Company's archives are divided into three parts, correspond- ing to the principal scenes of its activity — Copenhagen, the West Indies, and Guinea — and each department contains the matter which normally gravitated towards that place. The manuscript materials in the Copenhagen municipal archives (Raadstuearkivet) and in the Royal Library which deal with the Danish West Indian possessions are few in number but of real importance. Their source will be noted in the bibliography. The hbrary of the University of Copenhagen apparently contains httle of vital importance that cannot be found in one or the other of the above collections. One repository remains to be considered, the Bancroft Col- lection at Berkeley, California, referred to above. The manu- script material there to be found, necessarily fragmentary, but by no means negligible, was collected about thirty years ago by Alphonse Pinart, who made a tour of investigation and collection over Spanish, English, French, Dutch and Swedish, as well as Danish islands. The part secured at St. Thomas consists not only of copies of official orders and correspondence, [263] 264 BIBLIOGRAPHY but of a number of originals. These materials were later ac- quired by Mr. H. H. Bancroft and are now in the custody of the University of California. In the writing of Chapter I, the author has in the main fol- lowed the work of J. Frederick Krarup, whose long service in the archives gave him a unique opportunity to work out an authoritative and indeed a microscopic account of the first Danish governor. A careful checking up of Krarup's work on Governor Iversen soon revealed the futility of retracing his footsteps. Krarup's biography of Milan has also been followed in Chapter III in so far as it deals with the West Indian career of that strange character. In the chapter dealing with the Brandenburg African Company's experience in the West Indies, Schuck's exhaustive account (q. v.) has been freely used, but it has been checked up and supplemented with documentary material from the Company's archives which Dr. Schiick did not examine. In the remainder of the work the author has had to rely chiefly upon unpublished documentary material. Although the major part of the materials are in Danish, a few are in German, the language of the court, some in French, and a considerable number in Dutch, which was the prevailing tongue among the St. Thomas and St. John planters in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. Manuscript Sources Note: The abbreviations employed in the text are enclosed in brackets [ ]. A. The Danish State Archives (Rigsarkiv) : I. The Records of the Company: Gouverneurernes Copi-Boger (1686; 1694-1700; 1700-1703; 1703-1715). Volumes containing correspondence of governors. [Gouv. C. B., 1686, etc.] Gouverneurens Journaler (1688-1689; 1689-1691; 1696- 1702). OflScial diaries of A. Esmit, Heins and Lorentz. [neins\ Lorentz s, etc., Journ.] Diverse Dokumenter vedr. Interimsgouv. Adolph Esmit, hans Embedsforelse, Fcengsling, m. m. (1682-1689). [A. E. 1682-1689.] Diverse Dokumenter vedk. Gouvernewren paa St. Thomas, de la Vigne (1692-1695). [Delavigne papers.] Kopie-Bogfor St. Thomas (1703-1715). Kopier og Extrakter af Sekret-Protokoller for St. Thomas (1699-1714; 1723-1735; 1735-1752). The privy council records of St. Thomas from 1715 to 1722, inclusive, are missing. BIBLIOGRAPHY 265 Sekret-Protokol for St. Thomas (1694-1714; 1723-1727; 1729-1730). [S. P., St. TL] Lands-Protokol for St. Thomas (1694-1711). Kopier af Plakater, Breve, og Ordrer udstedte paa St. Thomas og St. Jan (1683-1729). [P. B. 0., 1683-1729.] Negotie Journaler forte paa St. Thomas. These account books of the Company are practically complete. Sales of slaves were usually recorded in them. Their ponder- ous size and lack of indexes make them difficult to use. [N. J. for St. Th.] Negotie Journaler forte paa St. Croix. These begin about 1736, and are not quite complete. [N. J. for St. C] Land Lister for St. Thomas. The first census was taken in 1688. After the expiration of Thormohlen's proprietor- ship, the tax list was made out annually, and the series is very nearly complete. [L. L. for St. Th.] Land Lister for St. Jan. The first census seems to have been taken in 1728. The lists here are less complete than on the other islands. [L. L. for St. J.] Land Lister for St. Croix. Begins with 1742. [L. L. for St.C] Breve og Dokumenter indkomne til Vestindisk-Guineiske Kompagnies Direction fra Vestindien (1683-1689; 1706- 1710; 1711-1713; 1714-1717; 1717-1720; 1721-1724; 1724-1727; 1732-1734). The correspondence of the West Indian officials with the directors in Copenhagen forms an invaluable first-hand source of information. [B. &D.] Copie Bog holden ved Compagniets Contoir i Kiohenhavn fra den 13 Feb. 1690, til A[nn]o 1713, over "hvad der er pas- seret ved det vestindiske Comp." scerlig vedr. St. Thomas. [C. B., 1690-1713.] Americanske og Africanske Copie Bog (1716-1726). Europodsk Copie Bog (1698-1702). Dansk-Vestindisk-Guineiske Compagnies Breve-Copie-Bog (1698-1702). Vestindisk og Guineisk Compagniets Directions Resolutions og Forhandlings Protocol (1697-1734). [Comp. Prot., 1697-1734.] Vestindisk og Guineisk Compagniets General Forsamlings Protokol (1741-1754). [Comp. Prot., 17U-5A.] Vestindisk Guineisk Comp. Rets og Kommissions Doku- menter (1709-1719). Kopihog for Vestindisk og Guineisk Compagniets Direction (1733-1754). [Vest. Dir. K. B., 1733-54-] 266 BIBLIOGRAPHY Extrad-UdsTcrifter af Secret-Protocoller for St. Croix (1744- 1752). [S. P., St. C., 17U-1752.] Vestindiske og Guineiske Kompagnies Kassehoger forte paa St. Croix (1735-1754). The volumes for 1736, 1740, £Liici IT^j^j £irG missmff The same for St. Thomas (1680-1754). These volumes give the detailed accounts of receipts and expenditures of all sorts, e. g., customs duties, weighing fees, etc. II. The State Archives proper: Christian Martfeldt. Samlinger om de Danske Vestin- diske Oer St. Croix, St. Thomas, St. Jan. These six for- midable quarto volumes contain the materials collected and the observations made by a distinguished Danish economist of the eighteenth century who paid an ex- tended visit to the islands about 1765-1768. "He who would study thoroughly the history of the islands," says Bergsoe (Den danske Stats Statistik, Kjobenhavn, 1853, IV B., p. 559), "will find here amid considerable rubbish, much that is of value for the period before 1765." Vol- ume I contains copies of orders issued by various West Indian governments from 1733 to 1767, inclusive. Vol- ume II with its "Collegial Breve fra Kjobenhavn; Ordon- nancer, Instructioner, Reglementer fra Gouvernementet" deals with the period from Sept. 3, 1756, to Oct. 4, 1760, and includes a number of West Indian letters and mandates for the period 1741-1745. Volume III con- sists of a large variety of documentary and statistical material concerning the history and government of the islands, and the character of their population. Vol- ume IV begins with statistics of St. Thomas's planta- tions; the remainder being devoted to the story, in fif- teen long chapters, of "the Danish Island St. Thomas in the West Indies," an interesting though prolix ac- count of all the islands from administrative and political viewpoints. The remaining nine chapters are to be found in Vol. V. The last volume (VI) contains copies and extracts of West Indian archival material between the dates 1688 and 1766. [Martfeldt MSS.]. Sjosllandske aabne Breve (1654-1655 and 1662). These contain references to West Indian voyages of private adventurers before the establishment of the Com- pany. Registrant over vestindiske Sager (1671-1699). [Vest. Reg.\ Registrant over vestindiske aabne Breve og Missiver (1699- 1771.) The above two entries contain copies of pass- BIBLIOGRAPHY 267 ports to ship captains and confirmations of Lutheran and Reformed ministers, issued by the King. Vestindisk-GuinceisJce Koncepter og Indlaeg (1671-1699). Vestindiske Koncepter og Indlceg (1700-1771). Protokol over CommissionoBrerne udi Raadstuen for Slottet, Vols. Ill and ly (1695). Kronologisk Samling af Offentlige Aktstykker vedk. de dansk- vestindiske Oer og sasrlig negernes Forfatning betrcsffende .. (1733-1788). Oresundstoldboger. The records of the Sound duties are especially valuable in locating and identifying ships outward or homeward bound. B. The Royal Library at Copenhagen: Werlauff MSS. No. 22. (a) [Pierre Joseph] Pannet: Relation de VExecrable Conspiration, raise en Oeuvre par les Negres Minces en VIsle Danoise St. Jan en Amerique 1733; (b) Specification paa. . . . Compagniets Participanter og Actier udi Compagniet og Raffinaderiet indtil den Anno 1751. Ny Kgl. Saml. 426 fol. Peder Manager: Een saavidt mueligt fuldstcendig Historisk Efterretning extraheret of Det Vestindiske og Guineiske Compagnies Archiv, Roger og Protocoller, angaaende bemelte Compagnies Etablisse- menter udi Vestindien og Guinea, fra begyndelsen. . . . (Dated at Company's office, July 30, 1753.) The 222 folio pages in this volume constitute the official account of the Company's activities from its establishment in 1671 up to within a year or so of its dissolution. Manager had been employed in the Company's office, most of the time as bookkeeper, for upwards of thirty years, and was intimately acquainted with its affairs. On the whole, it is written with remarkable accuracy, and it is unique in being an authoritative exposition written from the viewpoint of the Company's Copenhagen head- quarters. Compared with this manuscript history, the published works of Host, and his successors and transla- tors, are weak indeed. [Mariager MS.] Uldallske Saml., No. 30 fol. Adskillige Placater og An- modninger samt Kongelige Rescripter Vestindien vedkom- mende. Thottske Saml., No. 515 fol. J. N. Hoist, Om hvad der kunde voBre Eiloenderne St. Jan, St. Croix, og St. Thomas til Opkomst (1746-1755). A series of proposals concerning the West Indies by an experienced ship captain. Thottske Saml, No. 1298 (4°). R. Haagensen, Reskrivelse ^68 BIBLIOGRAPHY over Eilandet St. Croix. (Dated 1751.) This account, dedicated to the newly elected president of the Com- pany, Count Adam Gottlob von Moltke, was published in 1758, and constitutes the first known printed account of the island of St. Croix under Danish rule. Thottske Saml., No. 764 b. Soren Sommer, En Kort Besk- rivelse om St. Thomas og St. Croix. . . , (Dated April 29, 1738.) Kallshe Saml., No. 103 fol. C. A. von Plessen, Resolution og Beskeed. . . . (Dated .'') This is an order relating to the treatment of the Moravian Brethren. C, The Municipal Archives at Copenhagen (Raadstuearkivet): Politi- og Commerce-Collegiets Resolutions og Missive Proto- coller, vol. 3 (1704-1709). Politi- og Commerce-Collegiets Memorial Bog, vols. 21 (1716- 1720) and 22 (1720-1723). D. The Bancroft Collection at Berkeley: Governors of St. Thomas. Orders issued for observance by inhabitants (1672-1726). Copies of 80 orders pub- lished during the governorships of Iversen, Milan, A. Esmit, Heins, Lorentz, Crone, Bredal, Thambsen, and Moth. Gardelin, Phillip. Letter-book containing correspondence with officials on St. John and St. Thomas (April 22, 1733- August 21, 1734). The letters and orders in this frail and yellowed termite-burrowed volume throw interest- ing sidelights on the St. John insurrection of 1733-1734, St. John Planters. Five letters written to Gardelin and Horn (Dec._ 7, 1733-April 19, 1734). [Bancroft Coll.] _ Moth, Frederick. Porto Rico letter-book containing copies of correspondence with Spanish officials (1734-1743). Schweder, Christian. Letter-book containing copies of correspondence with St. Croix officials (June 13, 1744- Nov. 24, 1745.) Printed Sources Algreen-Ussing, T. ed. Kongelige Rescrifter, Resolutioner og Reglementer, Insiruxer og Fundatser, samt Kollegialbreve, med flere Danmarks Lovgivning vedkommende offentlige A ktstykker. K j obenhavn , 1806-1850. 56 v. [Danish West India and Guinea Company.] Kongelige Octroyerede Danske Westindiske og Guineiske Com- BIBLIOGRAPHY 269 pagnie. Ordre og Instruction for Assistenterne paa del Kongelige Octroyerede Danske West-Indiske og Guineiske Skibe. Kjobenhavn [1698]. 4°. [Danish West India and Guinea Company.] Det Kongelige Danske Westindiske og Guineiske Compagnies Participanters Convention, Reglement og Foreening ind- gaaet og sluttet d. 26 Sept., 1733. Kjobenhavn, 1733. 20 p. [Denmark.] Patent om it Guineiske Compagnies Oprettelse i Kiobenhaffn. Dec. 10, 1672. [Kjobenhavn] 1672. [Denmark.] Verordnung wegen des West-Indischen und Guineischen Handels Mar. 3, 1680. [Kjobenhavn, 1680.] 4 p. 4°. [Denmark.] Skibsartikler hvorefter Wi Christian V. . . . [Kjobenhavn] 1698. 15 p. 4°. This concerns West Indian and Guinea Company's ships' rules. (Dated March 26.) [Denmark.] Octroy for det Kgl. Danske West-Indiske og Guineiske Com- pagnie. February 5. Kjobenhavn, 1734. 28 p. An abstract of this charter is given in Host, Efterretning . . . , pp. 115 et seq. [Denmark.] Placat om Foringen ved det Kongelige octroierede Danske Westjndiskeog Guineiske Compagnie. October 14. Kjoben- havn] 1747. "Fol. pat." [Danish West India and Guinea Company.] Plan og Convention hvorefter det Kongelige Octroyerede Danske Westindisk og Guineiske Compagnies Augmentation have subscriberet, d. 6 Feb. 1747. Kjobenhavn, 1748. 8 p. FOGTMAN, LaURITZ, Alphabetisk Register over de Kongelige Rescripter, Resolutioner og Collegialbreve, Aar 1660-1800. Kjobenhavn, 1806. 17 V. 1-2 Part. Fogtman, Lauritz. [ed.] Kongelige Rescripter, Resolutioner, og Collegial Breve for Dan- mark og Norge, 1660-1813. Kjobenhavn, [date ?] v. Great Britain: Master of the Rolls. Calendar of state papers. Colonial series; America and the West Indies. (1669-1708.) Vols. 1-18. 1669-70 -[1706- 08.] London, 1885-1916. [Cal. Col] ^ These volumes contain valuable materials on Anglo-Danish relations in the West Indies. 270 BIBLIOGRAPHY Host, Georg. Efterretning om Oen Sanct Thomas. . . . (See under Second- ary Works.) Maanedlige Relationer (periodical, Copenhagen) for April and June, 1683. Contemporary account of Governor Iversen's death, and of punishment of responsible mutineers. Paludan, Capt. C. F. "Blade af de dansk-vestindiske Oers Historic," in Museum (Kjobenhavn, 1894), 341-366. An account of the St. John slave insurrection of 1733-1734 and its suppression, illustrated by unpubhshed documents from the St. Thomas archives, copied before their removal to Copenhagen. RORDAM, HOLGER Fr. [ed.] " Bidrag til Historieskriveren Anders Hojers Levned," in His- torisJce Samlinger og Studier vedr. DanmarJcs Forhold og Personligheder iscer i det 17. Aarhundrede, III, 144 et seq. Kjobenhavn, 1898. 4 v. Of the commission appointed in 1726 to report on the affairs of the Danish East India Company, some mention is made. RORDAM, HoLGER Fr. " Kirkelige Forhold paa St. Croix 1741 og danske Prsester paa de vestindiske Oer i Midten af 18. Aarhundre " in KirJcehis- toriske Samlinger, ser. 4, v. II. (Kjobenhavn, 1891), 55-100. This article includes an interesting letter from the Lutheran minister H. J. O. Stoud to President C. A. von Plessen of the West India and Guinea Company, dated Jan. 11, 1741, and biographical sketches of the Danish Lutheran ministers on St. Croix, 1735-1769, and of the ministers on St. Thomas and St. John, 1732-1765. RoTHE, Casper Peter, [ed.] Kong Christian den Femtes skrevne Befalinger og Anordninger, eller Rescripter for Norge, Island, Ferroerne og de Indiske Besiddelser fra . . . Ode Fehruarii 1670 til . . . 25 Au- gusti, 1699. Kjobenhavn, 1777. 2 v. (1153 p.) Vol. II, 993 et seq., contains the text of the ordinances, etc., issued by Christian V during his reign, and which concerned the West Indies and Guinea. ScHou, Jacob Henric. [ed.] Chronologisk Register over Kongelige Forordninger. . . . Kjobenhavn, 1777-1814. ScHtJcK, Richard. Brandenburg-Preussens Kolonial-Politik . . . (164.7-1721). Leipsig, 1889. 2 v. BIBLIOGRAPHY 271 Volume II contains many documents bearing on Denmark's and Brandenburg's relations with respect to Guinea and West India matters. [Swedish Ambassadors.] Reports in " Danske Samlinger for Historic " (periodical edited by Chr. Bruun, O. Nielsen, and A. Peterson). Kjobenhavn, 1865-1875. 6 vols. The letters of Swedish ambassadors at Copenhagen to their royal masters afford glimpses of the early career of the Com- pany. Secondary Works Special Works on the Danish Colonies: Alberti, C. " Den danske Slavehandels Historic," in Nyt historisk Tids- skrift, 3 B. (Kjobenhavn, 1^50, 201-245). A valuable account, based on^rinted primary and secondary material. The author was not permitted to inspect the state archive materials. BORGESON, F., AND UlDALL, F. P. Vore vestindiske Oer. Kjobenhavn, 1900. 55 p. Catteau-Calleville, J. R. G. Tableau des Etats danois, consideres sous le rapport du me- canisme social. Paris, 1802. 3 vol. "De danske Atlanterhavsoer." "Dansk Vestindien: Naturforhold, Befolkning, Hjselpekilder, og Nseringsveje " in "De danske Atlanterhavsoer" Afsnit IV. Kjobenhavn, 1908. 300 p. Maps. A copiously illustrated, collaborative work, with brief re- sumes of early history, but with main emphasis on present conditions. Lists of authorities are appended to many of the articles. Dewitz, a. von. ' In Danisch Westindien. Anfange der Briidermission in St. Thomas, St. Croix, and St. Jan, von 1732-1760. Herrnhut, 1899. 322 p. Dewitz, A. von. In Danisch Westindien. Hundert und funfzig Jahre der Briidermission in St. Thomas, St. Croix, und St. Jan. . . . Niesky, 1884. 374 p. Eggers, H. F. a. Baron. " St. Croix's Flora " in Videnskabelige Meddelelserfra Naturhis- torisk Forening i Kjobenhavn for Aaret 1876. Kjobenhavn, 1876. pp. 33-158. 272 BIBLIOGRAPHY An admirable description of St. Croix, particularly from the botanical and meteorological points of view, with an exposition of historical changes in plant life there. Griffin, Appleton Prentiss Clark. A list of books on the Danish West Indies. Washington, 1901. 20 p. The only special bibliography on the subject, limited to books in Library of Congress. Haagensen, Richard. Beskrivelse over Eylandet St. Croix i America i Vesiindien. Kjobenhavn, 1758, 72 p. Probably the earliest printed book describing St. Croix. The university and royal libraries in Copenhagen each have MS. as well as printed copies. Hoffmeyer, H. Vor KirJce i Vestindien. Kjobenhavn, 1905. Host, Georg. Hersing. Efterretninger om den Sand Thomas og dens Gouverneurer, optegnede der paa Landetfra 1769 indtil 1776. Kjobenhavn, 1791. 203 p. This is the first attempt at a chronological history of the Danish West Indies. The author had access to the Company's archives, and used some of the documents for his book. From 1769 to 1776 he lived in the islands, first as a member of the privy council of St. Thomas and St. John, and later, on the death of his father-in-law, Governor Jens Kragh, as governor-ac? interim for a few months. During 1760-1767 he had served as an employee in the Danish factory in Morocco, and on his return he became a secretary in the department for foreign affairs, under Guldberg. He died in 1794. (Nyerup and Kraft, Forfatter-Lexicon, p. 280.) ISERT, P. E. " Reise nach Guinea und den Carabaischen Inseln," in Colum- hien, in Brief en an seine Freunden beschreiben. Kjobenhavn, 1788. 376 p. Although inclined to exaggeration, the author, who had been chief physician in the Danish factory in Guinea and had served on slave ships, presents a valuable picture of the dark side of the slave trade. Letter 12 is headed "Reise von Guinea nach Wes- tindien. Zustand eines Sklavenschiffes. Rebellion der Sklaven. Beschreibung von St. Croix.^' Knox, Hugh. A discourse delivered on ths 6 of Sept. 1772 in the Dutch Church of St. Croix. On the occasion of the hurricane which hap- BIBLIOGRAPHY 273 fened on the 31 oj Aug. St. Croix, 1772. The copy in the Bancroft Collection is incomplete. Knox, John P. A historical account of St. Thomas, W. I., . . . and incidental notices of St. Croix and St. Johns. New York, 1852. 271 p. This book has long been practically the only available book in English. The first part of it is really a faulty translation of Host's work (q. v.), the last, a loose compilation. The author was a minister in St. Thomas. Koch, Hans Ludvig Schielderup Parelius. " Den danske mission i Vestindien," in Kirkehistoriske Sam- linger, ser. 5, vol. 3 (Kjobenhavn, 1905), 144-181. An account of those missionary efforts begun by the govern- ment in 1755. Krarup, Janus Fredrik. " Jorgen Iversen (Dyppel), Vestindisk Compagnies forste Gouverneur paa St. Thomas," in Personalhistorisk Tids- skrift, II R. 6 B. (Kjobenhavn, 1891), 23-45. An exhaustive study of Governor Iversen's career and the planting of the St. Thomas colony, based on a minute examina- tion of primary materials in the state archives at Copenhagen. Krarup became an assistant in the state archives in 1870, and chief secretary in 1882. Krarup, Janus Fredrik. " Gabriel Milan og Somme af hans Samtid " in Personalhis- torisk Tidsskrift, 3 R. 2 B. (Kjobenhavn, 1893), 102-130, and 3 R. 3 B. (1894), 1-51. A detailed and accurate account of the life of the fourth governor of St. Thomas, based upon exhaustive researches in the state archives at Copenhagen. Lawaetz, H. Brodremenighedens Mission: Dansk-Vestindien, 1769-1848. Kjobenhavn, 1902. 256 p. The main account is prefaced by a good summary of the early Moravian missionary efforts in the Danish West Indies. Lose, Emil Valdemar. "Folkekirken paa St. Thomas" in Kalkars Theologisk Tids- skrift (Kobenhavn, 1878), 265-297. Lose, Emil Valdemar. The Lutheran Church in the West Indies. St. Croix, 1887. 6 p. Lose, Emil Valdemar. " Kort Udsigt over den danske lutherske Missions Historic paa St. CroLX, St. Thomas, og St. Jan," in Nordisk Missions Tidsskrift, I (Kjobenhavn, 1890), 1-37. This account, according to Pastor L. Koch, is the most au- 274 BIBLIOGRAPHY thoritative one dealing with the history of Danish missions in the West Indies. Oldendorp, Christian Georg Andreas. Geschichte der Mission der evangelischen Briider auf der cara- baischen Inseln S. Thomas, S. Croix und S. Jan. Barby, 1777. 2v. Still the most accurate and comprehensive account of the early history of the Moravian brethren in the Danish islands. [Oldendorp, Christian Georg Andreas]. FuldstcBudigt Udtog of C. G. A. OMendorps Missions-Historie om den evangelisJce Brodres Mission paa de carahaiske Oer St. Thomas, St. Crux og St. Jan. . . . Kjobenhavn, 1784. 184 p. A Danish abridged version of the German edition. Oldendorp, Christian Georg Andreas. HistorisJc Beretning om de hedenske Neger-Slavers Omvendelse paa de dansJce Oer i Vestindien. . . . Kjobenhavn, 1784, 184 p. A translation from the German of part of the author's larger work (q. v.). [Orsted, Ander S., and others.] "De danske vestindiske Oer," in Bergsoe, De7i danske Stats Statistik, ^de Bd. (Kjobenhavn, 1853), pp. 557-712. A good summary of the history, geography, etc., of the islands, based on available published material. The notes give some valuable bibliographical hints. OxHOLM, Peter Lotharius, De danske vestindiske oers Tilstand i Henseende til Population, Cultur og Finance-Forfatning i Anledning af nogle Breve fra St. Croix. . . . Kjobenhavn, 1797. 84 p. A careful study of the sugar industry on St. Croix based on personal observation; contains four plans and an appended statistical table. [Anonymous. Answer to Oxholm. (q. v.).] Berigtigelsen ved Hr. Major Oxholms Skrift om de danske Oers Tilstand. Kjobenhavn, 1798. 30 p. Oxholm, Peter Lotharius. Urigtighederne i de saakaldte Berigtigelser ved Afhandlingen om de danske vestindiske Oers Tilstand. Kjobenhavn, 1798. 23 p. An answer to Berigtigelsen. . . . Petersen, Bernhardt von. En historisk Beretning om de dansk-vestindiske Oer St. Croix, St. Thomas og St. Jan. Kjobenhavn, 1855. Mainly a translation of Knox's work, checked up by some BIBLIOGRAPHY 275 reference to Host. His name is not to be found among those of the nobiUty. RoHR, Julius Philip Benjamin von. Anmerkungen iiber den Cattunbau. Mil einer Vorrede von P. G. Hensler. Altona und Leipzig, 1791-1793. 2 parts. Part 1: "Zum Nutzen der Danischen Wesiindischen Colonien auf Allerhochsten Koniglichen Befehl geschrieben." RoTHE, Dr. C. Lidt om Vestindien. Kjobenhavn, 1900. 55 pp. A patriotic appeal against the sale of the islands; a brief but fairly accurate historical summary is included. Schmidt, J. C. [Articles on St. Croix] in Samleren, v. II (Kjobenhavn, 1788), 198-206; 214-250; 259-263. A series of articles by a visitor describing plantation life on St. Croix. Taylor, Charles Edward. Leaflets from the Danish West Indies; descriptive of the social, political, and commercial condition of these islands. London, 1888. 228 p. One of the few writers who has made use of archival material for the early history of St. Thomas. The author was a physician and book-dealer in St. Thomas, and had access to the Company's archives before their removal to Copenhagen. Trier, C. A. " Det dansk-vestindiske Negerindeforselsforbud af 1792," in Historisk Tidsskrift, ser. 7, v. 5 (Kjobenhavn, 1904-1905), 405-508. A scholarly study of the edict abolishing the slave trade in Danish dominions, a^nd of the circumstances leading up to it. United States. Fifty-seventh Congress, first session. House document, vol. 47 (Washington, 1902), 2767-2847. A geographical and historical description of the islands com- piled by Oscar Phelps Austin and drawn mainly from Knox and Host; summary of commercial conditions since 1884; extracts from consular reports, histories, etc., including Prof. C. W. Tooke's article in the Amer. Econ. Assoc, report for 1900 (pp. 2782 et seq.), a concise summary of the administrative ar- rangements. The treaty of 1902 with Denmark is quoted and the various efforts at purchase by the U. S. traced out and illustrated with documents (pp. 2788 et seq.). Werfel, Johannes. Efterretning om de danske-vestindiske Oers St. Croix's, St. Thomas's og St. Jan's. Kjobenhavn, 1801. 276 BIBLIOGRAPHY West, Hans. " Beretning om det danske Eiland St. Croix i Vestindien, fra Juniimaaned 1789 til Juniimaaneds Udgang 1790," in Maanedskriftet Iris (Kjobenhavn) Julii 1791, pp. 1-88. An article on plantation economy in the Danish islands, based on a brief stay there as rector of a school. This article was expanded into the book "... Beskrivelse over St. Croix . . ." (1793). West, Hans. Bidrag til Beskrivelse over Ste. Croix, med en kort udsigt over St. Thomas, St. Jean. Tortola, Spanishtown, og Crabeneiland. Kjobenhavn, 1793. 363 p. An enlarged edition appeared in a German translation in 1794. General Works on Danish and West Indian History: Allen, C. F. Histoire de Danemark. . . . (E. Beauvois, tr.). Copenhague, 1878. 2v. This work has been superseded, especially in its treatment of economic history, by the more recent work of Professor Edward Holm {q. v.). [Anonymous.] The Importance of the British plantations in America to this kingdom . . . considered. London, 1731. 114 p. "Santa Croce" (St. Croix) is mentioned as being abandoned, and St. Thomas as remarkable only for its harbor, which is a free port, and for smuggling {cf. Macpherson, Annals, III, 161). [Anonymous]. The Present state of the West Indies, containing an accurate description of what parts are possessed by the several powers in Europe. . . . London, 1788. 95 p. Pp. 72-74, Virgin Islands; pp. 93-94, Danish Islands. Bonnassieux, Jean Louis Pierre Marie. Les grandes compagnies de commerce. Paris, 1892. 562 p. A cursory review of the activities of the Danish West India and Guinea Company (p. 441) and of the Danish African Com- pany (pp. 442-443), based largely on Beausobre's work (1791). BuRNEY, James. History of the Buccaneers of America. London, 1816. 326 p. Mentions St. Thomas as a "Danish factory" (p. 300) plun- dered by " Flibustiers " from Hispaniola in 1688 (cf. Labat). Cheyney, Edward Potts. European background of American history: 1300-1600, in BIBLIOGRAPHl' 277 American Nation ser. A. B. Hart ed. New York and London, 1904. 343 p. List of commercial companies, 1554-1698, pp. 137-139. Davies, John. The history of the Caribby-I stands, viz. Barbados, St. Chris- tophers, St. Vincents, Martinico, etc., etc., . . . in all XXVIII. London, 1666. 2 v. St. Croix under the French in I, 28. Dessalles, Adrian. Histoire generate des Antilles. Paris, 1847. 3 v. Brief mention of the Danish islands. Douglass, William. A summary, historical and political, of the first planting, pro- gressive improvements, and present state of the British settlements in North America. Boston, 1755. 3 v. Pp. 140-141: St. Thomas and St. John. Du Tertre, Le R. p. Jean-Baptiste. Histoire generate des Antilles habitees par les Francois. Paris, 1667-1671. 4 vols, in three. Contains a map of St. Croix under the French (1671); a valuable work for the history of the Danish islands previous to Danish occupation. Edwards, Bryan. The history, civil and commercial, of the British colonies in the West Indies. London, 1793. 2 v. Makes a bare mention of the Danish possessions. St. John "is of importance as having the best harbour of any island to the leeward of Antigua;" while St. Croix is notable for its sugar smuggling (I, 458-459). Fiske, Amos Kidder. The West Indies ... in Story of the Nations ser. New York, 1902. 414 p. Pp. 293-301 : the Danish islands. Fridericia, J. A. See Steenstrup. Froude, James Anthony. The English in the West Indies. . . . New York, 1908. 550 p. GiGAs, Emil. Grev Bernardino de Rebolledo, spansk Gesandt i Kjobenhavn, 16^8-1659. Kjobenhavn, 1883. 413 p. Haring, Clarence Henry. The buccaneers in the West Indies in the XVII century. New York, 1910. 298 p. The relations of early Danish governors in the West Indies (the Esmits and Iversen) to the pirates there is discussed in a 278 BIBLIOGRAPHY rather one-sided account based solely upon the Calendar of State Papers, Colonial, West Indies. Holm, Edvabd. Danmarks-N orges Indre Historic, under Enevoldenfra 1660 til 1720. Kjobenhavn, 1885. 2 v. All of Professor Holm's work is based on a careful study of first-hand material. His treatment of economic problems is especially thorough. Holm, Edvaed. Den Dansk-Norske Stats Historie fra 1720 til 1814- Kjoben- havn. Holm, Edvard. See Steenstrup. Jameson, John Franklin. " St. Eustatius in the American Revolution," in The American Historical Review, VIII (New York, 1903), pp. 683-708. St. Croix is reported to be the first foreign port to salute the American flag (p. 691). Johnston, Sir Harry H. The negro in the New World. New York, 1910. 499 p. "Slavery under the Danes" (344-351) is a brief, inaccurate resume of the history of Danish slave trade and West Indian colonization. Keller, Albert Galloway. Colonization. New York, 1908. 630 p. Although mainly based on secondary works, this is the most recent and reliable summary in English on the Danish islands (497-508). The book is provided with a bibliography. Koch, Hans Ludvig Schielderup Parelius. Kong Christian den Siettes Historie. Kjobenhavn, 1886. 354 p. Labat, Jean Baptiste. Nouveau voyage aux isles de V Amerique. ... A la Haye, 1724. 2v. 4°. The author was a cheerful, if not very accurate, Jesuit priest who visited St. Croix after its abandonment by the French in 1695 or 1696, and St. Thomas in 1700. He gives a lively de- scription of the Danish and Brandenburg factories. Ledru, Andre Pierre. Voyage aux isles de Teneriffe, la Trinite, Saint-Thomas, Saint- Croix et Porto-Rico, execute far ordre du gouvernement Frangais depuis le 30 Septemhre, 1796 jusquau 7 juin, 1798, contenant des observations, etc. Paris, 1810. 2 v. Folded map. Pp. 160-188 of the German translation of 1812 contains a description of the Danish West Indies. BIBLIOGRAPHY 279 Leroy-Beaulieu, Pierre Paul. De la colonisation chez les fewples modernes. Paris, 1902, 2 V. A brief account of Danish West Indian colonization (Vol. I, pp. 182-186). Macpherson, David. Annals of commerce, manufactures, fisheries, and naviga- tion. . . . London, 1805. 4 v. This compilation, gleaned from many sources, has a number of extracts, including quotations from treaties, dealing with the Danish islands. Martel, Henri. Etude pratique sur les colonies anciennes et modernes et sur leurs grandes compagnies commerciales. Ghent, 1898. 355 p. Pp. 332, 335: Danish West Indies. Martin, Robert Montgomery. History of the West Indies, comprising Jamaica, Honduras, Trinidad, . . . and the Virgin Isles. London, 1836. 2 v. Vol. 1, pp. 288-312: Virgin Isles, especially Tortola. Morris, Henry Crittenden. The history of colonization from the earliest times to the present day. New York, 1900. 2 v. The few pages (284-286) devoted to the Danish West Indian colonies are full of errors and misstatements. The work bears evidence of hasty compilation. A revised edition has recently appeared. Nathanson, M. L. Historisk-statistisk Fremstilling of Danmarks National-og Stats-Huusholdning fra Frederick den Fjerdes Tid indtil Nutiden. Kjobenhavn, 1844. 2d ed. revised. 1062 p. Numerous comments on the West Indian and Guinea trade, with statistics drawn from Thaarup, and other sources; par- ticularly valuable for period after 1765. Nielsen, Oluf. Kjobenhavns Historic og Beskrivelse. . . . Kjobenhavn, 1871- 1792. 6v. A rehable history of Copenhagen, based on careful study of first hand materials and giving due emphasis to the economic development of the city. The interest of Copenhagen mer- chants in the India trade is brought out. d'Orbigny, M. Alcide. Voyage dans les deux Ameriques. Paris, 1854. 615 p. A paragraph mentioning St. Thomas's position as a free port, smuggHng, trade, etc. (p. 31). 080 BIBLIOGRAPHY Payne, Edward John. History of European colonies. London, 1877. 408 p. Pflug, Henrich Ovesen. Den Danske Pillegrim. Kbhn., 1707. A discursive work, containing descriptions of many parts of the world. It gives an account of the dispute concerning Crab Island, in which Danes, Spaniards and English participated. Quoted in Host, 16, 79. Pontoppidan, Erik. Origines Hafniensis, etc. Kjobenhavn, 1760. Raynal, Guillaume-Thomas. A philosophical and political history of the settlements and trade of the Europeans in the East and West Indies. London, 1798. 6 V. Vol. 4, 256-265, Danish settlements in St. Thomas, St. John and Santa Cruz. Translated from the French. Rodway, James. The West Indies and the Spanish Main. London and New York, 1896. 371 p. Pp. 238-240; St. Thomas, brief historical sketch. [Royal Society.] Philosophical Transactions and Collections. London, 1700- 1701. An account of the Darien expedition which touched at St. Thomas in 1698. See also Host, pp. 39 et seq. SCHLEGEL, JoHAN FrEDERIK WiLHELM. Statistisk Beskrivelse af defornemste europceiske Stater. I Del. Kjobenhavn, 1793. This work corresponds closely to that of Thaarup (g. v.). ScHtJCK, Richard. Brandenhurg-Preussens Kolonial-Politik. . . . (1647-1721). Leipsig, 1889. 2 v. A minute exposition of the colonial policy of the Great Elector and his immediate successors, based on an extensive study of the archival materials in Berlin, Emden, and Aurich. The main defect in the work, so far as concerns the author's treat- ment of the Brandenburg African Company's experience at St. Thomas, is due to his failure to consult the Danish West India and Guinea Company's archives in Copenhagen. Smith, Adam. An inquiry into the nature and cause of the wealth of nations. Oxford, 1880. 2 v. (2nd ed., by J. E. T. Rogers.) Pp. 149-150: the Danish West Indian colonies are cited to show the evils of government by an exclusive company. BIBLIOGRAPHY 281 SouTHEY, Capt. Thomas. Chronological history of the West Indies. London, 1827. 3 v. A compilation from many works of many sorts, quite regard- less of their reliability. The direct quotations from treaties and other primary documents are of value. Steenstrup, Johannes, and others. Danmarks Riges Historie. Kjobenhavn [1897-1907]. 6 v. and index. This cooperative history of Denmark is an authoritative summary by modern Danish scholars, each of whom is a spe- ciaHst in his particular field. Vol. IV (1588-1699) is by Prof. J. A. Fridericia, and Vol. V by Prof. Edvard Holm. The latter has paid considerable attention to the East and West India companies and has not hesitated to make use of their records in his study. Thaarup, Frederick. Veiledning til det Danske Monarkies Statistik. Kjobenhavn, 1794. 2ded. 767 p. This work appeared in a number of new editions during the next quarter century. It presents a considerable body of bibliographical, statistical, and descriptive material (pp. 420- 443). WiNTERBOTHAM, W. An historical, geographical, commercial and philosophical view of the United States of America, and of the European settle- ments in America and the West Indies. New York, 1812. (1st Am. ed.) 4 v. Vol. IV, pp. 329-330: Danish West Indies. Maps and Illustrations (Unpublished) "Carte des konigl. Danischen Westindische Eilandes St. Thomas unter den [ ] Grad. [ ] Minut. nordlicher Breite belegen." Size: 28 x 48 cm. This undated manuscript map of St. Thomas appears on the same sheet with the map of St, Croix listed below. It was probably made between 1715 and 1730. It is the earliest known map showing St. Thomas under Danish possession, and is here reproduced for the first time. (Royal Library, Copenhagen.) "Carte De LTsle De Sainte Croix Danoise situee sous le 18me m. de Lat. Septen." Size: 28 x 48 cm. This map, the names on which are written in the same hand as in the preceding map, has in its upper left-hand corner the following legend: "Maison de Monsieur du Bois dernier Vice 282 BIBLIOGRAPHY Gouverneur de I'isle pour sa Majes. tres Chr6tieiine Tan 1734." From this, it would appear that the island was occupied when the Danes came over to take it in full possession in January, 1735. As there is no evidence indicating occupation, however, it is possible that the map is misdated. "KoRT over Etlandet St. Croix udi America Saaledes som det ved en acurat udmaaling er hejunden med Qvarterernes Navne og enhver Plantagies Nummer . . . tegnet af I. M. Beck." Size: 47 x 72.5 cm. This map was engraved in 1754 and dedicated to Adam Gotlob Moltke. On a copy in the Royal Library, on which is written "Saaledes befunden i July Maaned 1766," is to be found filled in ink the names of all the plantation owners and the locations of the sugar mills. The plans of the towns "Chris- tianstsed" and " Fredericksstsed " are inserted in the engraving. (Royal Library.) "Af Teigning ojr. St. Croussis Bye." This crude, undated representation of "St. Croix's town" was apparently made shortly after the occupation of the island, and intended to show the appearance of Christiansted. (State Archives.) " Forestilling af Wcerfet paa Oen St. Croix i Westindien . . . forfoerdiget af H. G. Beenfeldt 1815." Although made long after the Company's dissolution, the lively scene on the Christiansted waterfront at St. Croix is fairly typical of the eighteenth century on that island. The sailing ships riding at anchor in the harbor, the fort, the bat- teries, and the provision houses, the red-coated soldiers and the negroes with their burdens, the white aristocrats in their car- riages or on horseback, the sugar casks piled up on the square, even the ubiquitous goat and the humble mule, — all are typical of St. Croix in its palmy days. Vessels flying the flag of the United States may be seen in the harbor. (State Archives.) Early Printed Maps (Eighteenth Century) "Die Insel Sanct Thomas mil den mehresten Plantagen 1767." "Die Insel Sainte Croix mit den Namen der Plantagen die bestoendig sind . . . 1767." These two maps, engraved by Paul Ktiffner of Nuremberg, are to be found in Oldendorp's Geschichte der Mission (listed among the printed works above) . Both show locations of plan- tations and mills. BIBLIOGRAPHY 283 OxHOLM, Peter Lotharius. Charte over den Danske Oe St. Croix i America forfaerdiget i Aaret 1794- og udgivet i Aaret 1799. . . . Size: 67 x 174 cm. Oxholm's map (engraved by G. N. Angelo, Copenhagen) was reproduced by Laurie and Whittle of London in 1804. The legend on the English map is misleading in that it states that the map is made "From an actual survey made in 1794-1799." Another edition of the Oxholm map was published by the Hydrographical office in London on March 1, 1831. Oxholm, P. L. Charte over den Danske Oe St. Jan i America Optaget i Aaret 1780, og Udgivet i Aaret 1800. . . . Size: 60 X 98.5 cm. Maps Printed Since 1800 HoRNBECK, H. B. St. Thomas Dansk Americansk optaget i 1835-39 ved Barometer og Vinkel Maaling . . . tegnet i 18^5 af J. Chr. Petersen Tegner ved Sokaart Archivet. This map is reproduced in J. P. Knox, Historical account of St. Thomas. "De DANSKE Atlanterhaysoer " (publ.). Kort over Dansk Vestindien. Maps of all three islands are printed in Afsnit IV, Dansk Vestindien (Kjobenhavn, 1908). BORGESEN, F. Map of the Danish West Indian Islands. Reproduced in Botanisk Tidsskrift. Bd. 29. The reefs and depths of surrounding waters are indicated. Eggers, H. F. a. (Baron). " Vegetationskort over St. Croix," in Videnskabelige Meddelelser fra Naturhistorisk Forening i Kjobenhavn for Aaret 1876. A map showing the distribution of vegetation on St. Croix. i APPENDIXES APPENDIX A GOVERNORS IN THE WEST INDIES AND IN GUINEA (1) GOVEHNOB8 IN THE WEST INDIES FROM THE BEGINNING, IN THE TEAB 16711 In the West Indies, the first governor who took possession of the island of St. Thomas on May 25, 1672, was JoRGEN IvERSEN, who was succeeded by NicoLAi EsMiT, who received his appointment on Septem- ber 10, 1679, and was deposed by Adolph Esmit, his brother, who was to have been relieved by Jorgen Iversen, who again started out [for the West Indies] in November, 1682, on the ship Hafmanden (Merman), where he was killed by mutineers, whereupon the said Adolph Esmit was supplanted by Gabriel Milan, who was appointed in 1684; but because of bad conduct, Gabriel Milan and Adolph Esmit were sent home as prisoners by Commissioner Michel Michelsen, and [they] arrived here in October, 1686, and meantime Christopher Heins was vice governor until March, 1688, when Adolph Esmit again arrived in St. Thomas and took com- mand, having gone thither in the ship Maria [under the com- mand of] vice admiral Hoppe, but vice admiral Hoppe took him home a prisoner and arrived here in October, 1688, so that Christopher Heins again became vice governor until 1690 [when] he died and was succeeded by JoHAN LoRENSEN.2 In that year the lesseeship [of St. Thomas] began under Jorgen Thormohlen, who installed Frans de la Vigne as governor of St. Thomas, but Johan Lorentz remained in the meanwhile as vice governor and looked out for the Company's interests, also made a journey home, during the period of the lease, and went out again [to 1 From P. Manager, Historisk Efterretning . . . pp. 213 et seq. The spell- ing of proper names employed by Manager is followed here. This work is dated 1753, hence was compiled nearly two years before the Company's dissolu- tion. The translation is avowedly literal. - Rendered as John Lorentz in text. [285] 286 APPENDIX A St. Thomas], and remained as vice governor until February 19, 1702, when he died and was succeeded by Claus Hansen, who was advanced on the spot [to governor] ad interim, and was confirmed [by the directors remaining in oflSce] until his death, February 8, 1706, when JocHUM VON HoLTEN succeeded him [and remained in office] until December 21, 1708, when he died. His place was taken by the interim commandant DiDERicH MoGENSEN, who was relieved in 1710 by Michel Crone, who died August 8, 1716, and was succeeded by Erich Bredal, in whose time the island of St. John was occupied. He was succeeded in April, 1724, by Friderich Moth » who was succeeded late in May, 1727, by Hendrich Suhm, "Commandeur Capitain" who came from Fort Christiansborg in Guinea, and untU February 21, 1733, he remained on St. Thomas when he was relieved by Phillip Gardelin in whose time, namely in the above year, 1733, the rebellion of negroes on St. John began. Later, on February 21, 1736, his place was taken by Friderich Moth, who became governor of the island of St. Croix on June 12, 1734, which island was occupied by him in that same year, and [who] was, on February 21, 1736, made governor general of aU the Company's three islands, St. Thomas, St. John and St. Croix, [remaining] until April 13, 1744, when he was succeeded by Christian Schweder, who was commissioned as command- ant of the fort (Castellet) and Christiansfort on St. Thomas and St. John, and head ^ of the privy council in matters affect- ing all three islands; and he was relieved on April 25, 1747, by Christian Suhm, who was installed as vice commandant and governor over St. Thomas and St. John, and head of the privy council of St. Croix, but later in the same year he was exempted from [his] St. Croix duties, since a governor and privy council have been placed over St. Croix alone, so that he is still vice commandant and governor of the islands St. Thomas and St. John in the West Indies. On St. Croix, on the other hand, there have been since the beginning of the year 1734: Friderich Moth, and during his absence Gregers Hog Nissen was named on February 24, 1736, as •^Otto Jacob Thambsen served as governor for a few months after Bredal. See above, p. 184. * "Forste Stemme." APPENDIX A 287 "chief" ad interim^ and judge on the said [island of] St. Croix, [where he continued] until April 16, 1744, when he was replaced by Paul Lindemark, who was likewise "chief" ad interim, and treasurer on St. Croix in Commandant Schweder's absence. He continued until May 15, 1747, when his place was taken by Jens Hansen, who was commissioned as governor of St. Croix in the same year, [in which position he remained] until December, 1751, when he was relieved by Peder Clausen, who is still governor on the said island of St. Croix. (2) GOVERNORS IN GUINEA FROM THE YEAR 1650 ^ So far as is known from the account of H[artwig] Meyer ^ to the Company, hereinbefore referred to, Henning Abrecht appears in the year 1650 to have estab- lished a "lodge" on the Guinea coast near Ac[c]ra, and to have resided 18 [Danish.?] miles from that place at the Danish cita- del,8 Friderichsberg, which lodge was, in 1659, made into a small fort at which there was placed in charge Christian Cornelisen as factor, and [who] had it changed to a fortress, which is now Christiansborg, after which Peter Valck is said to have been in command of the fort, Fredericksberg, but, because of his bad conduct, held as a slave by the black king; and Peter Bolt the then factor, did in the year 1679 in traitorous fashion sell the fort Christiansborg to the Portuguese nation, thereafter fleeing from the coast of Guinea. Magnus Pranger arrived at Fort Friderichsberg in Guinea, from Copenhagen, in February, 1681, bringing with him his majesty's orders to the then provisional commander, Peter Vitth and commissioner Johan Ulrich, as well as [to] all those who were in authority, to the effect that they were to seize the forts Fridericksberg and Christiansborg together with the lodges in Guinea, [and they] bestirred themselves to retake the said fort, Christiansborg, from the Portuguese, but in vain; mean- time Magnus Pranger died in that same year, 1681, and was succeeded by ^ As Interims Cheff Nissen was to officiate in Governor Moth's place during the latter's absence. ^ P. Manager, Historisk Efterretning . . . . The peculiar form of these lists has made a rather literal translation seem desirable. ' Ibid. pp. 75 et seq. Cf. above, p. 21. * Hoved Castell. 288 APPENDIX A CoNEAD BuscH, chicf factor, who remained but 10 days at the helm of the government of Fort Friderichsberg, when, be- cause of his bad conduct, he was replaced by Hans Lucke, lieutenant at said fort, Friderichsberg, [and] who, after the Portuguese had, in 1682, acting on royal orders, abandoned it, took possession of Fort Christiansborg in the Company's name, and placed in charge there Peter Hofman, factor, who had come out from Gliickstad to Guinea; and Fort Friderichsberg was sold by the above Hans Lticke and Peter Hofman to the English commandant at Cape Cors, who took it into possession in the year 1685, whereupon Liicke, together with Hofman and Lorens Lassen came to Christiansborg. Thereafter Lyke (Liicke) died and Hofman » and Lassen returned to Denmark so that NicoLAi Fensman in the year 1688 became governor at the fort of Christiansborg after which JoRGEN Meyer, [who had been appointed] commander [in] 1691, for and by Nicolai Jansen Arf[f], took possession of Fort Christiansborg, and in 1692, Nicolai Fensman again came out [to Guinea] in Nicolai Jansen Arf[f]'s service, but returned, and thereafter Harding Peterson was made governor. In the same year, 1693, because of said Harding Petersen's careless supervision, the fort was taken by the blacks. But when two of Nicolai Jansen Arf[f]'s ships came out, the merchants who accompanied them, Hartwig Meyer and Johan Trane, concluded a treaty by which Fort Christiansborg was delivered back to them, whereupon Thomas Jacobsen was installed as governor; and when Nicolai Jansen Arff abandoned the trade, Erich Olsen Lygaard was in the year 1698 placed as gov- ernor of said Christiansborg in the name of the Company, as it had taken up the Guinea trade; and he was relieved by Johan Trane, who left here in August, 1698, and was suc- ceeded by Hartvig Meyer, who left here in August, 1702 [and re- mained there] until April, 1704, when he died and was succeeded ad interim by Peder Sverdrup who likewise died, in May, 1705, when he was succeeded by Peder Pedersen. Meantime, in order to release Hartvig Meyer, there was sent out from here once more Erich Olsen Lygaard, who left Copenhagen in December, 1704, [and] who died, and was succeeded by " Derefter dode Lyke og Hofman og Lassen repair ierede saa at . . . APPENDIX A 289 Frans Boye, who in the year 1711 departed over Holland or England to relieve the said Lygaard; and he was in turn re- lieved in 1717 by Knud Rost, who died and was succeeded by David Herbn, who left in the capacity of factor on Janu- ary 22, 1723, [and] into whose place advanced, ad interim Christian Synderman, who was relieved in April, 1724, by Hendrich Suhm, " Commandeur Capitain," who was sent to St. Thomas and sailed thither March 4, 1727, Frederick Pahl advancing into his place, and shortly there- after dying. The latter was followed ad interim by Andreas Willumsen, who was succeeded on December 24, 1728, by Andreas Pedersen Waeroe, who was to have been relieved by "Cammer Raad" Andreas Jorgensen, who left in June, 1733, but [who] died en route, so that he [Waeroe] remained until August 12, 1735, when his place was taken by Severin Schiellerop, councilor of chancery, i" who died June 15, 1736, and was succeeded ad interim by Enevold Nielsen Borris, who died June 20, 1740, and was succeeded ad interim by Peter Nicolai Jorgensen, who, on May 25, 1743, gave up his position to Christian Glob Dorph who was relieved by JoRGEN BiLLSEN on February 3, 1744, and when, on March 11, 1745, he died, he was succeeded ad interim by Thomas Broek, who died on the 23rd [of March, and] on whose place there stepped ad interim JoHAN Wilder, who died April 23, 1745, and likewise was succeeded ad interim by August Friderich Hackenburg, whose place was taken in June 21, 1746, by Joost Platfus, who was relieved on March 6, 1751, by Magnus Christopher Lutzow, Major, who arrived at the fort of Christiansborg on March 6, 1751, and passed away on the 8th of the same month, when he was succeeded ad interim by Magnus Hachsen, who died July 21, 1752, and was followed ad interim by Carl Engman, who is now governor ad interim of Fort Christiansborg in Guinea, ^° Cancellie Raad. APPENDIX B DIRECTORS AND BOARD OF SHAREHOLDERS IN COPENHAGEN DIRECTORS OP THE COMPANY ' Name Appointed Term closed Jens Juel Mar. 11, 1671 1681 Peder Pedersen Lerke " " Mar. (.") 1680 Hans Nansen " " " " Herman Meyer 2 Apr. 7,1680 July 1,1681 Peder Bladt " " " Mauritz van der Thy ^ " " " " Claus Sohn " " " Herman(?) Meyer July 1, 1681 1682 Hans Nansen " " Edvard Hoist " Jens Juel 1682 1700 Albert Gyldensparre « " 1697 (?) Jorgen Ehlers 6 1688 1697 (?) IverHoppe " 1697 (?) Jens Juel 1697 Mathias Moth [before 1697] Kristian Braem ^ 1697 Jochum F. Rohde " Johan Gotf ried Becker " Jacob Lerke Kristian Schupp May 28, 1700 Karl Ahlefeldt. May 7, 1703 Laurens de Boysset Sept. 12, 1712 Frederik Rostgaard " " Kristen Berregaard Jan. 11, 1723 Ferdinand Anthon " " Severin Junge Dec. 4, 1727 ^ Modern Danish usage has been followed as far as possible in the spelling of the proper names here listed. Many of the names are of men prominent in Danish-Norwegian history, whose biographies may be found in Dansk Biog- rafisk Lexikon, edited by C. F. Bricka. 2 Meyer and his three colleagues were elected ad interim. ' Or Morits V. de Thee. * Albert Schumacher, a brother of Griffenfeld. * Or Elers. ^ Braem, Rohde, Becker and Lerke were merely "acting directors." [290] APPENDIX B 291 Name Appointed Term closed Hans Jbrgen Soelberg Dec. 4, 1727 Abraham Klocker " " Gregorius Klauman June 16, 1730 Ferdinand Anthon (Laurwigen) 1732 Sept. 12, 1732 Severin [de] Junge ^ " Kristen Berregaard " Hans J. Soelberg " Gregorius Klauman " Otto Blome, chairman Sept. 26, 1733 Severin [dej Junge Thomas Bartholin Frederik Holmsted F[rederik] Seckman H.J. Soelberg Gregorius Klauman Emst Ulrick Dose Apr. 14, 1735 Lorens Kreyer ^ " " Karl Adolf von Plessen Sept. 10, 1735 Adolf Andreas von der Liihe Nov. 17, 1736 Peter Lemvig Dec. 28, 1737 Jacob Kling " " Herman L. Klocker May 9, 1741 Johan Frederik Wewer Mar. 18, 1747 Joost von Hemert " " Andreas Biom " " [Gotthilf] Just Fabritius » " Adam Gotlob Moltke i» Mar. 3, 1750 Johannes Valeur ^^ Sept. 14, 1751 DIRECTORS OF THE SUGAR REFiNERT ^^ F. Seckman 1729 1734 G. Klauman " " H. J. Soelberg " " F. Holmsted 1735 Dec. 28, 1737 G. Klauman " " ^ Junge received his patent of nobility in 1731. ^ Or Laurents Kreyer. ' Resigned very soon after his appointment. ^° ProBses or chairman. " When Manager wrote (1753), the directors were Moltke, Klocker, Wewer, Hemert, and Valeur. ^^ The management of the refinery was taken over by all the directors of the Company on March 9, 1750. 292 APPENDIX B Name Appointed Term closed F. Holmsted 1737 Mar. 3, 1750 G. Klauman " " " P. Lemvig " " " BOARD OP SHAREHOLDERS OP THE COMPANT {Hovedpartidpanter) Kort Adder Mar. 11, 1671 1679 Frederik Poggenberg " " " Niels Juel Sept. 1679 July 1, 1681 Claus Sohn " " " '' [Mikkel] Wibe July 1, 1681 Meyer " " Gregorius Fleischer " " Jens Tolder (Rosenheim) Dec. " [Jorgen] Ehlers 1' " Abraham Wust " " WUhelm Mule " 1697 Paul Winding " Peder Lemvig " Paul Eggers " Laurens de Boyssett Apr. 29, 1698 Sept. 12, 1712 Vincens Lerke June 26, 1703 Kasper G. von Moltke May, 1704 Kristen Berregaard May 1, 1713 Jan. 11, 1723 Severin Junge " " Dec. 4, 1727 Olaus Judicher Jan. 11, 1723 Hans J. Soelberg " " Dec. 4,1727 Abraham Klocker " " Gregorius Klauman i^ Mar. 13, 1728 June 16, 1730 i [Frederik] Seckman " " Urban Bruun " " Frederik Holmsted ^^ Apr. 7, 1728 j K. A. von Plessen Sept. 26, 1733 | Ernst Ulrik Dose " " April, 1735 | Laurents Kreyer " " Peter Lemvig " " Dec., 1737 Herman Lengerken Klocker " " * May, 1741 I Adolf Andreas v. d. Luhe Apr. 14, 1735 Nov., 1736 " Or Elers. i< Or MuUe. ^^ The sugar refinery was united with the Company and managed by a com- mittee of the directors. Soelberg and Klauman were elected on October 7. " Reappointed in 1732. APPENDIX B 29S Name Appointed Term closed Jacob Kling Apr. 14, 1735 Dec, 1737 Hans Gram Nov. 17. 1736 Johannes Valeur. . Dec. 28, 1737 Sept. 14, 1751 Iver Jentofft " " Frans Fseddesen " " Kristian Lucas Klauman Mar. 9, 1741 [Kristian] Stockfleth Mar. 3, 1750 Jesper Richardt " " OlufBlach " Peter Boertman Feb. 24, 1751 Adam Christian Oelgod " " Lyder Schilderop ^^ Sept. 14, 1751 " At the time that Mariager wrote (1753) the board of shareholders consisted of Blach, Boertman, Oelgod, and Schilderop. APPENDIX C THE FIRST CHARTER OF THE DANISH WEST INDIA COMPANY ^ On March 11, 1671, by a charter most graciously granted by his royal Majesty, King Christian the Fifth, the Company was established for the benefit of commerce and for the general wel- fare which thereon depends. . . . In the said . . . charter the Company is graciously per- mitted to have, use, enjoy and retain in its possession the island of St. Thomas in the Caribbees, and other islands in the vicin- ity or on the mainland in America, with the following privileges, namely : (1) To be permitted in the name of his Majesty to form alliance with either governments in the West Indies; To be allowed in case of violence or attack to employ means adequate for defense and offense; But in case European lords, potentates, or states cause trouble to the Company, it must first refer the matter to the king, although if the others should begin the use of violence, the Company must defend itself. If it shall be considered necessary, his Majesty will not alone furnish the Company with the needed credentials but will also send to all foreign potentates such communications as the Com- pany's interests may require. (2) The Company may build such forts, lodges and offices as they may deem necessary [upon St. Thomas], and also upon such islands and lands as are uninhabited and belong to no other power, and if such possession is effected by the Company, the lands must belong to the Company. His Majesty will appoint and ordain commandants and governors suitable for the Company's service, after considering the recommendation of the Company, and will, moreover, especially order them to labor for the Company's best interests; nor shall they be paid higher salaries than the condition of the Company's finances will justify. 1 Translated from P. Manager, Historiske Efterretninger, pp. 2 et seq. The original, with which this has been compared, is to be found in Registrant over Vestindiske Sager, 1671-1699. See also C. P. Rothe's Rescripter for Norge, Island . . . og de Indiske Besiddelser . . . 2 Bd. Mariager's paragraphing has been retained. [294] APPENDIX C 295 (3) The commandants and others m the Company's employ must not do any trading except on the Company's account.^ (4) Durmg the first three years, his Majesty will loan the Company a ship, which will be fitted out with all necessities, and for the use of which the Company will pay nothing during the first year, on condition that the Company shall give [to the king] one-half of all woods, pock-wood or other kinds, which they carry, and likewise one-half of such quantity of salt as they may secure there. But if they carry other goods, then they must pay 30 rdl. in freight for each 4,000 Ibs.^ But for the succeeding years, they are to give 40 rdl. per LoBst or 4000 lbs. although they are not to pay for woods and the like which are used as ballast, nor to pay freight on more than is dehvered here on their return. And in order that they may in the course of time the more easily come to own their own ships, the Company shall be per- mitted, as soon as their means will allow it, to furnish them- selves a flute ship for securing salt from Spain, in which [trade] they may enjoy the same privileges as the largest mounted ships sailing to Spain, although such ships be not built especially with a view to defence. His Majesty will also loan the Company one of his small yachts, which they may retain there in the islands for three years, and if it cannot be sent hither then, the Company shall not be held liable to pay. Similarly, his Majesty will loan to the Company sailors to go with the Company's ships, on condition that the Company pay the men as high wages as they have enjoyed in the king's service, and furnish them with the needed provisions and board so long as they are on board ship. And the Company's ships may fly his Majesty's flag, and are also to be provided with the proper passports. (5) Those ministers of the gospel who return from thence and have comported themselves well will be appointed by his Majesty to such places as may be vacant, and are to be sup- ported during the interval by the funds of the marine department. (6) His Majesty's seamen who are placed in the service of the Company are to be subject to the directors' orders so long as the journey lasts, and the latter are to include them in their oath of allegiance. 2 They were also forbidden to enter into any war or to take an offensive action against either Europeans or Indians, except on the advice and with the consent of the directors, and under no circumstances were they to wage war against a European power without the royal consent. Cf. C. P. Rothe, Rescripter. ' One LcBst contained four thousand Danish pounds. ^96 APPENDIX C (7) So long as the Company exists, none other than it, neither his Majesty's own subjects nor foreigners, shall receive any passports or permission to trade with the West Indies in any fashion whatsoever, upon penalty of confiscation of ship and goods ; and such ships as the Company is able to seize, either by its own ships or freight vessels, it may retain, except the tenth part, which share of all prizes goes to his Majesty's Admiral of the Realm.* (8) The Company's ships or property, either in general or in particular, is not to be subject to seizure or to any other use whatever without the Company's consent, nor shall any other obstacle be placed in its way whether in time of peace or in time of war, but trade shall always be permitted to run its free and undisturbed course. (9) Everything needed for the equipment, cargo and fitting out of the Company's ships shall be exempt from duty, but all goods brought in from the [West] Indies shall be carefully listed, . . . those exported to foreign lands, shall be subject to a duty of one per cent, and those remaining within the realm, to two and one-half per cent., for which account must be ren- dered at the close of each year. (10) The Company is also permitted to have its own weights and measures, and to use these in all cases although they must conform to those weights and measures which are in use here in Copenhagen. (11) And since the said Company is an entirely new enter- prise, and no one has yet been placed in charge of it, and since it is highly necessary that persons be appointed at once to take charge of the collecting of capital and of securing the necessary goods [for the venture] [at the proper time], these persons are hereby chosen and authorized to act as directors: Jens Juul ^ chancery councilor and vice president of the Board of Trade, Peter Pedersen Lerche, justice in the supreme court and a mem- ber of the Board of Trade, and Hans Nansen,!^ likewise a mem- ber of the Board of Trade. To these three shall be added three of the Company's shareholders, by a majority vote, as soon as a sufficient number of shareholders have joined the Company. His Majesty has also . . . granted the sharieholders the right to fill vacancies on the board of directors, provided the places are filled from among the stockholders who have invested not ■• Rigsadmiral. ■^ Juel. ^ Rendered incorrectly as Hansen in C. P. Rothe's Rescrifter. APPENDIX C 297 less than 2,000 sldl. in the Company, — all in accordance with the proposals of the Reglement drawn up by the Board of Trade. (12) The said Company is also to be allowed to have its own court, so that the directors may try and render judgment in all disputes and cases concerning themselves and their employees, which arise out of the [West] Indian trade; from which forum there shall be no appeal, except to the supreme court. (13) And all artisans, laborers and seamen who come from foreign places to enter the Company's service, shall enjoy the same treatment that his Majesty's subjects enjoy, and they as well as their surviving wives and children, shall be exempt from the payment of sixths and tenths when they receive a furlough from the Company and proceed out of the kingdom. . . . (14) And inasmuch as the Company has need of men to build and defend the places and lodges which they need for their security, as well as for the peopling of the colonies and the cultivation and settling of the land, it is permitted to take two enlisted men from each company from among the strong, in- dustrious men who are married and know some trade, and also as many as may be needed of those who have been condemned to prison or put in irons, for use on plantations or elsewhere; and of women, as many as may be desired from among those whose unseemly lives have brought them into prison or a house of correction,^ (15) The Company is also permitted, by royal favor, to have as much space as they may need for meetings, the safe-keeping of moneys, and for offices, in the upper part of the stock ex- change, while for pack houses and magazine it is to have the vaults and space formerly occupied by the salt company, which places shall be assigned them by the Board of Trade. (16) It is permitted, moreover, that if the Gluckstadt African Company is unable to give satisfactory assurances of its ability to continue its career on the lines already planned, the West India Company shall be allowed to take up said Com- pany's work with the same privileges and exemptions as the Gluckstadt company now has, although in such a case they shall pay said company for all its entire stock of pieces, guns, and ammunition, and also permit it to remove such goods as it may have on hand, and to collect its outstanding debts there, unless some other arrangement is made between the two com- panies. But inasmuch as the forts revert Ex direlicto to his Majesty, ^ Spindehuset eller andetsteds. 298 APPENDIX C he will hand them over to the Company's possession and reten- tion without any dues. Finally, the privilege of using his Majesty's seal in such cases as the advancement of commerce seems to require is by especial royal favor and grace granted to those servants of the Company in the [West] Indies who have charge of its business. Which most gracious charter is dated [at] Copenhagen, March 11, A[nn]o 1671. APPENDIX D CHARTER OF 1697 FOR THE WEST INDIA AND GUINEA COMPANY ^ C[hristian] 5 to whomsoever this may come, greeting: Inas- much as we have most graciously recommended the directors of our West India Company to take up the Guinea trade, in order the better to facilitate the said commerce, we have most graciously furnished our West India and Guinea Company with this our charter. The Company is to continue in possession of the island of St. Thomas in the West Indies, likewise Crab island, St. John, item the fortress Christiansborg in Guinea, together with such lands and forts as they might hereafter secure possession of, and is alone to be permitted to trade therewith, and is, without pay- ment of dues to us, to enjoy any and all profit which might therefrom ensue. 2 The Company may take and retain in full possession all those islands which it owns and which are still uninhabited, such as Crab Island, St. John, and the like, as well as all those places on the mainland of Africa and America which are not already taken possession of by other European nations, and [it may] permit forts and lodges to be built thereon; and any profit that may result from such occupation shall likewise be the Company's to enjoy and to retain, without any dues, let or hindrance. 3 The Company may enter into such contracts and alliances with governments in Africa and America as seem best for the furtherance of commerce, and when it is necessary, we shall assist it with our credentials and recommendations, but it must not enter into negotiations with European potentates or states without previously securing our consent; for, when the Com- pany requests it, we shall graciously take it [i. e., such nego- tiations] up, and labor for the welfare of the Company. 1 Translated from Registrant over Vestindiske Sager, 1671-1699 {Rigsarkiv). [299] 800 APPENDIX D No one, whether he be a subject or a foreigner, excepting the Company alone, may hereafter enjoy the use of our . . . pass- ports,2 or be permitted to sail to Mrica or America, and still less to trade with the Company's lands, forts or lodges, but if some of our subjects should nevertheless venture to trade with the places and lands indicated, without the Company's per- mission, they shall be liable, whenever they may be found, to lose ship and cargo and whatever they may have with them, which shall all fall to the Company, without any dues to us. All goods of whatever kind, without exception, which the Company may ship from our lands and dominions to Africa and America, as, well as all sorts of goods which the Company may order and import from foreign places or from our own lands for the furtherance of trade [or for] the fitting out and provisioning of ships, shall be entirely free and exempt from customs duties, food taxes, excise, and all other dues, by whatever name they might be known, which shall include those which are already forbidden, as well as those which may hereafter be forbidden. So also all ships and vessels which the Company now owns or hereafter may own shall be exempt from all harbor and tonnage dues as well as from all other burdens aforementioned. But those goods which the Company ships from Africa or America to Denmark (excepting gold, which shall be exempt from cus- toms dues or any other kind whatsoever) shall be subject to the following tariffs : one per cent, on such goods as are shipped to foreign states (?) [fremmede ster], and two and one-half per cent, on goods consumed in our realms and lands. 6 The Company's ships and effects must not be liable to seiz- ure, except in such cases where someone has advanced an appre- ciable sum of money for the Company's benefit in return for the notes of the directors and in such cases, the person who has in his possession the directors' notes may, in case of default of payment, have the directors summoned before our supreme court and may there secure judgment against them, after which judgment, he may seize any of the Company's effects, and se- cure his payments out of those. * S6e faaaer. APPENDIX D 301 And in order that the trade of the Company may the better be continued and directed, we have seen fit to permit and to order that the shareholders may select from among them- selves, by a majority vote, six men, or a greater number if need be, who are to serve as directors, of which six or more, one-third shall be of our ministers or servants, and the other two-thirds reputable merchants from this city, although no one may be selected to act as director unless he has invested, at the very least, 1,000 rixdoUars in the Company; which directors shall have full power and authority to dispose of all the Company's means and effects, in Europe as well as in Africa and America, and to make all needful arrangements upon the Company's be- half; and when any of the directors die, others shall be selected in the aforesaid manner. 8 The said directors are herewith authorized to appoint and to dismiss all employees of the Company who serve on land or sea, whether in Europe, Africa, or America, and to issue such instructions to them as they may deem needful for the Com- pany's interests; which employees shall be duly bound to carry out the orders of the directors on pain of punishment according to the gravity of the case. But such as are chosen by the direc- tors, acting for the Company, as governors and commandants of the forts in Africa or in America, must be furnished with our . . . confirmation of their ofiBce, which shall in due course be granted upon the application of the directors. 9 The Company is also to be permitted to have its own court, so that the directors may either themselves try all cases and decide all difficulties concerning the Company's employees (so long as they are actually in the Company's service and have not rendered proper account of their stewardship), or [they may] name two or more shareholders, who may do this work on the Company's behalf; and such judgments shall not be appealed from, unless someone's honor or life is involved; for in such cases, and such only, shall it be permitted to the condemned to come before the supreme court in a new trial. 10 Likewise the Company is also to be permitted to have its own weights and measures, and to use these in all cases, although 302 APPENDIX D they must conform to those weights and measures which we have ordained shall be used throughout our realms and lands. 11 The Company's own artisans, as well as the master here in the city, are to be permitted without let or hindrance to carry through all that the directors have asked them to do for the furtherance of the Company's trade, and to do this in such manner as the directors may deem that the best interests of the Company demand. 12 The Company is permitted to use unstamped paper in all its departments of business, which shall be accepted in all places and in every court at just as high a [legal] value as though it were stamped. 13 The directors are to be allowed to pay such a rate of interest on moneys which they may have borrowed for the Company's use and for the promotion of its trade as they can agree upon with those concerned, and those notes which the directors thus issue on the Company's behalf are in all ways to be as valid as though all the shareholders had signed them, and they are to be accepted as letters of exchange. 14 The directors may themselves select God-fearing decent and learned persons as ministers, who shall teach the pure Lutheran doctrine on the islands and in the forts of the Company in Africa and America as well as on its ships, and who shall serve the people in matters affecting their souls' welfare. Whenever they have been named and called by the directors, we shaU con- firm them in their office, and if they show themselves to be well instructed and of proper behavior, we shall in due time, on the application of the directors, give them preference to others in the matter of securing positions as ministers in these, our realms and lands. 15 We do also herewith grant to those servants of the Company who do business for it in the [West] Indies permission to use our seal in cases involving the general welfare and the further- ance of commerce. Forbydendes, etc. Copenhagen, September 28, [16]97. APPENDIX E LETTER OF CHARITE ESMIT TO ADOLPH ESMIT ^ My dearest! We thank God for the good news regardmg your safe arrival in Barbados; though nine weeks old, it was very welcome to everybody. I had heard from various sources about town that letters had arrived. Madame Hoppe had kept hold of her letters three days before she had allowed me to see them. I hope all my letters have arrived, and that you will answer them before the supreme court begins its session and calls upon me for them.2 Last week Milan had the smith, Anna, Karen and the negro Sent called up before the magistrate and had two hundred questions put to them. We had no one there; Munch is out of town on orders from the king, T., our good friend, is on Fiinen, Mickelsen and Captain Meyer have been there [at the magistrate's?]. Milan has managed it so that Sent has taken the sacrament at the French ambassador's. Your brother* will appeal; he has "taken orders" from Sidenborg, which has cost half a hundred rixdoUars, and is to cost me an equal sum, but whence I shall get it I do not know. I am in great hopes that you will send me some [money] but I fear that you will not be able to. May God bless you on your mission, otherwise your reputa- tion here is gone. People here are all awaiting eventualities eagerly; I cannot write all that they say. Be sure that you 1 Breve og Dokumenter, 1683-1689 (Rigsarkiv). This letter, according to a statement signed by C. Heins, H. Irgens, J. Delicaet, and J. Lorentz, arrived in St. Thomas after Adolph Esmit's enforced return in company with vice admiral Hoppe. It had come via France and a Brandenburg bark had brought it from St. Eustatius. The letter was written in English, Madame Esmit's native tongue, but only the Danish translation is to be found in the Company's ar- chives. The paragraphing is that of the translator. ^ Jeg forhaaber at i cdle mine Brefve har hekommet, i ville snart sende tnig Svar derpaa fdrend dend Hoyeste Rcett Kommer og bestille dem til mig som jeg Eder hafver beedet. ' Nicholas Esmit. See above, p. 46, et seq. The Sidenborg referred to can- not be Jacob Sidenborg, since the latter died March 31, 1685, after having been secretary to, and a member of, the Board of Trade. 1 303 ] 304 APPENDIX E don't forget to write to Luxdorph,* Harbo,^ and Baron Juell; « you must also write to Moth,^ Mule « and to those whom you wish to retain as your friends. They are all expecting it. Do not forget the directors, for we are under their thumbs. There are no news from the Red Cock and the schooner.^ I have had the matter herewith enclosed with me for six days, but I don't think that it amounts to much. He complains of lack of money, and has told me that you were to send him five to six hundred dollars on account. i" I find that the account appears to be quite large. I hope that it will please God to bless you to the end that we may get away from this people. I believe in my good God, who has never during my life left me in need, and if he wills to spare my life, I shall not remain here in this place after your case is closed. With this post came letters from Guinea [stating] that all the people were rebellious. I believed that it was on St. Thomas. Rosenheim ^^ has been in England and has sold the Guinea fort for 4,000 rdl. I have inquired about your instructions but can get no reply. For God's sake, be careful that you are not caught in others' snares. You must write in quite friendly fashion to the Old Man ^^ so long as I am here. Verily, I am quite melancholy, full of fear, grief and distress. I have been [so] unwell . . . that I have hardly been able to draw my breath. I have taken a purgative, and have had some blood let. Thank God, I am now somewhat better. 1 am unable to get any money from Madame Westervyck; she has none. The president " here in Copenhagen is dead. I do * Bolle Luxdorph had held various positions in the chancery since 1669. In 1680 he became a councilor and secretary to the chancery, in 1684, a councilor of state (Etatsraad), and in 1688, first secretary. ^ Perhaps the Jens Harboe who was first secretary in the war department from 1691 to 1699, and a privy councilor. ^ Jens Juel, the statesman. ^ Matthias Moth. Cf. above, pp. 90-92. * Probably Christian Mule, secretary in the chancery from 1685 to 1697. ' Kreyert. '" Paa hans Regenshahs afkortning. ^^ Jens Tolder {Rosenheim) had become a councilor of commerce (Kommerce- raad) in October, 1681, and in December had been elected to the board of shareholders in the Company. For Guinea negotiations, cf. Manager, Historisk Efterretning, pp. 51 et seq. " Possibly Steen Andersen Bille, "vice commandant" of the city of Copen- hagen. *' This was Peder Resen, the predecessor of Hans Nansen, who became "Pres- APPENDIX E 305 not know what sort of an account your cousin here in Vlissingen " has given you, for he hasn't even troubled himself to answer my letter since your departure. I beg of you to have nothing to do with him. You must not ship the cotton to England; no price can be got for it there. Deldyn seems to be your most reliable man; [he] is of the opinion that sugar and indigo are selling well in England, and he is a good man there. I haven't much confidence in Johan Lorentz and aU those who are associated with you, except [Hendrick] Irgens alone. The good God will guide you. I implore you most heartily, my dearest, to say your prayers to God and to keep him as your friend; then you need have no fear of anything men may do to you. And remember always the former grace, and feel obliged at all times to fear and serve him who has done such great things for you, and always will do. For otherwise you are miserable, poor, poor. Hendriette greets you heartily. When you write, remember to write to Pauli; ^^ he is my friend. You probably know that I have signed MarcoUi's note, and at that time [when it is due], he must have his money. You must write to Claes Sohn,i8 and not forget Mr. Becker. Mr. Fadderbye is the best friend I have here. He sends you his greetings. Adieu, my dearest. That the good God may grant that we shall meet happily once more is the constant prayer of Your affectionate last wife, Charite Esmits. My sincere greetings to the good admiral. His entire family is in good health; his wife is to go to Holstein to her sister's wedding. ident" of Copenhagen July 7, 1688. Resen had been an active member of the Council of State from 1673 to 1676, had become a councilor of justice in 1677, and councilor of state in 1684. He died June 1, 1688. 1* Flushing. ^^ Oliger or Holger Pauli, the 6rst secretary of the Company in its Copenhagen office. 1" Claes or Claus Sohn was elected to the board of shareholders in 1679. Mar- iager, op. cit., 31. APPENDIX F REPORT OF BOARD OF POLICE AND TRADE TO KING FREDERICK IV (1716) Most mighty king, Most gracious hereditary ruler: In accordance with your Majesty's most gracious order, we humbly present herewith our sincere opinion concerning those privileges and [other] matters [in dispute] which the delegates sent out from St. Thomas in America have asked the West In- dian Company to adjudicate that their commerce and means of livelihood might be sustained, [and] which the Company considers that it can not grant them without serious invasion of the rights granted it in the charter. Which points are as follows: Query 1. Whether the inhabitants of St. Thomas may be permitted free trade with their goods, in America as well as in Europe (excepting Copenhagen and Hamburg) without the West India Company's charter being violated by said free trade.' The condition of the island ought to be observed in this con- nection; since it is such that nothing grows there except sugar, cotton-wool of which they make cotton, and millet, which is a sort of plant smaller than rice, and is used mainly by the poorest whites and by the slaves of the land. The nature of the soil and the climate is said to be such that nothing can grow there except beans and other small truck which cannot be taken to Europe; for which reason the inhabitants must necessarily procure from other places all things necessary for food as well as clothing, such as flour, meat, pork, butter, oil, cloths and stuffs, muslin, linen, leather, tobacco, all sorts of implements for cultivating their land, all kinds of tools for trades, and all their equipment of silver, tin, copper, iron and the like. Either the Company must bring these things to the planters in suffi- cient quantity for their daily needs, and at as reasonable a price as they can get them in that region from the English, French, and Spaniard colonies in the vicinity, or they must be allowed to seek them where they may. 1 From Politi- og Commerce-Collegiets Memorial Bog, Bd. 21 (1716-1720), in Copenhagen Municipal Archives {Raadstuearkiv) . The paragraphing is largely that of the translator. See above, pp. 179-180. [ 306'] APPENDIX F 307 Hitherto the Company has not demonstrated its ability to provide them the planters with sufficient of the above-mentioned goods to satisfy their bare needs, — to say nothing of providing a plenty, — and even had they been able to bring in such goods, it would have been impossible, and will be still more so in the future, for them to bring in provisions at as low a price as they could have been secured in the neighboring colonies. For example, how will it be possible to bring in a barrel of English flour weighing 180-190 lbs. net for 6-7 rdl., a bbl. of meat weigh- ing 200 lbs. net at the same price, a barrel of pork for 10-11 rdl., when the price here is very nearly as high? Besides it will also be difficult for the Company to furnish enough provisions to keep those lands properly supplied from one journey to an- other, and if that cannot be done, the inhabitants will surely die of hunger and so the Company would be the loser in the end. For unfortunately, there has not been a year since the first establishment of the Company, when it has been able to fit out and send from here more than a single ship, or at most two ships. How often, indeed, has it not happened, especially in times when these dominions or those of our neighbors have been disturbed by war, that St. Thomas has seen but a single ship every other year ! ^ Next must be considered the goods which must be carried thither, and especially woolen and linen goods, which the Com- pany must itself import from foreign places, and which it cannot, therefore, bring thither at the price at which they can be se- cured in the neighborhood; for either the Company must bring them in at a great loss, or St. Thomas must suffer the mis- fortune of being impoverished by paying exorbitant prices for such goods, and higher prices than are paid on all the sur- rounding islands. And if that happens, the colony will no doubt decay of itself, and the colonists move to other places where prices are more reasonable and there is greater freedom. Besides, it must be taken into consideration that some of the Company's ships on leaving here first sail to Guinea and the African coasts to fetch slaves, which are the very best and most profitable of commodities that can and must be brought to St. Thomas to be sold for the cultivation of the land and the de- velopment of the plantations. Now they are obliged to bring from here a double cargo, part of it to use for provisioning their forts and lodges in Guinea, and for purchasing slaves, and part for the West Indian colony; for which reason the ships that do ^ J a hvor tit og besynderlig i ufreds Tiider saavel her i Rigerne som andensteds er det sheet at St. Thomas ikkun har sect eet Skib fra Compagniet hver Andei Aar. 308 APPENDIX F not sail directly to the colonies are en route so much longer. Meantime the colony is likely to be subject to various dangers, such as violent hurricanes which harry those regions yearly, and often bring great disaster down upon them; sea-robbers, who descend upon the land to rob its inhabitants; sicknesses and other plagues which are likely to increase their misery. All these things may come upon them without their being able by post to advise the Company thereon, and when they do not learn of the colonists' needs and sufferings until the ships arrive in the islands, they cannot bring with them the needed relief. Would it not be un-Christian, then, to forbid them the chance of making their living in the best way that they can, inasmuch as the Company itself is obliged almost every year to supply its own fortress and plantation from New York and [from] the surrounding islands, and ships practically nothing from here [Copenhagen] for their [St. Thomas'] provision? Besides this, there are other goods in the islands, not includ- ing sugar and cotton, which the Company either will not or can not ship out, such as brandy, which they make from sugar cane, beans, cassava, [sweet] potatoes, yams, etc., on which products alone many families who have no plantations live, and which are brought in from other places.* It is indeed a sin that these goods should be lost to commerce, and the families either be forced to starve or to move out. And who would suffer more therefrom than the Company itself which would lose its surest and largest source of income,^ the poll tax. [?] The directors, to be sure, are continually harping upon their privileges and charter, which provides that no one, whoever he may be, excepting themselves alone, may trade with the col- onies, but may not the colony seek its living and trade with outsiders, when the Company itself suffers no hardship thereby, and can secure enough return cargo for its ships [?] It appears, too, that the Company has lost nothing by the free trade which the inhabitants have connived to enjoy during the past few years,^ inasmuch as it has not only had full cargoes for the homeward voyages, but while its ship has been lying in the harbor [in St. Thomas], the Company has frequently disposed of two or three cargoes to other places before its own ship was loaded. The directors may say that this occurred without their knowledge or consent. But it is scarcely believable that ' Alleeniste leve, og andensteds henfores. ■• Intrade. ^ Ved Ind Byggernes Fri Handel, som de nu i nogle Aar afdere^ Connivence hate nydt. . . . APPENDIX F S09 their servant (the governor) should have been a party to such peculation within sight of the Company's own ship, which was to take on all [the cargo] that there M^as and that it could secure and take back to the home land, without special orders or per- mission. It also appears that the Company has not suffered through the free trade thus connived at, since they permit their own plantations, which are the largest and best, to lie uncultivated, and to be used, according to report, only as grazing land for their horses and mules; so that one is inclined to ask how the needed provisions could be obtained upon the island, except through the inhabitants enjoying free trade, which enables them to secure much white and brown sugar from the French colonies. From all of which circumstances, we can by no means con- cede that free trade with the surrounding islands should be for- bidden to the inhabitants, because they should not be subjected to privation as a result of the Company's and colony's pros- perity and growth, because they ought not to be treated with greater severity than the other neighboring colonies round about, since thereby the island might become desolate and other nations might avail themselves of an opportunity to seize it; because they ought not to be treated as serfs and slaves of the Company, since they are, indeed, a free people. If the Com- pany would confine its restrictions to one sort of goods or an- other, which they were not to be allowed to ship out of the is- land, and if it would, on the other hand, agree to take such produce from them at a reasonable price, and also to furnish them with all necessaries, which it cannot possibly do, such as the free use of money," horses, mules, etc., it wouldn't have been so bad, and then the Company and the colony might sub- mit to certain rules, as is the case with Iceland and the Fseroe islands, but now it is making such demands that we can by no means lend it support. It is not necessary to forbid free trade with Europe, except with Hamburg, Bremen and Denmark. Query 2. Whether the Company shall have the right of pre- emption [with respect to colonial goods] in the colony and [if so] at what prices.'' The Company should indisputably have the right of pre- emption, as the Company's store-house must always have a sufficient quantity on hand to furnish full cargoes for its ships on their return voyages. But it ought to be observed that such right of priority should not be abused, either by the Company or by its employees at the forts and lodges, as they have hitherto ' Gratia Contanter. 310 APPENDIX F done to their own profit and the loss and injury of the inhab- itants. For the way the Company's employees there have man- aged and kept the inhabitants from making a living has been improper and ought not to have been tolerated. If the Company could inform the inhabitants how large a cargo it planned to take out, it should certainly furnish its pack houses with the needed quantity; but the Company should, on the other hand, either be obliged to keep up its own plantations, which are the best, or they should sell or rent them to others on such terms as would be considered reasonable on the island. For when these plantations lie uncultivated the colony must make up the difference, and thus they will lack produce to sell to private traders in exchange for provisions. The chief ques- tion of dispute will be the price. The directors maintain that they should secure the produce at one-sixth less than the current market price. The colonists say, on the other hand, that this amounts to more than 16 per cent.,^ and are unable to perceive why they should sell their goods at a better rate than the market price, inasmuch as they are now paying a six per cent, duty on all outgoing goods, whereas previously they paid but four per cent., and where they formerly paid no duties on incoming goods, they now pay five per cent. Hence the Company, after it had permitted free trade ^ now receives seven per cent, more of the colonists' goods than before, and if it should now secure their goods at one-sixth off, it would then secure twenty-three per cent., and poll tax for persons over 16 and 20 years of age, whether they are free or slave, besides; which runs up to a pretty considerable total. It is our firm conviction that the inhabitants [of St. Thomas] have much reason on their side. The prospect of their losing so high a percentage of their produce is hard indeed, since they must not only pay a high price for their plantations, and for living on and cultivating the land, but also pay so large an im- port and export tax, especially [large] in \dew of the necessity of importing from abroad all their food and clothing. What is most to be feared is that the most substantial of the inhabitants will put their heads together and dehberately raise the price of the goods which should be dehvered to the Company. But to that they have replied that such was impossible, for the Company's employees being in business as well as themselves, ' are as well informed concerning the state of the market, and ' Crossed out in MS.: af alle udgaaende Vahre, i staden de ickxin Gave. ^ Siden de Conniverede udi Deresfri Handel. APPENDIX F 311 when they so desire, they can both raise and lower (sic) the price as they please.^ It is our humble opinion that since the Company has already raised their customs duties, both for exports and imports, in which matter the colony will make no protest if those taxes shall remain unchanged where they are at present, it would be very severe, indeed, if the planters should have to dispose of their produce at such a fearful loss; for the Company has already a sufficient handicap, both through its prior right of purchase, and its customs duties. Query 3 is whether or not planters who leave the island should pay the sixths and tenths out of their resources which the di- rectors claim, and which they have never known of nor paid hitherto until the year 1702, when one was compelled to pay it. Besides, when anyone at present comes to the island, they re- ceive from the privy council there a promise of exemption from that tax should they desire to move away. . . .i° For one must distinguish between Europe where such Ahzug Gelder, Nachsteuer, Jus Detractionis, and other [taxes], by what- ever name they might be called, are everywhere in use, and the regions of Africa and America, where they are not used. Here in Europe, it is Jus Gentium, but it is by no means thus in those lands, and if it is not practicable in one place, it is hardly ad- visable to introduce it in another [near at hand] unless the object is to instil a fear of such a place in men's minds, and prevent them from coming there to settle. The directors should con- sider that scarcely one tenth — indeed hardly one tweKth — of the colony consists of native Danes, but most of them are Dutch, Enghsh and French, for there are reported to be not more than ten or twelve Danish famiUes who are in a position to own slaves or plantations or to > carry on trade. The rest are for- eigners. . . ." Query 5.'^^ Whether it is advisable that a number of the leading inhabitants shall have seats in the council or the courts, in matters concerning the internal affairs of the island .^^ The directors oppose this, since they fear the inhabitants will become too greedy for power and encroach by intrigue upon the Company's sovereignty and commercial privileges." But we are of the opinion that if their rights are limited to certain fields, ^ Hvorefter de meest faar at rette Sig. '" Various elaborate arguments against these taxes are here omitted. '1 Arguments favoring various definite immunities and guarantees along the lines above indicated conclude the reply to Query 3. ^^ Query 4 does not appear in the MS. ^^ Intriguer e sig udi Deres Eyendoms Rett of Deres Preference udi Negoeen. §i^ Appendix p such as disputes arising within the islands, De Meo et Tuo and other matters in which the Company is not interested, then a number of the most intelligent and best of the inhabitants should have a place in the courts. But that concerns the [de- partment of] justice and not the Board of Trade. Yet we shall take the liberty of saying that in so far as we have been informed by the [St. Thomas] delegates, the administration of justice there should beyond doubt be recognized and placed upon a different footing; which need is indicated by their complaints concerning the probating of their estates. The remaining grievances and Gravamina have to do with fugitive slaves, the seizure of their vessels, and the like, in which matters we have nothing more to suggest than either the seeking for satisfactory adjustment through your majesty's efforts, or reprisals, if such are possible, or to give blow for blow, for which the Company is too weak. But with respect to the calling or securing of ministers, as well as freedom in the exercise of reli- gion, i* the directors have already promised a remedy. . . . Besides all this, some of us have hit upon the idea that your royal majesty might himself place a commandant at the fort who might be supported from those imposts which the Company draws from the island, such as customs duties and poll tax; and the commandant could defend the inhabitants when any in- justice was done them. Besides, the inhabitants and their property would be more secure against unexpected attack, con- cerning which rumors of danger have gone out this spring, inasmuch as the fort is described as being in so poor a condition that it is to be feared that unless an improvement takes place there will be danger of losing the island. This is discussed in the communication of the [St. Thomas] deputies, art. 2, of May 20, 1716, and further in the letter of the inhabitants dated F[eb- ruary] 24, 1716, already referred to, wherein it appears that for a long time the garrison has consisted of not more than twenty- two soldiers largely incapacitated by lack of food and proper care; for in five or six months they had received no wages, so that they had become desperate [and] wished to be relieved. Besides, for this small garrison, there was not more than one month's provisions, only ten usable pieces, two hundred good balls; no small arms to put in the hands of the inhabitants; the commandant is apparently not a man of military training, but interested more in trade than in looking out for such matters of necessity. . . .^^ ^^ Liber exercitio Religionis. '^ Here the members of the investigating Board failed to agree, J. B. Ernst, A. APPENDIX F 313 Your royal majesty's most humble, dutiful and faithful servants N[iels] Slange J[ohan] Bfertram] Ernst A[ndreas] Franck C[hristian] Braem M[orten] Munck M[arkus] Johansen A[braham] Klocker i^ Board of Police and Trade [Copenhagen] June [?], 1716. To this statement was added the following: Information con- cerning the cargo which the last ship sent by the Company took with it from the fatherland to St. Thomas in the West Indies, Bricks Klincker Tilestones Norwegian planks Rope Pitch and tar, though they planters may be secured cheaper from New York A small quantity of copper work, such as sugar kettles and the like, of which nothing has been sent thither during recent years, so that the have been forced to supply their needs from other sources. Silesian linen Grindstones A small quantity of Liibeck beer Iron Goods which the colony on St. Thomas needs and must pro- cure from other places : Victuals: Meat, pork, butter, etc. May be secured at far lower prices in New York than in Denmark. Goods for clothing, etc. English stuffs, wool and silk stock- ings, woolen and silk puoser (?), camelots, English Bay (?), Hol- land linen, French " Rouan " [Rouen cloth], table-cloths, all kinds of linens from Flanders, Westphalia, Harlem and other places," silk and threads, flax and hemp, lace, pottery, spices, iron im- plements for the cultivation of plantations, domestic imple- ments, sail cloth. From the French islands : sugar, both white and brown, cacao, indigo, ginger, powder, money. Franck, C. Braem, and M. Johansen favoring prompt reinforcements, the others arguing that this matter was not for them, but for the King and the Company to determine. 1^ Of these Braem had been on the directorial board since 1697, and Klocker was to become a director in 1727. ^' The last four or five items "may be had from the English, French, and Dutch islands." 314 APPENDIX F From the Spanish islands: cattle, hides and leather, cacao, Virginia tobacco, money, etc. Exceedingly necessary for sugar mills and plantations: mules from the Spaniards; horses from New York. From the English: Brazil-wood, Campeachy and other woods suitable for rasping and dyes. APPENDIX G GOVERNOR ERIK BREDAL TO DIRECTORS, 1719, 1722 i St. Thomas, May 25, 1719. . . . The English nation is the one that does us the most good, and from which we have most to fear, for truth to say, they hold our very lives in their hands; and if they, (who dis- pute our right to St. Thomas, and threaten St. John) should adopt the expedient of forbidding the sending of provisions to this place for haK a year, the inhabitants would be obliged to leave the island, for their live-stock (now that the land is laid out in cotton and sugar works) would not suflBce, according to my calculation, to keep them supplied with food during that time, the less so, since a butchered ox cannot be preserved here more than a couple of days on account of the heat. But although the English General Hamilton ^ might enter- tain such a plan because of the evil intentions he bears toward this land on account of the occupation of St. John, yet it is for- tunate for us that the governors of the other English colonies from which we secure provisions are not on good terms with him, and are not prepared to carry through any such plan. Be- sides, Mr. Hamilton might easily have taken the chance (con- sidering the malice he bears us) to ruin both of these islands if he had thought of it. For a long time, there have been a great many English sea-robbers here, who have always kept their posts at the English islands Spanishtown (sic) and Tortola, where they have had free passage. He would only have had to set them upon us secretly to bring about our ruin. For the amnesty that they have been granted is so liberal that they cannot even be held by the English inhabitants for murder, robbery or other misdeeds, if they but return within a certain time and receive amnesty. In that manner the French have received the greater part of Hispaniola [Haiti] from the Span- iards in the midst of peace. I do not say it because of any fear, and I do not think that anyone accuses me of that, but because of the caution which I think is needed here to prevent the seizure or plundering of this land (especially in the cold months when sickness is general), — which may God avert! — 1 B. & D., 1717-1720. The paragraphing is that of the translator. ^ Governor General of the English Leeward Islands. [315] 316 APPENDIX G either by the Spaniards or the sea-robbers; for our garrison amounts to nothing, and the land is weaker than one would believe, since in the course of time, three or four plantations have come under a single owner, so that where formerly there were four whites, there is now but one. Indeed, we are not strong enough with respect to the negroes themselves. I have warned the inhabitants that this land is becoming weaker, and that they should have one white man on each plantation, whether or not several were under one owner, but they have replied that they were unable to secure any, but that if I were willing to let them have some of the soldiers, as had previously occurred, they would take them. But none of them can be spared. It has actually been a fact that the foreign ships and vessels lying in the harbor have sometimes had four times as many men on board as the entire fort and island together. . . . St. Thomas, June 17, 1722 ' Enclosed herewith is a letter from the English General Hart who was sent here with two ships of war to request St. John of me, and also to inform me that the English also claim St. Thomas as belonging to them. I have replied to them as was my duty, and attempted to phrase my negative reply as po- litely as possible. I gave to Capt. Ellis Brand's proposition a similar reply, to which he replied that he would report it to his General, and that the occupation of St. John might cause the Danes to lose St. Thomas, too, since they had no right to it, either. News had also reached me from St. Christopher, be- fore the arrival of these ships, that the English said that they expected to go and seize St. Thomas and St. John. Neverthe- less, these ships left here without attempting anything, after having lain anchored far outside of the harbor for several days. Although one would suppose that the said two islands are not worth enough to the English to pay for their getting into trouble with Denmark, yet there is reason to suspect that they would be useful for the following design. It is known that they have long had an eye upon Porto Rico, and with St. Thomas and Crab island (which they are also talking of settling) in their possession, they would be able, on account of their sea power, so to hem Porto Rico in '• that they would make themselves masters of it on the first break with Spain. Likewise, they have also a short time ago seized the island of Providence in the straits of Bahama, which though not considered of any 3 B. & D., 17n~2Jt. * Saaledes indknibe og indsparre Puerto-rico . . . APPENDIX G 317 particular importance in Europe, is still of more consequence than one would readily believe, for the Spaniards are absolutely obliged to pass by it with their silver fleet; and the English could from this island as well as by land from Virginia disturb the whole coast of Florida, How bold that nation has become was recently shown in their attitude toward the French who took the uninhabited island of St. Lucia, for the English immediately sent ships thither and drove them out; and since they are so strong in America, the French have allowed the matter to rest there, although the French General, Marquis de Feuquireres, at once dispatched an express to Europe to complain of the shameless treatment accorded an oflScer of the king and the duly consti- tuted French governor at that place. . . . APPENDIX H STATISTICS FOR ST. THOMAS: POPULATION, PLANTATIONS i Population White 1688 1691 1715 1720 men [„,^ 155. . 155. ■j xlSc women [ 145.. 127. children 177. . 247. . 283. total 317.. 389.. 547.. 565 Negro men . . . women. . manq . . . . children . total. . , 1725 1733 . 155.. 173. . 169.. 159. . not given 1740 1745 1754 121.. 144.. 139 . 128.. 127.. 89 {361. 1157. .1507. 1633 2246' . 837. . 635. . 909 ■ 613. . 873. 979 . 750. . 748. . 849 . 694. 684 1495 . 968. . 933. . 979 194. .1272. .1113. 1194 . 578. . 678. . 744 422. 555. .3042. .4187. 4490. .3741. .3133. .2994. .3481 Plantations C. PI.., c. w.. S. PI... s. w. . . K. W.. Mixt . . . Total. 81. . 1. . 11. . 13.. 9.. 10.. 5. . 6 . 69. . 61. . 74.. 68.. 66.. 55. . 64 3. . 8. . 34. . 24.. 11.. 8.. 4. . 9 32. . 24. .31.. 32.. 28.. 34. . 28 16. . 10. . 8.. 6.. 3.. . 1 17. . 34.. . 24. . 27.. 27.. 38.. 8. . 46 90... 101.. .160.. .164.. .177.. 148.. 153.. 108. .164 Abbreviations: C PI. = Cotton plantations. C. W. = " " with " works." S. PI. = Sugar S.W. = " K. W. = Kill-devil works. IMixt. = Plantations with various products, including provisions or " Kaast " and Misc. those not surveyed. Cap. = Slaves capable of performing full adult work. Manq.= " Manquerons " or those incapacitated by reason of age, injury, etc.; de- fectives. PI. = Plantations. ^ These tables have been compiled largely from the Land Lister in the Com- pany's archives. [318 : APPENDIX I STATISTICS FOR ST JOHN AND ST CROIX: PLANTATIONS POPULATION, Population Whites Men Women Children Total Cap. Negroes Manq. Children Total 1728 1733 76. 97. 73. 6. 53 .41. .58. .75. .123 563' .208 731.. .208 743.. 84 119 280 . 30 677 .237 1087 1739 60. .391 1414 1720-21 . . . 1728 1733 1739 C. PL .■.■.■.'48.., ....15.. ....29... C. W. ... 0... ... 3... ...36... S. PI ..8. ..1. ..3. :. S Plantations. . W. K. W. Mixt. 21 1 9.... 9 1 80.... 21 20.... Owners Total On PI. 39 . 87.... 28.. .109.... 67.. .109.... 61. . Owners Owners on abroad St. Th. ...36 1 ... 4 1 ... ? 3 For abbreviations, see St. Thomas statistics. 1742. 1745, 1754. Population Plantation owners 2 Negroes (total) Children under Men Women age Total Cap. Manq. Child. .146. . .23. . . 53 .174. . .1559. . . 31 . . . 316. . .162. . .30. . .19. . .211. . .1918. . .217. . . 743. Total .1906 .2878. Christiansted Whites Negroes M. W. Cap. Mg. Ch. ,10. ..3... 15. .260. . .23. ..21. . .304.. .4851. . .675. . .2040. . .75664 .77. . .7. . .409. 3 9 .46 .'.'.' 259 Plantations 1742. 1745. 1754. C.Pl. . . 122 . ..163. . . 34. -S. PI. Misc. .120 42 . .77 23 , , .1341^ 207.. Total .264 .263 .3751^ ^ The women included one mulatto; the children, ten groups of "heirs," each of which embraced perhaps two or more children. Several owners counted in the list for 1739 resided on St. Thomas, St. Eustatius and elsewhere. 2 The nature of the records makes possible only an approximation to accu- racy, especially with respect to the white population. * Five is simply the number of plantations credited to minors. * Of these, four hundred and nine "capable," forty defectives, and two hundred and thirty-nine children were owned in Christiansted. 319 APPENDIX J LIST OF SLAVE CARGOES ARRIVING IN DANISH WEST INDIES (compiled from the company's archives) Slave cargoes — Ship {and Date of Registered s 1 a _K 1^ Cost to Company Cost io Planters Skipper) arrival from ^ (§ 3 CQ {wholesale) {retail) rdl. (each) rdi.(each) Wapen (Gert. Cort) 1687 (May) 80 (Danish Ship) 1688 Denmark 200 (Captain?) Marschall 1688 Emden 291 Dorfling [EngUsh Ship] 1690 (Apr.) Bermuda [109?1 Marschall 1692 Emden 500? 80-95 Dorfling (Captain?) Frederick III 1696 (Nov.) Emden 630 (Jacob Lam- brecht) Churprin- 1696 (Nov.) Emden 480 sesseri (Wouter Ypes) [Slave vessel] 1698 (June) Zeeland 364 (Jac. de (Nether.) Bruyne) Kobenh: B6rs 1698 (Sept.) 78 128 44 14 16 280 » (InnesPieters) [Frederick III?] 1698 (late) Emden? 624 (Wouter Ypes) [Slave vessel] 1699 Zeeland [90] = 70 90 (Math. Boo- gaert) Christian V 1699 (July) 123 178 35 17 353' 85-90 (Jurgen Grabner) 1 There were shipped from Guinea one hundred and eighty-four men, two hundred and thirty-eight women, fifty-five boys, twenty-four girls, and five infants, a total of five hundred and six negroes. Of the two hundred and eighty that arrived on September 17, thirty-seven had died by October 12. CJ. Gov. C. B., 169^-1700. Lorentz to Directors (October 12, 1698). 2 Only ninety were sold in St. Thomas, fifty to the Danes and forty to the Brandenburgers. The cargo contained three hundred and fifty slaves. ' Capt. Grabner took on five hundred and forty-nine negroes in Guinea. [320] APPENDIX J 321 LIST OF SLAVE CARGOES— Continued Slave Cargoes Ship (and Skipper) Date of arrival Registered from g 1 27 20 Cost to Company (wholesale) Cost to Planters (retail) Frederick IV 1700 (Oct.) Denmark 72 119 2381 50 90-100 (Innes Pieter- aen) [Interloper] 1701 (Jan.) Zeeland 1542 (Captain?) [Interloper] 1702 (July) Zeeland 74 21 12 2 109 3 45 80 (Jean Closter) [IO31/3] [Interloper] 1702 (Dec.) Zeeland 51 14 18 6 89 4 45 80 (Adrian [79S/6] Daemes) [Interloper] 1703 (June) ? 77 10 16 5 108 5 48 85-90 (J. Rogges- [991/6] taert) Christian V 1704 (May) Denmark 123 126 27 15 4 295 60 100 (Willem [2711/3] Resen) [Flying Hart] 1707 (Jan.) Middelburg 246 69 62 10 387 80 100 (Jac. S. Voss) [3562/3] Christian V 1707 (July) Denmark 212 160 13 8 393 8 70 100 (N. C. Boom- [3851/3] feldt) [Slave vessel] ' 1708 (Mar.) ? 33 27 13 11 84 75 100 ("Grazaleir") [73] Red Lion 1708 (Oct.) Zeeland 139 30 34 9 212 3 80 100 (Hubert Freth) [Flying Hart?] 1709 (Jan.) Zeeland 227 54 20 12 3139 80 100 (Jac. S. Voss) [2991/6] [Slave vessel] 1709 (July) Zeeland 85 60 (Captain?) Two Brothers 1709 (July) 17 14 3 5 39 60 90 (Pieter ? [352/3] Thebeu) ^ Three hundred died on the journey. In his letter to the Directors dated October 24, 1700, Lorentz mentions the misfortune that has likewise struck other traders, several Zeeland interlopers and English slave ships not having brought more than a third or a fourth safe to their destination. Gov. C. B., 1700-03. 2 Lorentz bought the cargo in company with Van Belle, the Brandenburg factor. ^ Of these the Danish Company secured one hundred and eighteen, the Bran- denburgers the rest. * The Brandenburg factor bought eighty-eight from Capt. Daemes. ^ The Brandenburg factor bought sixty-six. ' Capt. B. had left Guinea on June 2 with four hundred and forty-seven slaves, and arrived at St. Thomas on July 23. ' Also spelled Grazselli. ^ Four per cent, duty brought the Company an additional eight slaves. ^ Of these, Peter Smith bought one hundred and forty-one, and two French- men bought twenty-six and one hundred and seven, respectively. APPENDIX J LIST OF SLAVE CARGOES— Continued Slave cargoes •1 Ship (and Skipper) Date of arrival Registered from 1 1 S 1 1 19 1 3 C3 05 Cost to Company (wholesale) Cost to Planters (retail) Rosenborg 1709 (Aug.) Zeeland 138 22 1871 60 90-95 (Erasmus [1726/6] MuUer) The Hunter 1710 (Jan.) Zeeland 312 2 65 100 (H. de Witte) America 1710 (July) Zeeland 134 26 33 7 200 65 100 (David Dine- sen) Prince Eugene 1711 (Jan.) Zeeland ^[229] 3 16 253 96 (Abr. Schil- strad)* [America] 1712 (Mar.) Zeeland 155 25 26 6 212 s 70 100 (David Dine- sen) [Slave vessel] [1965/6] 1712 (June) Zeeland? 134 27 32 7 2006 65 94 (Sam. Jo- [1788/6] chumsen) [Slave vessel] 1714 (Jan.) none (H. de Witte) sold New Prince 1714 (Jan.) Zeeland 76 56 76 6 216 70 100-96 Eugene [1733^] (Bastian Mugge) Papkiesborg 1714 (Mar.) Zeeland 121 30 72 3 226 65 100 (Corn. Huy- sing) Crown Prince [193] 1714 (June) Bergen 49 45 24 1 7 135 70 120 (Jacques [lllVs] Thomas) 9 4 2 3' 18 [15J^] 50 ^ One hundred and eighty-seven "manquerons" were delivered back to the captain, who sold one hundred and twenty-seven to private buyers for 5,469 rdl. IMuUer's cargo is put down as consisting of Lawango negroes; those arriving in July are called "Calabary" or "Kalbarie" negroes, — in English, Calabar. 2 De Witte, being able to account only for three hundred and one when he should have had three hundred and twelve, was charged with the difference or "profit" of 35 rdl. each, or 385 rdl. The Company bought two hundred and thirty-eight (229j^ Pies de Indies) at 65 rdl. each. Many of those remaining were delivered back to the captain who sold them to planters and paid the Com- pany the four per cent. duty. A^. J., St. Thomas, 1709-1710. ' This includes men and women. Of the two hundred and twenty-nine, forty- nine were sick or "manquerons " as were six of the sixteen boys. Two hundred were bought first, and fifty-three later. * Capt. S. died immediately after arrival and Capt. Anthony Warene (Vareny) took his place. The remainder of the cargo (six hundred and twenty- six on arrival at St. Thomas) that was unsold or still alive was taken to Porto Bello and Carthagena. ^ Besides these, the Company received eight in duty. ' Jochumson's cargo consisted of Angola slaves. ^ The lower figures represent those that were sick or "manquerons." One APPENDIX J LIST OF SLAVE CARGOES— Continued 323 Slave Cargoes Ship (and Skipper) Date of arrival Registered from i 83 i 7 - 1 20 0) Cost to Company (wholesale) Cost to Planters (retail) [Slave vessel] 1715 (Jan.) 8 118 65 100 (Jacob Valle) [Slave vessel] 1715 (Feb.) [lOSVs] (Corn. Lyn- sen) [Slave vessel] 1715 (Apr.) (Jochim Gomertz) [Slave vessel] 1715 (Apr.) (Alex. Ro- land) [Slave vessel]^ 1715 (Sept.) (Dan. Gab- ion?) Crown Prince 1718 (July) Denmark 104 38 19 3 164 2 50 120 Christian (And. Veroe) [Slave vessel] 1718 (July) 42 60 80 ( Jan de Moor) [Slave vessel] 1719 (Aug.) (Jacob Valle) "Haabet Gal- 1722 (Apr.) Denmark [167] 3 34 201 60 125 ley" [1822/3] (Lor. Spang?) Christiansborg 1724 (June) Denmark 142 80 68 351 70 125 « (P. A. Vaeroe) 26 11 24 6 "Haabet Gal- 1724 (Nov.) 219 70 125 ley" (Lor. Spang) [Slave vessel] 1725 (Mar.) Netherl.? 375 73 120 6 (Jan Vergoue) hundred and seventy-one negroes (sixty-eight men, fifty-seven women, twenty- six boys and twenty girls) were shipped from Guinea, and of these, eight men, five women, two boys, and five girls died en route. ^ Capt. Gabion was allowed to sell his cargo to private buyers on payment of thirty per cent, "preference" to the Company. "On Capt. Gabion's slaves about 2600 rdl. has been gained [by the Company] through import and export duties." B. & D., 171Ii.-17, Gov. M. Crone to Directors (February 24, 1716). 2 On the way from Guinea thirty-six men, seven women, four girls and five boys — or fifty-two slaves — had died on Capt. Veroe's (or Wserroe's) ship. B. & D., 1717-20 (July 8, 1718). ^ The one hundred and sixty-seven includes men and women. * The profit from this cargo was about 7,464 rdl., or a little over twenty-eight per cent. Deducting for the twenty-one slaves retained for the Company would bring the profit to about thirty and one-half per cent. * The lower figures include the sick and " manquerons." A "Speciall-Liste" (5. & D., 17S1-U) dated July 14, 1724, gives the same total, but different subheadings. He had left Guinea with four hundred and sixteen negroes. ^ The net profit was 16,372 rdl.,OT twenty-nine and seven-tenths per cent, from both Vergoue's and v. der Brocke's cargoes. 324 APPENDIX J LIST OF SLAVE CARGOES— ConfmMed iSiotie cargoes Ship (and Skipper) Date of arrival [Slave vessel] (A. V. d. Brocke) [ Young Knight] (George Jones?) "Jonge Mathys" 2 (Charles Jansen) Christiansborg (Jorgen Mathisen) " Haabet Gal- ley " (Lor. Spang) [Slave vessel] (Hybregt) Young Virgin ("Allewelt") ^'Haabet" G. (A. H. Ham- mer) "Haabet" G. (A. H. Ham- mer) Countess of Laurwig (Corn. Bagge) Laarburg G. (Lor. JsBger) 1725 (Mar.) 1726 (July) 1726 (Nov.) 1727 (Feb.) 1727 (May) 1727 1728 (Jan.) 1729 (July) 1731 (Feb.) 1732 (June) 1733 (May) Registered from Netherl.? Netherl.? Denmark Denmark Zeeland Denmark? Denmark Denmark Denmark Denmark 109 125 124 64 26 1^ 379 1301 2073 [217] i 18 32 5 126 6 557 115 242 ' Cost to Company {wholesale) 73 Cost to Planters {retail) 70 70 50 70 70 80 123 125 120 120 100-1508 70 -f- 120-156 ^ The government permitted the cargo to be sold to outsiders only, on pay- ment of 4J^ "pieces-of-eight" for each slave sold. ^ A cargo was offered for sale, but no purchases are recorded. ^ Two hundred and eighty-three were taken on board at the Danish Guinea factory, September 29, 1726. These included one hundred and fifty men, ninety women, twenty-nine boys, fourteen girls, whose total purchase price was entered at 18,216 rdl. * Hope Galley left Guinea on March 6, 1727, with a cargo of two hundred and thirty-eight. Of these, one hundred and forty-seven were men, seventy women, eleven boys, and ten girls. Cf. N. J. for Guinea, 1727. ^ Forty-seven left Guinea. G = galley. '^ One hundred and twenty-six left Guinea May 28, 1729. '' These were taken on in Guinea, Dec. 28, 1729 (?). * The price varied according to whether payment was made in cash, or in cotton or sugar to be paid in six weeks' time. Of one hundred and twenty taken on, only one hundred and two were reported in sound condition when offered for sale. ' One hundred and ninety-nine out of a cargo of four hundred and forty-three APPENDIX J LIST OF SLAVE CARGOES— Continued 325 Slave Cargoes Ship {and Skipper) Date of arrival Registered from 1 s i 1 7 1 5 C3 03 1 si Cost to Company (wholesale) Cost to Planters (retail) Countess of 1734 (May) Denmark 60 31 180 115 Laurwig 22 43 7 51 (Corn. Bagge) Jomfru 1736 (June) Denmark? 108 2 100 100-133 (Knud Erich- sen) [A hark] 1738 (Jan.) St. Eusta- 8 4 35 10 57 (P. Heyliger) tius [A bark] 1738 (Feb.) St. Eusta- 10 £18 (Robt. Stew- art) [A hark] tius 1738 (Mar.) St. Euata- 9 14 8 8 393 (Robt. Stew- tius art) [A bark] 1738 (Apr.) St. Eusta- 20 20 15 554 £18 (R. Stewart) tius Countess of 1738 (Oct.) Zeeland 109 35 15 11 170 85 Laurwig (Corn. Mar- skalk) Countess of 1739 (Feb.) Denmark 6 8 5 1 20 5 75 120-140 Laurwig (Co.) (J. N. Hoist) Laarburg G. 1740 (Jan.) Denmark 24 12 6 2 44 120 130-140 (H. Ostbye) (Co.) Countess of 1742 (June) Denmark 19 27 4 1 51 120 140-155 Laarwig (Co.) (Capt. Hoist?) Williamine 1744 (May) ? 41 40 11 3 95 130 140-235 Galley (B. H. Pratt) Postillion B. 1746 (May) Denmark 79 150-240 (A. Thorsen) Williamine Q. 1746 (Nov.) Denmark 85 38 18 5 146 100-150 160-300 (B. H. Pratt) (Co.) Crown Pr. 1747 (May) Denmark 102 60 25 8 195 150-300 Desire (Co.) (A. J. Seiero) Sorgenfri 1747 (Nov.) Denmark 274 200-285 (D. Boysen) Princess F. 1748 (July) Denmark 114 86 55 20 3 278 200-320 (J. Gronberg) JcBgersborg 1749 (Jan.) Denmark 77 62 15 6 160 100 180-270 (O, Erichsen) (Co.) Vesuvius 1749 (Feb.) Denmark 127 66 45 14 5 252 100 (Capt.?) (Co.) Sorgenfri 1749 (June) Denmark 120 89 15 11 7 235 100 140-220 (Capt.?) (Co.) 3 died en route of a virulent form of dysentery. Two were sold to Portuguese. The profit was nevertheless sixty-nine and one-half per cent, on what re- mained! ^ Sick and " raanquerons," or defectives. 2 Forty-two had died on the way from Guinea. ^ Sold directly to planters on payment of usual four per cent. duty. * Capt. S. had asked 110 rdl. for the grown slaves, and 80 rdl. for the children. ^ Capt. Hoist's cargo came from Madagascar. 326 APPENDIX J LIST OF SLAVE CARGOES— Continued Slave cargoes ¥ § ii -s^ Cost to Cost to Ship (and Date of Registered si 1 s 1^ Company Planters Skipper) arrival from 69 1 53 26 6 10 (wholesale) (retail) Crown Pr. 1750 (Feb.) Denmark 161 100 140-220 Desire (Co.) (O. Reinholt) Sophie Mag- 1750 (July) Denmark 27 23 22 5 3 80 -220 dalene (Capt.?) Jagersborg (Co.) 1751 (Feb.) Denmark 182 82 5 3 269 100 100-220 (O. Erichsen) (Co.) Sorgenfri 1751 (July) Denmark 58 42 23 10 133 100 150-250 (P. K. Collin) (Co.) Crown Pr. 1752 (Mar.) Denmark 2241 Desire (0. Reinholt) -353 Princess Wil- 1752 (June) Denmark 109 58 12 2 1812 helmineCar. (N. Hoyer) Princess 1752 (Oct.) Denmark 164 81 27 9 3 2813 100 150-354 Sophia Mag. (P. C. Sam- (Co.) soe) Jmgersborg 1753 (Aug.) Denmark 114 58 38 21 231 4 -320 (J. Rasmus- sen) Patientia 1753 (Dec.) Denmark 67 30 38 11 146 5 100 150-300 (O. Erichsen) (Co.) (Brigantine) 1754 (Mar.) Denmark 1 140 s ^ This ship left Guinea with three hundred and thirty-eight slaves (Janu- ary 7, 1752). ^ The Guinea cargo was recorded at two hundred and three slaves. * The Princess Sophia Magdalena left Guinea July 29 with three hundred and seven slaves. * Eighty-one died on the way, apparently. ^ Patientia left Guinea July 30 with two hundred and seventy-five slaves. A mutiny of slaves on board while sailing between Cape Coast and El Mina re- sulted in serious loss of life and property. ^ From this cargo, apparently privately owned, a profit of fifty per cent, was reported. The journey took twenty-eight days. APPENDIX K PRICES ON ST. THOMAS (1687-1751) ^ Year Sugar ^ (per 100 lbs.) Cotton Year (per lb.) Sugar (per 100 lbs.) Cotton {per lb.) 1687 10 ^ 1688 10 1697 30-32 1699 14-16 1701 5 rdl. 1702 4K-5 " 15 1703 3J^(?)" .... 12 1705 3 " 12 1706 3K " 12 1707 3-3H " ••■• 11 1708 3 " 10 1709 3 " 1710 3 " 11 1713 3 S}4 " 12 1714 4 " 12 1716 4>f-5 " 13-14 1717 4K " ••■• 13 1719 43^ " .... 13 1720 43^ " .... 13 1721 3}4rdl ISsk. 1723 3 " .... 10 " 1724 4>^ " ....12-13 " 1727 13 " 1728 43^ "... . 13 " 1730 4 " .... 13 " 1732 43^ " .... 11 " 1733 3-43^ " ....11-13 " 1739 3-33^ "... .14-143^" 1740 33/^ " 1741 4-43^ " ....12-13 " 1742 4 " 10-11 " 1743 4 " 12-13 " 1744 133^" 1747* 5 " 1748 5 " 1750 i^i " 2 reals 17515 41^ « 1752 « 1 Prices paid by Company to planters, though not necessarily an average for the year. These figures are derived from many official sources, — too many for enumeration. ^ Brovra sugar. ' In 1713, the current price in the open market was reported to be 43^-5 rdl. per 100 lbs. * The St. Thomas officials reported the following prices for sugar: in Holland, 7-9 rdl.; St. Eustatius, 5^f^ rdl.; and Curagao, 7-8 rdl. per 100 lbs. Martfeldt MSS., VI (February 3, 1748). * The governor and council on St. Croix set the price at 33^ rdl, * The St. Croix authorities raised the price of sugar to 43^ rdl. and fixed the price of cotton at 13 sk., for unpacked, and 133^ sk. for baled cotton. [327] APPENDIX L WEST INDIAN SUGAR EXPORTED FROM COPENHAGEN i (1709-1754) Year Quantity (lbs.) Destination Price secured by Company 1709 8,950 br Lubeck 5i8 rdl. " 6,804 " Kiel 425 " " 2,519 wh " 348 " " 4,500 br " 281 " " 1,274 wh. 179 " " 100 " Aarhus " 1,169 " 120 " " 3.904 " Lubeck 544 " 1710 5,000 br Dantzig 377 " " 2,302 wh " 263 " 1711 4,000 br LUbeck 312 " " 4,500 " Kiel 351 " " 1,600 wh " 233 " " 2,160 br " 169 " " 228 wh " 29" " 5 c. " " 389 " " 4 c. " Dantzig 291 " " 317 br Elsinore " 285 wh " " 200 " Aarhus " 151 br " " 1 c. wh Kiel 94 " " 1 c. " " 60 " " 42,544 br Kiel (?) 2.659 " 1712-20 2 1721 6,296 br Lubeck 368 " " 1,000 wh Elsinore " 1,084 br " 1722 6,061 " Dantzig 323" " 6,000 " " 312 " * Vdshiibnings og Passeer Sedlers Cojne—Bog, 1709-1754. This volume is included in a bundle, the label of which I failed to note. br. = brown sugar; wh.= white sugar; c.= casks (Fade). The marks and shillings are omitted. ^ No sugar is recorded as having paid the one per cent, export duty during this period. [328] APPENDIX L S2& WEST INDIAN SUGAR EXPORTED FROM COPENHAGEN— Confonwed Year Quantity (lbs.) Destination Price secured by Company 1723 2,617 br Konigsberg 136 rdl. " 11,251 " Lubeck 588 " 1724 12,170 " Stettin 697 " 1725 15,284 " " 875" 1726 none 1727 1,225 " Lubeck 68" " 344 " Flensborg " 800 " Nyborg 1728 232 " Elsinore " 2,144 wh Dantzig 134 " 1729-30 none 1731 426 wh. (?) Bergen 1732 230 wh. (?) Christiania " 298 br Bergen 1733 238 " (?) Elsinore " 578 " (?) Bergen 1734 236 " Aarhus 1735 389 " Bergen " 685 " " 1738 2 c. (?)" Slagelse " 1 c. " Elsinore 1740 338 " Aarhus " 250 " Flensborg 1741 58 " Laurwigen " 211 " " " 11,443 " Stockholm 1745 400 " Aabenraa 1746 350 sirup Nyborg 1747 2 c. br Holstein " 2 c. sirup Randers " 64 wh. (?) Ritt (?) 1748 none 1749 111,864 wh Stockholm 8,815 " " 200 " Aarhus " 27,747 br Stockholm 2,456 " 30 c. " Lubeck 1,802 1750 '. 4,206" " 240 " 10,966 " Stettin 628 " 5,880 " [St.] Petersburg 336 " 82,958 "3 Nordkioping 4,752 " 27,766 " Stockholm 1,590 3 The entry of 80, 20, and 26 Fade apparently refers to the 82,958 lbs. 330 APPENDIX L WEST INDIAN SUGAR EXPORTED FROM COPENHAGEN— Confinwei Year Quantity (lbs.) Destination Price secured by Company 1750 28.628 br Carlshafn 1,640 rdi. " 200 " Aarhus " 52,878 " Nordkioping 3,029 " " 32 " Randers " 200 " Christiania " 230 " Amsterdam 10 " " 2,387 " Dantzig Ill " " 200 " Aarhus " 1,249 " Stettin 58 " " 1,302 " Dantzig 61 " " 31,441 " Stettin 1,409 " " 3,218 " " 146 " 1750 7,310 '* Dantzig 343 " 1751 39,739 " [St.] Petersburg 2,276 " 1,589 " Stettin 74 " . 6,796 " , " 309 8,386 " " 384 ,42,360 " " 2,095 . 5,176 " " ? . 15,451 " Lubeck 734 . 82,261 " Stockholm 3,892 . 129,299 " Bergen . 129 c. raw br Stockholm .205,850 br Amsterdam 9,633 71,538 " Stettin 3,539 37,987 " [St.] Petersburg 1,780 153,474 " Bergen 82,984 " Amsterdam * 3,848 6,632 " " 310 64,994 " Nordkioping 3,034 86,294 " Amsterdam 4,045 133,437 " " 6,231 65,036 " Stockholm 3,025 56,868 : " Gothenburg 2,634 19,100 r. br.i5 " 895 30,976 br Amsterdam 1,411 77,300 " Odense 92,182 " Amsterdam 4,201 144,246 " Bergen * These are the totals of seven shipments sent to P. de Wint. ^ r. br. = raw brown sugar; r. s. = "raw sugar." APPENDIX L 331 WEST INDIAN SUGAR EXPORTED FROM COPENHAGEN— Conimwed Year Quantity (lbs.) Destination Price secured by Company 1751 128,694 br Stettiii« 6,032 rdl. 1752 55,714 " Stettin 2,633 " " 106,394 " Odense " 29,775 r. s Gothenburg 1,199 " " 144,712 br Bergen " 20,074 " Gothenburg' 953 " .158,270 " Bergen. .140,042 " Odense. " 3,428 " Ltibeck 187 " 11,517 " Odense 17538 101,038 " Bergen. . . 84,023 " Odense . . . . 39,749 " " ,117,176 " Bergen , 78,729 " Trondhiem. , 74,219 " . 84,610 " Odense 87,477 " Frederikshald. 56,554 " Aalborg 210 " Korsor 32,854 " Aalborg " 38,592 " Frederikshald. 1754 77,668 " Odense .134,819 " Bergen . 151,727 " Trondhiem . " 904 r. s Mediterranean 46 " 69,373 br Frederikshald " 47,144 " Aalborg " 112,320 " Frederikshald " 5,015 " Ltibeck " 158,614 " Trondheim " 102,946 " Odense " 36,449 " Amsterdam 9 1,538 " " 168,136 " Frederikshald " 15,134 " Aalborg & Viborg " 168,804 " Bergen * Consigned to Iselin & Co. '' Consigned to Johan Froichen. * The entries from the latter part of 1752 and after refer to sugar sent to the shareholders in the refineries in Odense, Bergen, Trondheim, Frederikshald and Aalborg, Cf. above, pp. 135-136. ' Consigned to F. Wever. APPENDIX M COMPANY'S RECEIPTS AND DEBTS AT ST. THOMAS (1688-1754) Certain of the Company's Receipts at St. Thomas: compiled from the account books of the Danish West India and Guinea Company (Rigsarkiv) . Weighing Debt of Debt of fees Co. to planters planters to Co. No. of Poll and Customs Year planters land tax receipts 1688 489 rdl. 1689 550 1690 . . 1,817 1691 . .30,1551 1692 1693 37... ... SSirdl.. . . 5,162 1694-97 . . . 1698 . . 3,452 1699 32... ... 653.... 1700 78... . . 2,643 1701 . . 3,233 1702 . . 3,065 1703 52... ...1,294.... . . 9,574 1704 59... ...2,585 . . 5,653 1705 74?.. ...2,716.... . . 4,112 1706 105?.. ...2,715.... . . 3,361 1707 106... ...3,050 .. 4,184 1708 109... ...2,872.... . . 7,027 1709 . . 10,688 1710 103... ...3,282.... ..11,114 1711 ...4,201.... . . 9,959 1712 ...4,504.... . . 10,634 1713 131... ...4,937.... . . 6,818 1714 130... ...4,838.... . . 5,818 1715 134... ...4,821 . . 4,903 1716 139... ...5,017.... . . 8,236 1717 132... ...5,029.... . . 5,778 1718 131... ...6,140.... . . 5,619 1719 144... ...6,676.... . . 7,464 1720 152... ...6,683.... . . 8,869 1721 162... ...6,799.... . . 4,992 1722 188... ...6,905.... . . 3,099 1723 188. .. ...6,971.... . . 7,144 1724 187... .. .7,169 . . 7,328 1725 205... ...7,891.... . . 7,749 23. 57. 621. 35. 36! 72! 132. 27. 476. 270. 183. 219. 109. 121. 218. 100. 240. 305. 153. 145. 46'. 84.. 31.. .1,9952 . 373.. .37,787 160,445 11 75,876 177,120 42 8,573 209,438 279 80,197 210,129 1726 211 8,063 4,927 142 84,278 211,331 1727 215 8,078 5,208 511 67,044 200,486 1728 3 190 7,785 6,018 1,117 61,732 163,357 1729 182 7,123 5,335 252 41,960 160,473 1730 168 5,814 6,324 351 14,967 138,306 1731 166 6,769 6,884 447 12,033 102,277 1732 163 6,859 6,462 365 10,565 109,194 1733 171 6,891 6,489 409 22,972 123,241 1734 167 7,169 5,158 276 23,810 117,396 ^ See above, pp. 84-87, for story of seizure of Brandenburg goods. * Includes moneys collected for several years past, and now disgorged by guilty official. ^ Before 1729, the fiscal year ended in March, so the figures entered under 1728 refer to the year from March, 1728, to March, 1729. With 1730 the fiscal year is considered to end in December, and hence the records for 1730 apply only to eleven months. [332] APPENDIX M 333 COMPANY'S RECEIPTS AND DEBTS AT ST. TUOM AS— Continued No. of Poll and Customs Weighing Debt of Debt of Year Planters Land Tax Receipts Fees Co. to planters planters to Co. 1735 177 7,225 6,896 370 25,763 84,694 1736 158 6,440 6,306 469 28,758 87,580 1737 164 5,054 4,817 129 20,117 99,961 1738 158 5,452 7,524 703 2,558 119,750 1739 150 5,342 6,226 325 31,305 109,512 1740 149 5,087 4,366 543 14,096 143,488 1741 141 5,053 5,772 209 23,877 71,606 1742 145 5,153 8,186 591 26,035 82,956 1743 138 4,807 8,006 468 21,543 125,347 1744 143 4,798 8,083 561 12,216 126,378 1745 152 4,427 10,074 671 19,809 133,754 1746 153 4,474 21,512 1,221 24,805 193,315 1747 150 4,637 19,561 1,113 27,272 329,065 1748 151 4,945 21,667 1,041 41,301 357,931 1749 157 5,115 16,971 888 31,599 279,668 1750 163 5,335 12,226 989 71,159 317,279 1751 165 5,552 14,947 877 42,549 385,243 1752 151 5,551 10,448 773 83,611 443,376 1753 160 5,545 16,754 1,078 40,272 491,601 1754 168 5,745 10,830 1,036 34,409 503,515 APPENDIX N COMPANY'S RECEIPTS AND DEBTS AT ST. CROIX (1741-1753) Certain of the Company's Receipts at St. Croix: compiled from the account books of the Danish West India and Guinea Company (.Rigsarkiv) . No. of Poll and Customs Weighing Debt of Debt of Year Planters land tax receipts i fees Co. to planters planters to Co. 1741 76i rdl 52 rdl. ... 3,095 rdl... . 41,171 rdl. 1742 84 2,807 rdi.... 1,267 66 3,065 41,180 1743 122 2,589 972 64 2,949 49,863 1744 202 4,029 1,868 83 3,347 57,869 1745 199 4,662 1,773 108 12,464 76,058 1746 195 4,529 3,733 171 15,864 98,633 1747 207 5,158 8,202 250 20,313 136,007 1748 204 5,402 8,887 234 25,111 202,941 1749 218 5,830 9,139 286 35,187 79,642 1750 246 7,107 10,458 408 69,186 169,788 1751 288 7,687 26,465 392,425 1752 332 8,081 13,358 562 25,619 452,866 1753 355 8,624 13,976 673 16,125 562,089 ^ These totals, given in rdl. only, are those made up by the Company's officials. The greater number of the figures given exceed by 50 rdl. or more the totals de- rived from the Company's cash books, where the receipts are entered month by month. [334] APPENDIX O CAPITAL INVESTED AT ST. THOMAS UNDER PLAN OF 1747 1 Fixed 2 Circulating 3 Private ^ Interest s Rate of ' capital capital capital paid interest 1747 108,534 83,163 7,169 037 1748 108,921 62,966 292,235 8,182 047 1749 116,034 75,208 281,255 11,921 062 1750 123,200 136,831 284,584 14,556 056 1751 128,854 194,264 269,910 16,901 052 1752 129,546 238,343 262,855.. 20,563 056 1753 129,826 297,445 279,172 22,480 052 1754 127,734 275,842 280,858 25,753 063 ^ From Negotie Journaler for St. Thomas. See above, pp. 221-222. 2 Capital Conto vedk. Comps. faste og staaende Fond. ^ Capital Conto vedk. Comps. circulerende Fond. ^ Capital Conto vedk. Comps. particulaire Vahre og tilstaaende Gield. ^ Interesse Conto. ' The rate is calculated on the basis of the "fixed" and "circulating" capital, and the results are oflFered for what they may be worth. [335] APPENDIX P THE COMPANY'S BUSINESS IN BROWN SUGAR (An estimate based on its account books) i Income Outgo 2 Year Lbs. [Year] [Lbs.] 1700 there came in 513,732 1700 waste 3 deducted 6,382 and 356,568 and 2,158 1701 94,456 1701 deducted 2,612 and 209,149 1702 " 6,052 1702 and 1703 560,545 1703 and 1704 nothing deducted. 1704 726,683 1705 ] 1705 445,533 1706 } nothing [deducted]. 1707 J 1706 299,539 1708 waste deducted 205,869 1707 723,992 1708 to May 4 378,779 223,073 4,310,976 [4,308,976] During the period that the late Diderich Mogensen was factor, the waste deducted is found to have amounted to about five and a quarter per cent. 1709 there came in 1,036,048 1709 ] '^^ ^^^^^ deducted. 1710 659,212 1710 L here either 1711 93,085 1711 j ""^"^ '^'^^^ "*^®'^- 1712 •. . . 321,573 1712 deducted "without money." Total 95,276 1713 554.660 1713 none. During thia period, during the greater part of which likewise Diderich Mogensen was factor, the deducted waste is found to have amounted to a little over three and a half per cent. 1714 659,666 1714 1 „„ ^„ .„ ,)^a.,„'-^a 1715 2731425 1715 [ °° "^^^^^ deduced. 1716 131,114 1716 92,603 1,064,205 During Soeberg's term as factor, the waste is found to have amounted to a trifle more than eight and one-half per cent. 1717 694,576 1717 ] 1718 248,861 1718 1719 513,713 1719 \ no waste deducted. 1720 617,944 1720 1721 135,620 1721 J During SchnelfejI's and Jan Vlak's terms as factor, no waste is found to have been de- ducted in the books, hence the same brown sugar from those years remains, viz.. 38,846 lbs. net, which makes a tolerable waste, viz., about one and three-fourths per cent., which waste will be deducted, in so far as it will be necessary to determine the actual stock on hand. ^ Translated from Secret-Protocollen for St. Thomas, 1729-1730. This com- pilation was made by Philip Gardelin at the instance of the privy comicil of the island, about 1729. - For saa ndt som dend paa W. & T. Reigning afskrevne Leccage angaaer. ^ Leccage. [336] APPENDIX Q THE COMPANY'S BUSINESS IN COTTON (For factor Soeberg's time, according to tlie books) i Income Year] Lbs. [1714 43,986 1715 14,666 1716 to Sept. 14 28,927 85,578 So he (Sijeberg) may have charged against him only the stock that the books for 1713 in- dicate to have been on hand, which is 5,956 Hence there still remains on Soeberg's cotton account 927 Outgo [Year] Lhs. 1714 delivered 38,093 1715 15,386 1716 to Sept. 9 27,423 Stock delivered to Schnelfejl, ac- cording to books 1,923 82,825 The Commission has decided that Soeberg must pay, for cotton taken out of the warehouse for Crone and himself 11,636 94,461 94,461 Estimate of cotton [handled] in Schnelfejl's time. Received from Soeberg: Stock, ace. to books 1,923 1716 from Sept. inclusive] 757 1717 until his death, Oct. 24 25,923 Also for what Soeberg deUvered in 1717, which he is credited with by the Commission, but not until now in the books 1,103 1716 nothing delivered out. 1717 to his death 6,775 Stock at Schnelfejl's should then be 22,931 29,706 29,706 [Cotton handled] in factor Jan Vlak's time. On hand 22,931 1717 from Sept 3,479 1718 23,096 1719 30,591 1720 26,786J^ 1721 to May 15 — on the 19th he was suspended — there came in 10,810 For what Soeberg had dehvered in 1718 according to Jan Vlak's own account, with which the Com- mission has credited him, but which has not been observed until now 1,685 . . . [ ] abus which ought to be de- ducted from the capital account. . 4,670 1717 deUvered from Oct. 10 10,991 1718 37,412 1719 26,970}^ 1720 30,407 1721 to April 29 8,760J^ DeUvered to Stage after being properly inventoried 915 Hence Vlak has fallen short in his cotton account 8,592J^ 1 24,048 J^ 124,0481^ iFrom Secret-Protocollen for St. Thomas (1729-1730), compiled by Ph. Gardelin at instance of St. Thomas privy council, about 1729. [337] APPENDIX R RETURNS ON COMPANY'S CAPITAL " Getoinst og Verlies Debet til Capital Conto " . . . " saameget er udi dette Aar vide Gewinst og Verlies Reigningen, Gud vcere writ, netto vundet som paa Capital Conto p[er] Soldo hentransporteres." Numbers in parentheses refer to months, thus: 4 = April. Year Rdl.^ Year Rdl. 1688 3,825 1715 1689 (4-10) 748 1716 4,506 1690 1,669 1717 12,016 1691 35,998 1718 8,698 1692 no acc't 1719 12,650 1693 2 642 1720 25,095 1694-97 1721 10,222 1698 (Aug.) j 1722. . 12,973 \ 14,020 1723 25,036 1700 (Feb.) I 1724 28,386 1700 14,825 1725 21,792 1701 2,904 1726 [loss— 662] 1702 (2-6) 5,948 1727 14,729 1703 29,180 1728 8,698 1704 18,844 1729 35,386 1705 6,678 1730 15,704 1706 5,183 1731 26,449 1707 22,899 1732 28,073 1708 18,885 1733 39,760 1709 26,008 1734 2,525 1710 32,312 1735 29,610 1711 21,366 1736 15,561 1712 30,998 1737 4.782 ^ 1713 12,163 1738 15,165 « 1714 30,879 1739 11,932 ^ The marks and skilling are omitted here. "^ The Thormohlen and Arff leases covered most of this period. * "Because of the many expenses in connection with St. Croix." *" Gewinst til Capital Conto burde voire mere, da der paa Negere de Robert Steicart og Cornells Marskalk ere vundne mindst 6,000 rdl., men det beregnes 1739." [338] APPENDIX R 339 RETURN ON COMPANY'S CAPITAL— Con^znaei Year Rdl. Year EM, 1740 8,912 1748 34,631 1741 15,991 1749 21,323 * 1742 8,929 1750 19,384 1743 15,040 1751 24,684 1744 20,265 1752 20,159 1745 23,278 1753 34,211 1746 32,363 1754 28,567 1747 29,418 ^ " Vedk Comps. particulaire Vahre og tUstaaende Gield." APPENDIX S ST. THOMAS STATISTICS: MISCELLANEOUS (1700-1708; 1723-1754) Salaries 1700 3,151 rdl. 1701 3,279 1702 1.085 1703 4.694 1704 1705 3.989 1706 2,978 1707 3,082 1708 1723 6,368 1724 10,665 1725 10,318 1726 6,026 1727 10,323 1728 7,211 1729 8,359 1730 13,501 1731 9,145 1732 9,121 1733 9,389 1734 7,912 1735 8,189 1736 8,525 1737 10,251 1738 9,461 1739 10,820 1740 9,983 1741 10,626 1742 10,203 1743 9,484 1744 8,338 1745 8.418 1746 8.960 1747 9,827 1748 9,360 1749 10,036 1750 15,553 1751 13,482 1752 14,057 1753 14,557 1754 13,633 Governor's table Interest account .5,9511 671. 9,750 9,750 9,750 9,750 9,750 9,7.50 9,750 9,750 6,620 10,570 10,570 10,570 3,109 10,570 347 10,570 5,876 10,570 671 25,313 10,570 671 10,457 10,570 671 11,009 10,570 671 18,208 10,570 671 6,925 10,570 671 3,265 20,385 18,130 22,627 3,849 1,065 4,482 3,056 1,940 1,911 2,421 2,137 3,303 3,471 4,445 7,169 10,000 8,182 11.921 14,556 16,901 20,563 22,480 25,753 Value of Ammunition Christianfort account 9,750 rd« 4,825 rdJ. 4,757 6,561 6,213 5,900 5,835 5,874 5,783 6.025 4,988 4,410 4,902 4,605 4,924 5,651 .5,780 . 5,700 .5,721 . 6,078 .5,547 .4,606 .3,904 .4,528 .4,509 .4,738 .4,629 .4,527 .4,142 .4,141 .3,835 .3,399 .3,997 .3,982 .4,537 .3,011 .3,201 .4,607 .4,523 .4,553 .5,333 .4,544 ^ This represents the accumulated expenses of several years. Governors Crone and Bredal each had long, ■ tedious disputes with the directors con- cerning allowances for table expenses. 3401 1742.. 1743. . 1744. . 1745. . 1746. . 1747 . . 1748. . 1749. . 1750. . 1751. . 1752 . . 1763. . APPENDIX T ST. CROIX STATISTICS: MISCELLANEOUS (1742-1753) Lost or gained on Salary'- "Interest Princess LaGrange Value of^ Value of ^ Profit on^ account account" plantation plantation Princess LaGrange capital .4,826 539 4,173 23,54.0 4,752 .4,635 983 4,134 25,005 4,426 . 4,266 1,616 2.781 25,162 4,763 . 5,769 2,524 2,254 —46 26,097 3,520 7,446 . 7,128 4,370 4,383 —194 26,178 3,770 14,902 . 5,822 6,622 11,023 —617 38,088 8,216 37,002 . 6,732 11,127 — 4,064 — 4,509 60,889 11,716 . 8,314 4,207 1,614 —1,635 65,559 14,947 6,820 .10,256 38,660 1,493 —1,107 67,718 14,676 67,966 14,595 .10,845 23,791 8,236 —337 78,568 38,660 40,291 . 9,739 29,778 9,353 —655 78,888 39,930 50,365 1 Sallario Conto. ^ The Princess plantation lay a short distance northwest from Christiansted; La Grange, on the shores of West End Bay. Both belonged to the Company. See map of St. Croix, opposite p. 248. ^ The writer makes no attempt to explain the apparent discrepancy between the inventory value of LaGrange plantation, and the losses recorded against it. The accounts of the Company often arouse fear and wonder rather than understanding in the observer. Perhaps they fulfil thereby their intended mis- sion. ^ These figures seem to represent the returns on the capital invested by the Company upon St. Croix. [341] APPENDIX U LIST OF SHAREHOLDERS IN THE ROYAL CHARTERED DANISH WEST INDIA AND GUINEA COMPANY, AND SHARES HELD IN THE COMPANY AND REFINERY IN THE YEAR 1751 ^ Company Refinery shares shares 1. Det Kongelige Huus. Hans Kongl, Mt. Vores Allernaadigste Konge 8 2 Hendes Mayt. Dronningen Lovise 4 1 Hendes Kongl. Hoihed Princesse Charlotte Amalia 16 4 2. Prseses. Hans Hoi Graevel. Excel. Hr. Geheime Raad og Oberhof- marechal Adam Gotlob Moltke 8 2 3. Directeureme. Hr. Justitz Raad Peter Lemvig 10% 2 Hr. Etatz Raad Herman L. Klocker 8 2 Hr. Agent Johan Friderich Vewer 7 2 " " Joost von Hemmert 8 2 4. Hoved Participanterne. Hr. Etatz Raad Johannes Valeur 5}^ 1 /a " Capitaine Jesper Richardt 7 1% " Justitz Raad Oluf Blach 8 2 5. Sr. Hans Christian Oelgoed 8 2 " Peter Boertman 7 S 6. Participantere. Hans Hoy Graevel. Excel. Hr. Ferdinand Anthon Grsev af Danneschiold til Lauerwigen 9 3 Hr. Feldtmarschal og General Schulenborg 4 1 Hr. Geheime Raad von Berchentin 4 1 Afg. Hr. Geheime Raad von Schulin 4 1 Hans Excel. Hr. Vice Statholder Geheime Conferentz Raad Jakob Benzon 20^ 4% Hr. General og Commandant M. Numsen 8 2 Hr. Geheime Conf . Raad Claus v. Reventlau 2 1 1 From Werlauff MSS. No. 22, Royal Library. On account of the impossibil- ity of finding exact equivalents for many of the titles, they are transcribed as they are found in the manuscript, nor is any attempt made to correct the tran- scriber s spelling. [842] APPENDIX U 343 LIST OF SHAREHOLDERS— Confonwed Company Refinery shares shares Afgt. Hr. Geh. Conf . Raad og Baron Gersdorf 2 Afgt. Hr. Geh. Conf. Raad Grseve af Gyldensteen ... 7 l^/g Afgt. Hr. Geheinae Raad og Baron Christian Gylden- crone IM IM Hr. Geheime Raad Carl von Holstein 2 3^ " " " Fridrich W. von Holstein 2 J/^ " " " von der Osten 8 2 " " " og Baron von Dehn 4 1 " " " Demerciere 2 3^ " " " Victor von Plessen 4 1 " " " Eggert. Christ, v. Linstow 5 2 " OttoKot 1 1 " " " Oberhofmester von Juel 2 J^ " " " Ober Jsegermester von Gram 4 1 " " " Ober Kammer Junker V. der Liihe 3 % Afgt. Stiftamtmand Adolph Andreas von der Liihe Ridder 5 2 Hr. Stiftamtmand Holger Scheel Ridder Johan Albrecht Vith Ridder 2 1 Hr. Vice Admiral Friderich Hoppe 234 /9 Hr. Vice Admiral Wilhelm Lemvig ^/g 3^ Hr. Envoye Extraordinaire Walther Titly 4 1 Hr. Kanuuer Herre Buchwaldt 4 1 " " " Christian von Stocken 5 1 " " " von Stafifelt 1 " WUlum Berregaard 10 2j^ Frue Geheime Raadinde Enke af Holstein 4 1 Frue Grsevinde Knudt 8 2 " " Amalia Georgine von Schmettau 1 34 Froken Hofmesterinde von der Osten 12 3 Afg. Frue Baronesse von Gersdorf 12 2 Frue Wibeke Krag Generalinde von Eindten 1 3 Frue Generalinde von Stocken 4 1 Hr. Conf erentz Raad Hans Seidelin 43^ 3^ " SchoUer 2 }4 " " afgt. Carl von Brandt 2 2 " " " afgt. Lars Benzon 23^ 1 " " " Baron Matthias von Gyldencrone .. . 1 34 Frue Conferentz Raadinde Rostgaard 103^ 23^ Hr. Etatz Raad Friderich Holmsted 13}4 " " " Gregorius Klauman 8 2^ " " " Laurits Munck 2 3^ " Johan F. Friis 8 2 g44 APPENDIX U LIST OF SHAREHOLDERS— Contonwed Company Refinery Shares Shares Afg. Etatz Raad Severin Wartberg 3 % " Thomas Bartholin 23^ 2 Frue Etatz Raadinde Weyse. /.>;, 2J^ 1 Kammer Jomfrue Packo 4 1 Hr. Hof Predicant Bluhme 3 Hr. Lt. (?) Able le maire 1 }4 " Oberst Lieutenant Hans Albert von der LUhe 1 " " " " Christian SchoUer 1 J^ Frue Anna Stokfleth SI. Oberste Brugmans 1 J -IIP-- #"V ='^W.- ..^% i'O Ci 0' .-V-' C' '■^oS ^ ^r. "oo^ ^ "> M ^ V, "o^ -^^ ^^