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READING 3 Anand Yang, “Indian Convict Workers in Southeast Asia in the Late Eighteenth and Early Nineteenth Centuries,” Journal of World History 14, no. 2 (Fall 2003), 179–208. Abstract: South Asian convicts transported to Southeast Asia in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries were part of a global system of forced migration. Together with slaves and bonded and indentured laborers, they helped settle and colonize the overseas European empires. No wonder, then, that recent writings have designated them as “convict workers,” an emphasis that shifts attention away from their earlier characterization as “professional and habitual criminals” to highlight their actual lived experiences in the penal settlements. Indeed, Indian “convict workers” filled a critical need for labor in Southeast Asia, playing an especially significant role in carrying out the public works projects that were so essential to the establishment and consolidation of the British Empire in the region. This convict system came to an end in the late nineteenth century. Convicts transported from South Asia to Southeast Asia in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries were part of a global system of forced migration. Along with the convicts sent to Australia from Britain and Ireland, they were, as scholars of transportation have rightly insisted, part of a larger international and intercontinental flow of forced migration including . . . French, Spanish and Russian convicts, and “bonded” Indian and Melanesian contract labour. After 1820 a quarter of a million convicts were shipped across the world’s oceans to colonise Australia, New Caledonia, Singapore and French Guiana, and to meet labour demand in Gibraltar, Bermuda, Penang, Malacca and Mauritius. . . . Transportation, like the recruiting of slaves and the contracting of bonded workers, was complementary to the international migration of free European peoples before 1914. Convictism was a labour system existing in many countries of the world in the nineteenth century. 1 [End Page 179] Indeed, the history of transported convicts can be located “within the comparative literature of international ‘unfree’ labour migration” and tied to such “mainstream” topics as: the slave-trade from Atlantic and Indian Ocean Africa; the Trans-Saharan slave-trade; the international migration of indentured labourers from South and East Asia; the large-scale mobilization of various kinds of ‘unfree’ migrant labour within colonial Africa and South Asia; the migration of indentured servants from Britain to North America and the Caribbean; and the uses made of all this vast and varied flow of humanity on the one hand and its own historical agency, lived experience and cultural history on the other, in destinations around the world. 2 Used by permission for Bridging World History, The Annenberg Foundation copyright © 2004 1 The flows of convict workers between 1787 and 1920 involved significant numbers, especially to Australia. The traffic from Britain—extensively studied because of its centrality in the peopling of Australia—involved as many as 80,000 to New South Wales between 1788 and 1840; 67,000 to 69,000 to Van Diemen’s Land (Tasmania) between 1801 and 1852; and two smaller cohorts of 3,000 and 9,700 people during the 1840s, 1850s, and 1860s. These forced migrations followed on the heels of the transportation of some 50,000 convicted felons from Britain to North America, principally to Maryland and Virginia, in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. Smaller in scale and far less known are the movements of convicts from South Asia to Southeast Asia. India dispatched 4,000–6,000 convicts to Bengkulen between 1787 and 1825 and 15,000 to the Straits Settlements between 1790 and 1860. Another 1,000– 1,500 were transported from Ceylon to Malacca in the Straits Settlements between 1849 and 1873, and several thousand more were sent to Burma and to areas outside of Southeast Asia, principally Mauritius between 1815 and 1837 and the Andaman Islands after 1857. 3 This paper tracks the history of convicts from South Asia to their Southeast Asian penal destinations in order to assess their roles as “convict workers.” That is, it examines their roles as members of a labor [End Page 180] force that was recruited and organized to service the projects of the emerging British Empire in the region in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries. My use of the term “convict workers,” derived from the revisionist scholarship on Australian convict history, is deliberate. As in that literature, so too here it is intended to underscore their roles as productive laborers and to shift attention away from their criminal pasts, which previously misled considerations of their potential and effectiveness as workers. Nor did the earlier generation of writings in Australian history apparently plumb deeply enough into the criminal and personal backgrounds of the offenders. Instead it wrongly assumed that the convicts were “professional and habitual criminals” whose character and criminality destined them to become inefficient workers. The notion of “convict workers” therefore tilts against “the received interpretation… [that] has emphasised male convicts as hardened and professional criminals, females as prostitutes and convictism as a brutal and inefficient system of forced labour.” 4 The new emphasis on convicts as workers is also directed at relocating the scholarship on convict transportation within the comparative literature of “ ‘unfree’ labor migration.” Such a global perspective moves away from the earlier insistence on viewing the phenomenon of transportation solely within national histories and toward understanding its comparability with other forms of forced migrations and its direct connections to these other flows, as this account of their experiences in Southeast Asia will indicate. Used by permission for Bridging World History, The Annenberg Foundation copyright © 2004 2 Although the discussion here is centered on Indian convicts, it recognizes that they were part of a larger traffic pattern in South and Southeast Asia that transported different peoples in different directions across these regions. “[N]atives of the Malay countries” were transferred to India, Chinese from Singapore and Hong Kong were exiled to India and from Hong Kong also briefly to the Straits Settlements, and convicts from Ceylon and Burma were dispatched to these venues as well. 5 In 1853 the convicts lodged in the Straits were described as of a “most heterogeneous nature, comprising individuals not only of all [End Page 181] the tribes of Asia from the Punjaub to Ceylon, but also men from many of the provinces of China, Jews, Parsees[,] Seedi Caffers and Malays, and the House of Correction . . . held of late not a few Europeans . . .” 6 Indian convict transportation to Southeast Asia provided much needed labor in the rising outposts of the British Empire in Southeast Asia in the late eighteenth and the early nineteenth centuries. Important in this historical context is an understanding of the conditions and circumstances that generated a pressing need for their labor as well as of the roles these convicts played—literally and figuratively—in establishing and consolidating the foundations of colonial rule. Significant also to this study is the larger framework of labor in all its more coerced and less forced varieties ranging from slavery and serfdom that “have generally been permanent conditions” to “unfree labor” that is essentially temporary. Convict labor falls into the latter category, as does “indenture, military service, debt peonage, and apprenticeship, as well as the systems used to enforce types of agricultural and mining labor in various parts of the world.” Slavery, by contrast, is generally not “limited in duration” and often entitles “the rulers having the right and ability to exploit labor and to control not only the serf or slave, but also their offspring.” 7 Labor in Southeast Asia tended to be organized by slavery, bondage, and dependency. In the words of one scholar, “the labour system of Southeast Asia through most of its recorded history . . . [was] based on the obligation to labour for a creditor, master or lord.” 8 Although the prevailing Southeast Asian labor system decisively shaped the colonial framework in which Indian convict labor became imperative, it was rarely factored into the British discourse about labor. Official discourse, in fact, shied away from highlighting the ties that bound together the different systems of coerced labor, almost as if colonial administrators were fearful of their advocacy of convict labor eroding the high moral ground that they had claimed by advocating the abolition of slavery in the region. The two forms of labor were nonetheless closely interrelated: the closing down of the slave trade (banned in theory by the British parliament in 1807) and the subsequent abolition of slavery in many areas of the region exacerbated [End Page 182] labor shortages. So did local labor systems by virtue of their networks of Used by permission for Bridging World History, The Annenberg Foundation copyright © 2004 3 bondage and obligation that discouraged the growth of a labor market. “Southeast Asians,” notes one writer, “themselves appear to have continued to regard wage labour as alien and demeaning.” 9 Implicit here but not developed in any detail is my larger argument made elsewhere about convicts characterizing themselves as Company ke naukar (servants of the company). Indian convicts, in other words, opted to define themselves as workers, as men who were engaged in the service of the East India Company rather than as bandwars (prisoners, literally means those locked up). The idea of naukar or retainer, an offshoot of the term naukari or service, stemmed from the precolonial concept of “honourable service in the warband, the retainership of the lord’s companion, hence employment.” Whereas today it implies menial service, it meant something quite different in the colonial era when it alluded primarily to “long distance service as a retainer, for instance in the British East India Company’s army” or as migrant labor. 10 Whether the notion of the transportation experience as naukari or service arose exclusively out of the convict roles as workers overseas or grew out of the labor regimens that some prisoners in some prisons in India followed prior to the development of transportation cannot be clearly ascertained. However, it is highly unlikely that the term sprang up on Indian soil in conjunction with the incarceration experience because prisons were a relatively new phenomenon in the late eighteenth century, and relatively newer was even the possibility of employing prisoners to engage in manual labor. Indeed, the practice of organizing prisoners to perform manual labor did not become a systematic or widespread practice until the beginning of the nineteenth century. By then, the term naukars (or retainers or servants), which convicts applied to themselves, was already in usage. The use of the term naukari may have also emerged as an apposite self-designation because longdistance service was central to the transportation experience. 11 Convicts, furthermore, increasingly defined themselves as part of [End Page 183] an “Indian” community that emerged in these outposts of empire as a result of the mixing and melding of different groups of people from the South Asian subcontinent. This community consisted of transportees and sepoys (soldiers), as well as a number of other groups, including indentured laborers who began to trickle in toward the middle of the nineteenth century and then stream in much greater numbers later that century. Convicts developed a more encompassing identity through their shared experiences as laborers, subject positions that enabled people drawn from different regions of the Indian subcontinent and from different socioeconomic backgrounds to forge a sense of a wider Indian community. 12 The identities of Indian convict workers were also shaped by their encounters with other ethnic groups. For instance, in Bengkulen in the late eighteenth Used by permission for Bridging World History, The Annenberg Foundation copyright © 2004 4 century and the first decades of the nineteenth century, they lived and labored alongside the East India Company’s other major coerced labor group, African slaves who had been brought in primarily from Madagascar. Indian convicts and “kaffirs”—as African slaves were called in this region—worked so closely together that they were jointly supervised by an officer designated the superintendent of “convicts and coffrees [kaffirs].” Work and residential associations also issued out of and resulted in their teaming up sexually and permanently, arrangements that typically involved Indian convicts who were overwhelmingly male pairing up with African slaves who were predominantly female. In addition, Indian convicts were involved in liaisons with Malay women. All these relationships were further complicated by the fact that Malay women also consorted with Indian soldiers, thus further consolidating the social and personal ties that often formed among all the different groups of Indians who were thrown together in the foreign lands across the black waters. In some localities Indian convict workers also labored side by side with imported Chinese workers and some local Malay men. 13 Indian convict workers forged ties to Indian indentured workers as [End Page 184] well and to the rest of the Indian community by adapting to a variety of roles, both when they served in the capacity of unfree labor and when they stayed on as free labor in the penal colonies. My argument about the development of an “Indian” community also entails extending the connections between slavery and bondage on the one hand and forced convict labor on the other hand to encompass indentured labor. My contention is not that indentured labor represented “a new system of slavery” or was, by contrast, a labor migration of opportunity. Rather it insists on linking the two, on establishing the connections between the earlier forced migration of convicts and the later streams of Indian migrant labor that gained in size and momentum by the 1840s. By the 1880s Indian indentured laborers numbered over 10,000 a year. 14 I will focus first on highlighting the dynamics that led Indian convicts to become part of a global system of forced migration and part of a productive labor force in the enclaves of the rising British Empire in Southeast Asia. Part of the discussion here is centered on unraveling the contradictory policy impulses of the colonial authorities in South and Southeast Asia. The Indian government was primarily concerned with the penal aspects of transportation while the administration in the latter sites were principally interested in the labor utility of the able-bodied men they had acquired. My discussion will then shift attention to the convict workers themselves and their activities in the Southeast Asian penal colonies. Their story ends in the late nineteenth century, when the major penal sites in the Straits Settlements, specifically Singapore, refused to accept any more convicts from South Asia. Used by permission for Bridging World History, The Annenberg Foundation copyright © 2004 5 Developing out of the medieval punishment of banishment, transportation had been in existence in England since the sixteenth century, and it became more widely used in the late seventeenth century when North America was opened up to receiving convict traffic. In the eighteenth century it was by “far the most important of all . . . secondary punishments . . . in which minor criminals or those reprieved from the death sentence were banished to foreign lands as indentured labour. Transportation overseas was a feature unique to British penal culture.” 15 Transplanted to India in the late eighteenth century, transportation [End Page 185] took root in the emerging colonial penal culture of the early nineteenth century and flourished because colonial administrators viewed it as an especially suitable technology of punishment for Indian society and culture. In India, as in England, it was aimed at attaining the penal objectives of removing criminals from their local societies, of deterring others from committing crimes, and of reforming the convicts. 16 And in India it was believed to have the added virtue of being a transgressive punishment, that is, it transgressed indigenous notions about the religious and cultural dangers of crossing the kala pani or the “black waters.” Thus, British officials considered transportation to be “a weapon of tremendous power. The horror with which the people regard transportation is a feeling born with them, and the questions whether it be a wise or a foolish feeling, whether it be a just deduction from true premises or the result of ignorance and superstition, are nothing to the purpose.” 17 In other words, transportation was said to pack an extra punitive punch because of its negative cultural and religious implications. Furthermore, because of the peculiarly Indian cultural currency of this punishment, it was to be appraised differently in India than in England. Therefore the objections of the “many persons of very high authority . . . who have made themselves masters of the science of criminal-discipline” (presumably among them the law reformer Jeremy Bentham) and who raised doubts about its merits were not pertinent to the Indian penal scene. 18 Transportation, as utilized by the colonial regime, had little precedence in Indian history. Although banishment existed as a punishment for certain crimes in ancient India, its scope appears to have been limited. According to the Manusmrti (the code of law associated with Manu) and to other ancient texts, it was a substitute punishment for Brahmins whose transgressions otherwise merited the death penalty or branding. It was also levied on offenders for crimes ranging from adultery to not rendering assistance when a village was being plundered, and on undesirable characters such as gamblers and heretics that the authorities wanted to expel from their kingdom. Little evidence exists [End Page 186] as to the specific areas to Used by permission for Bridging World History, The Annenberg Foundation copyright © 2004 6 which people were banished. Apparently, the practice simply was to ensure that offenders left the state or the kingdom that banished them. 19 The British interest in utilizing this “weapon of tremendous power” was enhanced by their preoccupation with the deployment of punishments that inflicted a “just measure of pain.” Ironically, this emphasis meshed uncomfortably with their rhetoric that sought a moral high ground by espousing the replacement of harsh Islamic laws with the civilized and civilizing regime of colonial discipline and punishment. Indeed, colonial law increasingly replaced or revised Islamic law in the initial century of the Raj, discarding particularly those punishments the British considered repugnant such as mutilation—a trend that conformed with the European tendency to shift away from torture in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries. But this represented one trend at a time when the overall emphasis was on ensuring that the severity of punishments was not undermined and that appropriate punishments existed to facilitate the maintenance and enhancement of law and order. Jorg Fisch’s study of the British transformation of the Bengal criminal law between 1769 and 1817 has judiciously extricated the seemingly “humanitarian” strands of legal changes from the larger fabric with its clearcut sanguinary design. Punishments more or less familiar from Europe were hardly ever questioned, flogging included, while capital offences were much more frequent in English than in Islamic law. . . . Crime had to be fought in the interests of the state and of society. This led to deterrence and prevention as the most important means. Almost every measure was justified if it contributed to them. . . . British administrators . . . did not want to revenge, to retaliate or to impose suffering for its own sake. The ultimate goal of the punishment was not the body of the criminal but rather the impact on society and the future behaviour of the offender. Within this framework, mutilation was of doubtful use. It caused much and long suffering, while its deterrent effect was limited, and it encouraged rather than prevent the commission of further crimes by the punished person. Capital punishment, on the other hand, excellently fitted in with the British needs: it could be administered with comparatively little physical [End Page 187] suffering, but with much deterrent effect, and its preventive value was absolute. Transportation was seen in a similar manner . . . 20 Central to the colonial preoccupation with transportation was the British belief in the unusual “power” that it exerted over indigenous minds. And many colonial administrators continued to repose their faith in the “horror” of the punishment, even in the face of growing evidence to the contrary over the course of the nineteenth century. Such conviction grew out of the long-standing belief that Indians regarded the punishment with dread and out of the rising colonial state’s desire for balancing and even vitiating “humanitarian” reform Used by permission for Bridging World History, The Annenberg Foundation copyright © 2004 7 by perfecting a suitable technology of punishment for India and Indians. This framework guided colonial administrators from the very outset of their attempts at “reforming” Indian laws and punishments. Consider the responses of magistrates to the inquiry instituted by Governor-General Cornwallis into the criminal justice system in 1789 and 1790. An underlying tone in these deliberations was a concern about the lack of severity in punishments applied by the new colonial legal system. Several administrators therefore urged the establishment of more sanguinary punishments, including public hangings; some recommended the imposition of transportation. 21 Much the same tenor is discernible in the responses that Governor-General Wellesley elicited from his subordinate officers when he sought out their views on the prevailing judicial and penal systems. In fact, the official voices were even more insistent on this occasion that transportation be deployed as the “weapon” of choice against certain kinds of criminals. Once again the accent was on the “horror” that the punishment evoked among Indians. The three judges of the Provincial Courts of Appeal and Circuit in Calcutta, for instance, reported that transportation was “considered by many as more severe than death.” The judge of Bakarganj chimed in that “natives in general dread it more than hanging; and persons under that sentence have repeatedly requested me to get their sentences changed to death in preference.” The judge and magistrate of Hughli lamented that it was not utilized more extensively because it was “held in such terror.” 22 [End Page 188] The 1838 report of the Committee on Prison-Discipline, which became the textual primer for the emerging “scientific” discourse on penology in colonial India, echoed these sentiments. Charged with designing a “good machinery for the infliction of punishment” 23 —a machinery that was to work in tandem with the new penal code that the Law Commission was formulating—the committee found transportation to its liking because of its “horror” and “terror” potential. Although imprisonment received the most extensive coverage in the report because it was considered the primary punishment, transportation was singled out as the second most important form of punishment. A “distinct” section of the report highlighted the “system under which that punishment is now inflicted, with a few recommendations of improvements . . . and our plan of a new system under which we recommend the future infliction of that punishment.” 24 Transportation, to use the words of the Committee on Prison-Discipline report, was “a branch of prison-discipline,” its value as a punishment measurable largely in terms of its effectiveness in relation to imprisonment. Whereas the committee acknowledged that “the temporary discipline of a penitentiary has great advantages over the temporary discipline of a penal settlement,” it was decidedly in favor of transportation for life, which it considered a highly reliable form of “criminal discipline.” The subject of Used by permission for Bridging World History, The Annenberg Foundation copyright © 2004 8 capital punishment it chose not to broach, at least not to consider extending its use. However, it did weigh the merits of “whether death or transportation were [sic] the most awful to the people” and found “that transportation for life would generally, in India, have a greater deterring effect than this most grievous infliction.” Transportation, according to the committee report, was also the tougher punishment in the eyes of those people “who do not consider imprisonment for life, in solitude and without occupation, a punishment absolutely unjustifiable.” From this line of reasoning followed the conclusion that “at present imprisonment for life is universally considered as the milder, and transportation for life as the severer punishment. In fact the permanence of the effect in both punishments is equal, and the intensity of the effect of the latter in India, is incalculably greater than that of the former.” 25 [End Page 189] Transportation was intensely feared by the people in India, the committee maintained. Unmistakable proof of this attitude was its finding “that even under the present very lax treatment of transported convicts, out of those who are actually experiencing the tedium of perpetual confinement in Allipore Gaol, to whom if to any native the idea of novelty and release from the walls of a prison would be agreeable, few comparatively have petitioned to have their sentences commuted to transportation.” 26 The superintendent of this Calcutta jail offered his support for this belief when he urged that the “desperate characters” held in his facility be banished overseas, “a plan” that he considered “more consonant with the principle of punishment, and more suitable to the condition of such heinous offenders.” 27 From the outset transportation was also developed as a punishment in India—as it had been in England—to serve economic objectives as well. The latter intention was clearly spelled out in the Transportation Act of 1717, specifically in its wording that “in many of His Majesty’s colonies and plantations in America, there was a great want of servants, who by their labour and industry might be the means of improving and making the said colonies and plantations more useful to this nation.” 28 In short, this punishment had the added advantage of supplying “servants” to labor-deficit areas that were vital to the project of the British Empire. From the outset, the colonial decision to extend transportation to India was made with an eye to realizing both the penal and economic objectives. Certainly well aware of these dual goals was the superintendent of the Andamans, the first systematic major penal settlement for convicts from South Asia. Writing in 1795, he insisted that “in all cases of transportation two points must be established[:] the one that there is strong local attachment from habit, possession of fixed property; ties of consanguinity or affection, the dissolving of which with condemnation to hard labour constitutes the exemplary punishment, the other that the country chosen for the place of banishment is to Used by permission for Bridging World History, The Annenberg Foundation copyright © 2004 9 derive benefit . . .” He added that this advantage was attained “by the acquisition of even such bad subjects as was formerly the case in the [End Page 190] transportation of convicts from Great Britain to its colonies in North America and at this time to Botany Bay.” Furthermore, he emphasized that European convicts were not be added to the “native labourers” because they were incapable of working and surviving “in such a climate.” 29 In the initial years of transportation of convicts from South Asia to Southeast Asia, a few Europeans were transported along with Indians, and they were invariably treated differently. In fact, on the few occasions that European convicts—mostly Portuguese—were shipped out together with Indians they were housed separately and eventually placed in an overseer capacity over their fellow convicts from India. Generally, however, Europeans convicted of transportable offenses were dispatched to Australia. Furthermore, early on the authorities in London decided not to send any Indian convicts to Australia but to preserve it as a place for Europeans only. 30 The punitive and economic objectives of transportation did not always dovetail, however. Certainly, they did not mesh well when the primary colonial interest in inflicting this punishment was in capitalizing on its severity and its capacity to deliver a “just measure of pain.” By contrast, the transportation destinations were far more invested in its labor value, that is, in the promise of its capacity to provide a cheap and reliable pool of convict labor, the greater the number and the more physically fit the better. At times, these conflicting pulls, emanating largely from the sending and receiving ends, led to seemingly contradictory shifts in colonial policies about transportation. The subject of transportation was broached in India as early as 1773, when Warren Hastings, the governor of Bengal, recommended banishing prisoners to Bengkulen (also known as Fort Marlborough) in West Sumatra. Although sources differ on when the first Indian convicts were actually transported there—according to one account as early as 1784 31 —an early batch was sentenced by the Supreme Court in Calcutta in 1787 and deported to Bengkulen. Thereafter, [End Page 191] other destinations were sought and developed because of the lack of jail facilities in Bengal and the increasing number of prisoners. In 1788 Governor-General Cornwallis recommended transportation to the Prince of Wales Island, better known as Penang, which the East India Company had acquired in 1786, or to comparable sites in lieu of certain sentences: life imprisonment, a term of seven years, or forfeiture of limbs. By 1790 the first Indian convicts had set foot on Penang soil. 32 Thereafter, the number of prisoners eligible for transportation and the locales to which they were transported varied with changing legislative and administrative imperatives and with the changing geography of the British Empire in Southeast Asia. Penal destinations in the late eighteenth and the first Used by permission for Bridging World History, The Annenberg Foundation copyright © 2004 10 two decades of the nineteenth century included Bengkulen, Malacca, Penang, the island of Amboyna ( south of the principal Moluccan islands), and Java. By 1819 the flag of the empire also flew over the island of Singapore, which Sir Thomas Raffles had acquired when he was governor of Bengkulen. The British advance into Burma opened up additional venues, specifically in Arakan and Tenasserim, where they had secured concessions in the late 1820s. And by the close of 1810 Britain had also acquired the former French territory of Mauritius. Periodically, administrators in Calcutta and London broached the possibility of adding Botany Bay, West Indies, Aden, and various locales in Asia to this changing list of penal sites, but these were not developed into penal colonies for Indian convicts from South Asia. 33 If one impulse shaping transportation laws was the ongoing colonial Indian interest in making the punishment more severe, another dynamic was the Southeast Asian preoccupation with transforming the recipients of this punishment into convict workers for their settlements. And always there was a concern about increasing the numbers who could be targeted by such laws. As early as 1799, Regulation II displayed this intent in adjudging “convicts who may escape from confinement during their sentences liable to transportation.” 34 Much of [End Page 192] the initial focus, however, was on revising the terms of this punishment so that it operated with optimum severity, a condition that was believed to be best safeguarded by maintaining it as a long-term sentence. Regulation LIII of 1803 therefore sought to curtail its use to “none, except persons convicted of heinous offences and sentenced to be imprisoned for life . . .” 35 In its insistence that “transportation beyond sea shall be hereafter restricted to convicts who may be sentenced to confinement for life,” this regulation nullified section X of Regulation IV of 1797 whereby prisoners could be banished overseas for shorter terms, seven years or other time periods. Enacted in part as a response to the concern registered by several administrators that the return of transportees to their native soil diminished the terror of that punishment, this regulation also instituted capital punishment for escaped convicts. To one scholar, these changes show that the “warnings in the replies to Governor-General Wellesley’s enquiry of 1801, that the deterrent effect of this punishment was mainly based on uncertainty and would be destroyed by returning convicts, was taken seriously.” 36 Notwithstanding the overwhelmingly favorable light in which the judicial authorities had cast transportation in 1801, and notwithstanding the several legal measures enacted to tailor it into a more long-term and effective punishment, it was briefly abolished by Regulation XIV of 1811. This decision to amend the “provisions of the existing regulations respecting the punishment of criminals by transportation” emanated ostensibly from the administrative concern—to use the language of the Regulation—regarding the “delay Used by permission for Bridging World History, The Annenberg Foundation copyright © 2004 11 experienced in carrying such sentences into execution.” This seemingly dramatic turnaround in view was also justified by government on the grounds that (1) it entailed considerable expense, (2) its reputation as a terrible punishment had been compromised by the frequent return of transported prisoners, and (3) its capacity to evoke terror had been diminished partly from the laxness in treatment of prisoners, particularly those held in Penang. On the one hand, then, the decision to abolish transportation as a punishment stemmed from financial and practical considerations; on the other hand, it issued from an ongoing concern regarding the severity of the punishment because of escapes and returns and the relaxed [End Page 193] treatment of prisoners. Convicts, especially in Penang, were said to enjoy privileges that diminished the rigors of their punishment. Moreover, government now had the additional option of confining prisoners in its Alipur jail. Some authorities believed that this new jail in Calcutta, in the heart of the emerging Indian empire, could take over the transportation function of removing criminals from their home turf. They also believed that it could guarantee better the severity of the punishment because of the secure confines of the jail and the added possibility of requiring and extracting hard labor from the prisoners. 37 Regulation XIV was a momentary departure from an otherwise consistent line in favor of transportation. Not surprisingly, it was quickly overturned by Regulation IX of 1813, which reinstated transportation. That it was abolished at all has rightly appeared puzzling, particularly given the relative absence of official deliberations over why this decision was undertaken in the first place. 38 Whatever wavering there was over this form of punishment related not to its intrinsic merits as a harsh sentence but to a concern about the lack of rigor enforced in its implementation and practice. The timing of this revival—and the language employed in its reinstitution and in subsequent legislative refinements of this punishment confirms this— can be closely correlated with rising imperial ambitions and imperatives. Indeed, political and territorial advances abroad and in the subcontinent altered the parameters of the penal discourse regarding transportation from one directed solely at weighing its severity as a punishment and its effectiveness as a deterrence to an estimation of its role in the larger imperial configuration. In other words, policies about transportation increasingly became tied to questions of labor. These new considerations not only revived interest in transportation but also enhanced its value. Note the imperial address to which Regulation IX of 1813 reestablishing transportation was directed. This enactment authorized the governor-general to transmit convicts to whatever “British settlements in Asia” that he deemed appropriate and to move “convicts from one place to another in the settlements aforesaid.” Convicts were, moreover, “liable to be employed at Used by permission for Bridging World History, The Annenberg Foundation copyright © 2004 12 any places within the limits of the settlement to which they shall be sent, which shall from time to time be [End Page 194] fixed on by the local administration.” 39 All these strictures were clearly designed to accommodate the shifting labor needs and imperatives of the rising British Empire. Labor considerations were also clearly etched into Regulation I of 1828, the next legislative change in the conditions of transportation. This regulation empowered the governor-general “to commute sentences of imprisonment for life in the Allypore Gaol, to transportation for life to any of the British settlements in Asia, in certain cases,” an amendment that not only widened the pool of eligible offenders but also added new transportation destinations. Thus, those Alipur prisoners under life sentences who were desirous of securing a commutation of their sentences could, by this legislation, seek “transportation for life.” Another change enacted by this law was the ruling that prisoners could “from time to time . . . be transported to the coast of Tenasserim, or to other British settlements to which convicts are now usually transported, in lieu of being imprisoned for life . . .” 40 Administrative confidence in transportation’s efficacy in extirpating criminals from Indian soil and in supplying workers to labor-deficit settlements overseas is conspicuously evident in the deliberations of the Prison-Discipline Committee. No wonder its report strongly advocated continuation of this punishment and even its greater use, a recommendation that enabled transportation to persist in South Asia well into the nineteenth century. In the Southeast Asian outposts the support for transportation of convicts from India remained strong as long as the economic calculus outweighed other considerations. As one governor of Prince of Wales Island put it euphemistically, this type of coerced labor was helpful in providing “public service.” To continue in his words, as he noted in 1800 in making a pitch for Indian convicts, they were needed “to carry on works, particularly roads, which could not otherwise have been effected, but at a most enormous expence. The roads at present are extensive, and as the cultivation and population increases they will still require to be further extended, this can only be done in the first instance by government, the inhabitants not having the means . . .” 41 The resident of Fort Marlborough echoed similar sentiments. He wanted Bengal convicts because their services cost less than the “usual [End Page 195] price of labor of a Malay” and because their labor was vital to his plans to develop the cultivation of coffee and spices in west Sumatra. The first British governor of Mauritius, Sir Robert Farquhar (1810––23), added his voice to this chorus when he sought Indian convict labor to develop the island’s agricultural resources. And speaking in the aftermath of the abolition of transportation, the British resident at Amboyna called for its immediate Used by permission for Bridging World History, The Annenberg Foundation copyright © 2004 13 reinstatement, his argument for convict labor uttered in words that were all too familiar in Calcutta and in many locales across Southeast Asia. Convicts, he observed, performed “public service” that was in the best interests of the British government to support. Such “service” enabled the “natives” in Amboyna to adhere to “their domestic occupations” while the convicts were assigned to other pressing engagements. 42 The imperatives of empire also favored transportation by generating “push” factors: forces that encouraged the banishment of convicts from the British dominion in India to their rising empire overseas. As colonial rule expanded across the subcontinent—through the annexation of new territories and the extension of its reach into the countryside—British authorities increasingly perceived transportation as a punishment perfectly calibrated to rid the emerging empire of political opponents on the one hand and vicious criminals on the other. In other words, they regarded it as a pliable instrument of empire building, to shore up the foundations of colonial rule, by extirpating those people who resisted or threatened to undermine its evolving regime of law and order. Among the first to whom transportation was extended were the Poligars, seventy-three of whom were dispatched to Penang after their Sivaganga Revolt of 1799––1801 had been crushed in southern India. Several of the principal supporters of the Pychee Raja who fought against company rule in Mysore between 1799 and 1806, including Yeman Nayar of Malabar, were also transported and found themselves living alongside the Poligar prisoners. Briefly, authorities in Calcutta considered banishing Indian soldiers who had fought pitched battles against their superior European officers in the Vellore Mutiny of 1806. Although not carried out, the initial plan was to divide the mutineers [End Page 196] into batches to be shipped off to the Cape, Penang, Bengkulen, and Malacca. 43 Transportation was also a weapon in the colonial arsenal aimed at maintaining and reinforcing law and order. It was directed in the initial century of colonial rule at those crimes relating to property that were considered especially malicious—burglary, dacoity, and housebreaking, crimes that may have increased in the wake of agrarian changes ushered in by the British-instituted Permanent Settlement of 1793. Regulation XVII of 1817 “for the more effectual administration of criminal justice in certain cases” specifically targeted such offenders; “persons convicted of robbery by open violence” in certain cases were liable to be whipped as well as imprisoned and transported for life. The same punishment was to be awarded for burglary and theft under certain conditions. 44 According to the “Comptroller of Indian Convicts” in the Straits Settlements, Indian convicts in Southeast Asia were offenders whose crimes included “Murder, Thuggee, Used by permission for Bridging World History, The Annenberg Foundation copyright © 2004 14 and Dacoity” and some who were “tried and convicted of frauds and forgeries, robbery with violence, and such like misdemeanours.” 45 Increasingly in the nineteenth century, the Straits Settlements aggregated the largest body of convicts. Penang, which had been home to Indian convicts from the late eighteenth century onward, initially housed the largest number. Its total stood at 1,469 in 1824, 998 of whom had been sent from Bengal; the remainder were made up of 272 from Madras, 192 from Bombay, and 7 from Ceylon (Sri Lanka). A sizable proportion of these convicts had arrived between 1819 and 1823: 124 in 1819, 304 in 1820, 195 in 1821, 154 in 1822, and 185 in 1823, or 962 of the 1,469 present in 1824. Only 24 of these 1,469, or less than 1% of the overall convict population, were women. In 1824, on the eve of its return to the Dutch, Bengkulen supported 773 convicts, a majority (579) of whom were from Bengal; the other 194 had been sentenced from Madras. Although an initial batch of over one hundred convicts had been dispatched to Malacca in 1805 to clear its Dutch [End Page 197] fortifications, their numbers were not added to until 1825 when it was returned to British hands in exchange for Bengkulen. 46 The geographical distribution of convicts changed somewhat as Singapore and Burma emerged as penal destinations and other settlements declined as penal sites. They became the principal penal destination by the 1830s, as the Prison-Discipline Committee acknowledged in its report and in designating them as the optimum places to receive convicts. By 1835 Tenasserim in Burma counted 1,172 convicts, a substantial number considering the fact that this traffic had only been in motion since the 1820s. In the Straits, Singapore rapidly surpassed Penang and Malacca as the premier settlement for South Asian convicts. It boasted a tally of 901 by the mid-1830s, at a time when Malacca only housed 284. Its numbers had grown in one big leap in the mid1820s when Bengkulen convicts were transferred there on the occasion of its return to the Dutch. Penang’s total stood at 566, which probably represented a considerable underestimation because it counted only convicts sent out from Bengal and not those transported from Bombay and Madras, the latter of which according to an 1837 estimate amounted to 122. The total for Mauritius that same year was 750, a drop from the all-time high of 986 returned for 1834 and the beginning of a downward trend because it stopped accepting convicts in the late 1830s. 47 The Straits and Burma options persisted as the premier receiving locales after the 1830s. 48 A tally taken in the late 1840s counted 2,000 convicts in the Straits, with Singapore alone accounting for almost 1,500 in 1846 and Penang 601. By the early years of the next decade—with the pool of offenders eligible for transportation widened by additional legal changes instituted in the late 1840s—the total had reached nearly 3,000; 2,936 in 1854, to be precise. By September 1855 the number had reached 3,802, the majority of whom were in Used by permission for Bridging World History, The Annenberg Foundation copyright © 2004 15 Singapore and Penang; Malacca, which supported the smallest number, only had [End Page 198] 388 in May 1854 but this tally rose to 735 when 347 were added to this mix in 1854/55. 49 South Asian convicts became vital members of the workforce in the rising outposts of the British Empire in Southeast Asia. The first generation of British settlers and administrators in the region was quick to recognize their potential and to capitalize on it. Thus, immediately after assuming formal possession of Penang in 1786 on behalf of the Crown, the “country trader” Francis Light asked the governor-general in India to “supply. . . one hundred coolies, as the price of labour in Penang was enormous.” 50 Light’s request for labor, framed in terms of the high costs of local labor, became a standard refrain in Southeast Asia in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries. At times, the demand for laboring hands was cast in specific terms, such as was expressed in Penang’s 1796 application for skilled workers or “artificers.” 51 Bengkulen’s request in 1805 began with a familiar lament about the high wages for coolies (15 rupees a month) and the “equally exorbitant” rates for artificers. It then expressly mentioned convicts who could work as “artificers, blacksmiths, bricklayers, braziers, carpenters and particularly comars or potters of which last description there is not one at this place.” 52 Many were the calls as well for convicts who could be employed in the different kinds of agricultural projects that were being launched in Southeast Asia, tasks that Indians were said to be especially suited for because of their peasant backgrounds. 53 Local authorities in Southeast Asia also attempted to meet their labor demands by seeking out other types of labor, including “free” labor recruited from India. In fact, Light’s original request, although [End Page 199] denied, led to the recruitment of twenty-five Bombay artificers who arrived in 1787, the following year. Other Indians came as part of the entourage of European officers and settlers and troops. By the early 1790s, according to Light, there were “about one thousand” Indian shopkeepers and “coolies” on the island. In addition, vessels from south India were said to bring in as many as 1,300 to 2,000 men to work every year. 54 The principal assignment for most convicts, as in Penang, was “public works,” that is, the construction and maintenance of the communications infrastructure of these colonial settlements. They also toiled on many of the major government buildings and provided much of the sweat and blood involved in clearing swamp and forestlands for colonial expansion and reclamation. An 1818 Penang list of convict duties furnishes additional details on the enormous range of tasks that convicts performed and the numbers that were involved in the different undertakings. A sizable proportion, two hundred in Used by permission for Bridging World History, The Annenberg Foundation copyright © 2004 16 toto, labored on the roads. The rest performed menial tasks in a variety of offices. For many there are no specific job descriptions, only an identification of the office they worked in and in what numbers: council house (50 convicts), warehouse (45), customhouse (45), engineers’ department (30), paymaster and storekeeper (16), town major and his garrison (20), hospitals of the 20th regiment (50), courthouse (12), accountant’s office (4), treasury office (2), police office (5), brigade major’s office (2), Chinese poorhouse (8), convict hospital (6), officer commanding troops (8), superintendent of convicts’ office (10), free school (2), signal sergeant on Mount Erskine (2), junior civil servants and military (56), military officers and deputy commissary (2 each), signal sergeant on great hill (2), commissariat department (10), and government house (1). For some there are specific designations: cooks for European troops (8), custodians for the lines of the 20th Regiment (10), hospital attendants (18), dholi (litter) bearers and medical stores (8), sweepers for the navy house (2), church furniture cleaners (4), gravediggers (3), jail water carriers (7), cleaners and weighmen in the convict lines (12), and sweepers, water carriers, and cleaners of the stationery in the secretary’s office (15). Another 122 were hired out to various government and private individuals. 55 Information for other years shows a similar profile of convict work. The largest contingent of Penang’s 1,469 convicts in the 1820s, 351 [End Page 200] people in all, were dedicated to road construction. The rest were relegated to positions designated servants, attendants, and coolies for different senior administrators (254), workers employed in the botanic and hill gardens and in cleaning the lines of troops (128), and labor for hire for various individuals (98). Small groups worked as menial servants and attendants at the hospitals (59), as syces (grooms) and grass cutters to junior civil and military servants (46), as cooks and servants for British troops (22), in various capacities for nonofficial Europeans (16), and other comparable duties. 56 Colonial officials invariably appreciated the work carried out by Indian convict workers. Typical was the following assessment made by one Penang official, obviously uttered in appreciation of their accomplishments, that convict labor there had resulted in “numerous and extensive roads. . . [that] intersect the island in every direction, . . . extensive public buildings . . . and the swamps and marshy grounds . . . have been drained and raised, around and within Georgetown . . .” 57 Lavish praise was also heaped upon convicts for their work in Singapore where they had played a critical role in its development as a major British entrepôt after it was founded in 1819. In the estimation of Governor Blundell of the Straits Settlements, convicts deserved credit for building the whole of the existing roads throughout the Island . . . every bridge in both town and country, all the existing canals, sea walls, jetties, piers, etc. . . . But not only is the community indebted for these essential works to the mere manual labour of Used by permission for Bridging World History, The Annenberg Foundation copyright © 2004 17 convicts, but by the introduction among them of a system of skilled labour, Singapore is indebted for works which could not otherwise have been sanctioned from the State funds. A church has been erected [St. Andrew’s Church], every brick and every measure of lime which has been made and laid by convicts. . . Powerful batteries have been erected at various points . . . which would have been too expensive for sanction if executed by free labour while by means of convict labour, the whole of the public buildings in the place . . . [were] kept in a state of efficiency and repair . . . 58 Convict hands were also responsible for the building of other notable Singapore edifices, including the Government House and the Mariamman Hindu Temple. In addition, in every settlement Indian convicts were put to work [End Page 201] as private servants for government and private individuals. Although this practice may have grown out of the familiarity that many British administrators and settlers had had with Indians because of their prior South Asian experiences, it also stemmed from necessity because local people were not readily available for hire, and especially not for the wages that were offered. Several generations of British officials and nonofficials alike in Southeast Asia would, no doubt, have agreed with the administrator who admitted that “the allotment of convicts gratuitously as private servants has been resorted to in order to meet the great inconvenience which seems to have always prevailed in respect to the want of hired servants.” 59 Both because of the kinds of tasks Indian convicts undertook, ranging from “public works” to private employment, and because of the virtual absence of a local labor market, their working and living conditions were apparently better than what Indian authorities had expected them to endure during their terms of transportation. That is, convicts were, contrary to the sentences passed on many of them, generally not shackled, allowed to live relatively freely and not behind walls, and often released from their terms of servitude well before the expiry of their sentences. In many locales convicts were not chained together because the shackles interfered with their work operations. Nor was it easy to compel all the convicts to stay in one area because so many of them were scattered across the settlement, especially if they were assigned to a variety of chores. Moreover, local administrators at times deliberately sought to distribute their convict populations across their localities so that they could be more easily controlled and with less manpower. After all, the colonial line of administration was stretched thinly across these outposts of empire in Southeast Asia; it was strongest in the principal towns where the machinery of government was generally aggregated and greatly attenuated in areas removed from these urban settlements. Furthermore, most settlements were unprepared to absorb large numbers of convicts and had to scramble to build convict lines to house them; these Used by permission for Bridging World History, The Annenberg Foundation copyright © 2004 18 residential quarters were built up gradually and then too only with the help of convict labor. Because of the variety of occupations that penal administrators slotted convicts into, including on at least one occasion in Bengkulen into the ranks of a convict militia, [End Page 202] they were in some localities lax about enforcing the terms of hard labor that most transportees were sentenced to. In fact, Bengkulen convicts who performed military service were formally released long before their terms had expired. 60 No wonder the system of control that evolved in the penal colonies was characterized as—in fact by an officer in charge of convicts—”prisoners their own warders.” That is, some convicts, typically those identified as the better behaved and further along in the duration of their sentence, were designated as the warders for their fellow prisoners. This arrangement minimized the demands on government for an elaborate machinery of control, personnel to staff this infrastructure, and the costs of running all this and maximized the possibilities of utilizing convicts as “free labour.” 61 Moreover, the very terms of convict labor—whether involving “public works” or other kinds of jobs ranging from service in virtually every administrative office to private service for various European officials and non-officials—ruled in favor of a limited system of discipline for Indian convicts in Southeast Asia. To the authorities in India, for whom the economic utility of transportation was not the paramount concern, the convict worker system appeared much too benign and shorn of the “horrors” that this punishment was supposed to inflict. Not surprisingly, they repeatedly chided their counterparts in Southeast Asia to stiffen the conditions under which convicts worked and lived. A frequent complaint from the Indian government was that the convicts were generally not shackled or chained, as per the terms of their sentences, and when chained were only lightly secured “in irons.” And, above all, convicts freely mingled with the local population, and occasionally escaped with the help of other Indians and Malays. The response of the government of Madras to the annual report on its convicts transported to Malacca sums up the extent to which sentences of “hard labour in irons on the roads or other public works” were apparently not enforced. Instead, some convicts were said to be “providing for themselves” suffering it would appear, no part of their sentence, but that of expatriation. Others, . . . [were] “let out”. . . as private servants, and necessarily therefore in circumstances of much comfort, others, even in offices of some trust; one is returned as a [End Page 203] “chokeedar” [night watchman], and several “in care of the commissariat bullocks.” One individual, no 117, under sentence for returning from transportation, is stated be “in the charge of bungalows” . . . 62 Many convicts who served out their terms of transportation elected to remain in their host communities, their descendants becoming part of the significant Used by permission for Bridging World History, The Annenberg Foundation copyright © 2004 19 minority that Indians constitute in the plural society of Malaysia. Some married Malay women and became part of the Jawi Pekan, or Indo-Malay community. An estimate for Singapore suggests that in 1838 only 60% of the convicts returned to India, a number that fell considerably by the 1860s when “only very few returned.” 63 Yet even as the flow of convicts to the Straits reached new levels, attitudes about continuing this traffic began to change in the receiving communities. The emergence of Singapore as a thriving port city by the mid-nineteenth century led many of its prosperous residents to reassess their support for its convict population and to harp on the dangers of the potentially volatile population mix that this group of Indians created. In the words of one Singapore governor, “Europeans were apprehensive at being a tiny minority among thousands of Asians, and well-to-do merchants of all races looked with misgivings at the mass of poor, illiterate, half-starving rootless youths who came to make their fortune. They also began to appreciate that cheap convict labour was recruited at the cost of flooding Singapore with dangerous criminals.” 64 The Singapore Free Press declared that the Straits Settlements was “the common sewer . . . for all the scum and refuse of the population of nearly the whole British possessions in the East.” 65 To what extent the presence of a large population of Indian convicts alarmed many inhabitants is also apparent from the scare of 1853 when lightning struck Singapore’s well-known St. Andrew’s Church and parishioners had to carry out their services in the courthouse. This change of locale prompted a swirl of rumors, especially in the Chinese community, regarding the authorities dispatching convicts to collect human heads in order to pacify the evil spirits that had taken up residence in the church. It was also in 1853 that about a hundred Sikh prisoners, forwarded from Calcutta’s Alipur jail, attempted to break out of the Singapore Convict Gaol, further fueling the concern that many in [End Page 204] that city had developed about the presence of dangerous criminals in their midst. Moreover, there were also “grave objections” about plans underway to add European convicts to Singapore’s Indian and Chinese convict population. Governor E. A. Blundell, who took the lead on this issue, spoke out in 1856 against any further importation of Chinese convicts who had been coming in from Hong Kong since the late 1840s. Nor did the periodic riots by Chinese and Indians in the 1850s allay fears about the growing ethnic mix of the city, as was manifested in the disturbance by Indian convicts on the occasion of the Muslim festival of Mohurrum in 1856. 66 The rising tide of opinion against any further influx of Indian convicts crested during the mutiny/rebellion of 1857–58, when the colonial government in India suddenly found itself faced with having to dispense with huge numbers of mutineers and rebels. One option broached in Calcutta was to export the Used by permission for Bridging World History, The Annenberg Foundation copyright © 2004 20 problem overseas by dispatching large numbers of them to the Straits Settlements, or instead to send the “criminals” who were already behind bars so that their removal to Singapore would open up space in the jails for the newest offenders. Singapore authorities were especially taken back by the public declaration made by the lieutenant governor of Bengal clamoring for the right to banish to the Straits “all prisoners sentenced to more than three years imprisonment, whose retention . . . may, from political reasons, or from the insecurity of their jails, be deemed unadvisable.” 67 The response from Singapore was swift and emphatically negative. The “Christian inhabitants” of one locality in Singapore submitted a memorial stating that: The whole convict system is rotten to the very core. . . . We are no longer an infant colony—that state has been passed when convict labour is either desirable or necessary. But the treatment of the convicts reflects strongly upon a system which holds out greater privileges than are conferred on nearly all the lower classes of natives. Either let the flow of convicts cease, or place them under a proper system, with a large body of European troops to keep them down. We would rather dispense with their service altogether, and return to the various presidencies these offscourings. 68 [End Page 205] Even Governor Blundell, who had called convicts “harmless settlers” 69 in 1856, joined the ranks of this dissenting chorus. He added his voice to the following memorial submitted by a body of European merchants anxious about rumors regarding the imminent arrival of a large contingent of “sepoy mutineers” to Singapore: Hitherto . . . convicts have been men from all parts of India, unknown to each other, speaking different languages and brought up in different habits and pursuits. These mutineers, on the other hand[,] are men bound to each other in a sort of tie of brotherhood, accustomed to act together, speaking the same language, and naturally entertaining the most deadly sentiments of hatred and revenge against us. To keep such men under control requires an amount of physical force not at our disposal. We have no convict guards nor have we any means of organizing any such guards . . . The internal economy of the [convict] Lines and the supervision of the convicts when at work outside, is entrusted to the convicts themselves . . . I concur in what is stated in the memorial that any outbreak on the part of the convict body might have the effect of stimulating the turbulent disposition of the lower classes of our Chinese population. . . . I do not mean that there would be any coalescing between convicts and Chinese, because they would have no access to each other, but the passions and cupidity of the lower classes of Chinese and the result would be very awful. Indeed, I concur generally in the sentiment . . . that commercial settlements like Penang and Singapore and especially the latter, should no longer be used as penal stations. So long as these settlements were in their infancy, a body of convicts proved beneficial in the formation of roads, digging Used by permission for Bridging World History, The Annenberg Foundation copyright © 2004 21 canals, &c., but now . . . a large commercial city such as Singapore . . . with a trade of ten millions sterling, a harbor crowded with shipping, and large population earnestly engaged in mercantile and tradal [sic] pursuits, is no longer a proper place for the reception of criminals of India and most especially for that of the late sepoys of the Bengal army, men whose hands have been imbrued [sic] in the blood of women and children and whose hearts are full of hatred and revenge. 70 Thus, the Straits options for Indian convicts came to an end. Briefly, some inmates of the Alipur jail were sent on to Arakan to make room for incoming rebel prisoners. But this only provided temporary relief. Far more promising was the suggestion—and one that Governor-General Canning quickly acceded to—proposed in October 1857 by [End Page 206] F.J.Mouat, inspector of jails in Bengal. His recommendation for the “best means of disposing” of large numbers was to reestablish a penal colony in the Andaman Islands or to ship them out as laborers to the West Indies, which was said to possess the additional benefit of not having an Indian population. By the beginning of 1858 government had settled on the Andamans as the principal transportation destination. In the words of the governor-general, these islands were to serve as “the reception in the first instance of convicts sentenced to imprisonment, and to transportation, for the crimes of mutiny and rebellion and for other offences…, and eventually for . . . all convicts . . . whom. . . it may not be thought expedient to send to the Straits Settlements or to the Tenasserim Provinces.” 71 By 10 March 1858, a batch of 1,000 convicts arrived in the Andamans and ushered in a new chapter in the history of transportation in colonial South Asia in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. 72 As long as India’s “offscourings” were pliable and productive as convict workers, the “whole convict system” was considered an asset to the British Empire in Southeast Asia. But as soon as convicts grew in numbers and became engaged in the life of the multiethnic communities that sprang up in the once “infant” colonies, their reputation as “harmless settlers” began to change. Especially dramatic was the shift in attitudes that occurred in Singapore in 1857––58 when it was confronted with the possibility of hosting a new wave of convicts, this time people drawn from the ranks of sepoy mutineers and peasant and other rebels. Nor were local authorities eager and willing to mix these newcomers in with those other newcomers who were beginning to make their way into these settlements as indentured laborers. 73 Convicts they were in South Asia and convict workers they became in Southeast Asia in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries because the penal societies that received them desperately needed their labor power. And they too keyed on this identity as workers—as [End Page 207] Company ke naukar, or servants of the Company to be precise—in defining themselves in terms of their labor service and utility and not in terms of their punishment Used by permission for Bridging World History, The Annenberg Foundation copyright © 2004 22 or exile. This dynamic worked well for both parties as long as convicts seemed malleable and valuable as workers. But as soon as the government in India threatened to dump its mutineers and rebels on the Straits Settlements in the aftermath of the Mutiny/Rebellion of 1857, the local administrations in the penal colonies were no longer willing to host any more transportees. Thus, the flow of convicts from South to Southeast Asia, which was part of a global system of forced migration, came to an end, its termination ushered in by the political threat that the latest batch of convicts posed to the effectiveness of the existing system of convictism. Notes 1. Stephen Nicholas and Peter R. Shergold, “Unshackling the Past,” in Convict Workers: Reinterpreting Australia’s Past, Stephen Nicholas, ed. (Cambridge, 1988), p. 7. This entire volume champions the revisionist notion that transportees be viewed as “convict workers” who “were part of a global system of forced migration” and not a “distinct class” of “professional and habitual criminals.” 2. Ian Duffield and James Bradley, “Introduction: Representing Convicts,” in Representing Convicts: New Perspectives on Convict Forced Labour Migration, Ian Duffield and James Bradley, eds. (London, 1997), pp. 1––2. 3. Nicholas and Shergold, “Transportation as Global Migration,” in Convict Workers, p. 30; Bernard Bailyn, The Peopling of British North America: An Introduction (Madison, 1986), p. 121. 4. Nicholas and Shergold, “Unshackling the Past,” pp. 3––13. 5. Bengal Public Consultations (BPC), Oct. 1––28, 1808, Oct. 28, no. 12; and June 9––July 27, 1830, July 27, no. 10; India Criminal Judicial Consultations (ICJC), July 5––Dec. 20, 1845, Sept. 20, no. 13; and June-Sept. 26, 1856. Penang, Malacca, and Singapore were collectively administered as the Straits Settlements beginning in 1826; Singapore became its capital in 1832. 6. ICJC, Jan. 7–June 24, 1853, and July 1–Dec. 30, 1853. 7. Stanley L. Engerman, “Introduction,” in Terms of Labor: Slavery, Serfdom, and Free Labor, Stanley L. Engerman, ed. (Stanford, 1999), p. 4. 8. Anthony Reid, “Introduction: Slavery and Bondage in Southeast Asian History,” in Slavery, Bondage and Dependency in Southeast Asia, Anthony Reid, ed. (New York, 1983), p. 36. 9. Reid, “Introduction,” p. 34. See also David Northrup, Indentured Labor in the Age of Imperialism, 1834–1922 (Cambridge, 1995). 10. Dirk H. A. Kolff, Naukar, Rajput and Sepoy: The Ethnohistory of the Military Labour Market in Hindustan, 1450–1850 (Cambridge, 1990), pp. 20, 76; Used by permission for Bridging World History, The Annenberg Foundation copyright © 2004 23 Anand A. Yang, “Peasants on the Move: A Study of Internal Migration in India,” Journal of Interdisciplinary History 10 (1979):38–45. 11. See my “Slave/Convict/Laborer, Indian/Malay/Chinese,” Association for Asian Studies, San Diego, 9–12 March 2000, on the meanings of this self-designation. Public labor in India typically involved prisoners who were sentenced to work on the roads. G.H.Bar low, Subsecty., to Magte., Patna, Bengal Criminal Judicial Consultations (BCJC), P/128/21, June 12– July 10, 1795, June 26, no. 25. 12. The term “Indian” in this paper is used primarily to denote convict place of origin and not to assume the existence of a national identity. However, I have argued elsewhere that convicts forged a transregional identity as a result of their experiences as convict workers in Southeast Asia in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries. See my “Slave/ Convict/Laborer.” 13. Ibid., and my “Convicts, Cannibals and Colonial Rule: India, the Andaman Islands and Asia,” 4th Annual International Conference of the World History Association, Florence, Italy, 22–25 June 1995. 14. See K. S. Sandhu, Indians in Malaya: Some Aspects of Their Immigration and Settlement (1786–1957) (Cambridge, 1969). 15. Frank McLynn, Crime and Punishment in Eighteenth-Century England (London, 1989), p. 285; J. A. Sharpe, Crime in Early Modern England 1550– 1750 (London, 1984), pp. 66–67. 16. David Meredith, “Full Circle? Contemporary Views on Transportation,” in Convict Workers, p. 14. 17. Report of the Committee on Prison-Discipline (PDCReport) (Calcutta, 1838), p. 97. 18. J. B. Hirst, Convict Society and Its Enemies: A History of Early New South Wales (Sydney, 1983), pp. 10–14; and John Clive, Macaulay: The Shaping of the Historian (New York, 1973), pp. 61–65, on Bentham’s influence on Macaulay. 19. Ram Mohan Das, Crime and Punishment in Ancient India (with a Particular Reference to the Manusmrti) (Bodh Gaya, 1982), pp. 40–41; Sukla Das, Crime and Punishment in Ancient India (c. A.D. 300 to A.D. 1100) (New Delhi, 1977), pp. 74–75. 20. Jorg Fisch, Cheap Lives and Dear Limbs: The British Transformation of the Bengal Criminal Law 1769–1817 (Wiesbaden, 1983), pp. 131–32. See also Michael R. Weisser, Crime and Punishment in Early Modern Europe (Hassocks, Sussex, 1979), pp. 137–38. 21. Bengal Revenue Consultations (BRC), Dec. 3, 1790; Fisch, Cheap Lives, pp. 38–41. Used by permission for Bridging World History, The Annenberg Foundation copyright © 2004 24 22. “Answers to the Interrogatories of the Governor General; and New Systems of Revenue, and Judicial Administration (1801),” Parliamentary Papers 9 (1812–13), esp. pp. 9, 45, 115. 23. Minutes of 14 Dec. 1835, in Lord Macaulay’s Legislative Minutes, selected by C. D. Dharkar (n.p., 1946), pp. 278–79; Anand A. Yang, “The Voice of Colonial Discipline and Punishment: Knowledge, Power and the Penological Discourse in Early Nineteenth Century India,” Indo-British Review 21 (1995):62–71. 24. PDC Report, p. 3. Much of this report focuses on existing conditions of jails and prisoners, reform of prison discipline, and the establishment of penitentiaries. 25. PDC Report, pp. 94, 80–81. Clive, Macaulay, p. 447, states that “Macaulay’s code was based upon what were for the time rather advanced humanitarian principles. Thus, the death penalty was reserved for murder and for treason, the highest offenses against the state . . .” 26. PDC Report, p. 86. Of the 800–1000 prisoners with life sentences at Alipur jail at any one time, apparently no more than 48 a year ever sought to have their sentences commuted to transportation. By Regulation I of 1828, prisoners were allowed to do so. 27. Suptd., Alipur jail to GOB, in PDC Report, appendix no. 4, p. 301. The superintendent was also reacting to the lack of severity in jail discipline. 28. Meredith, “Full Circle,” p. 14. 29. A. Kyd to Bengal, 20 Nov. 1794, BPC, Jan. 2–Feb. 27, 1795, Jan. 19, no. 3. 30. Extract Judicial Letter to Bengal, June 30, 1802, Board’s Collections (BC), F/4/142, nos. 2481A to 2496. Also BCJC, P/128/32, Jan. 6–April 28, 1797, Feb. 24, no. 2, for a list of transportees that includes Portuguese convicts transported to Penang from India. 31. Fisch, Cheap Lives, p. 53. Some 270 convicts were banished to the Andamans by the end of 1795. The following year government, “with a view to humanity and economy,” withdrew from this penal settlement because of “great sickness and mortality . . . and the great expense and embarrassment to government in maintaining it and in conveying to it supplies at the present period.” Minute by the Board, BPC, Jan. 4–Feb. 22, 1796, Feb. 12, no. 5. These convicts were later transferred to Penang, also known as the Prince of Wales Island (POWI). Major J.F.A. McNair, Prisoners Their Own Warders (Westminister, 1899), p. 4. 32. Sandhu, Indians in Malaya, pp. 132–33. 33. Extract judicial letter, June 30, 1802, BC, F/4/142, 1803–4; Foreign Political, 1839; Nicholas Tarling, ed. The Cambridge History of Southeast Used by permission for Bridging World History, The Annenberg Foundation copyright © 2004 25 Asia, vol. 2, The Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries (Cambridge, 1992), ch. 1; John Mulvany, “Bengal Jails in Early Days,” Calcutta Review n.s. 6, no. 292 (1918):297–98. Briefly, the British also held Java and other former Dutch possessions. 34. “A.D. 1799. Regulation II,” Harington’s Regulations; “List of convicts . . . on . . . the ship Endeavour,” “List . . . on board the ship London,” BPC, May 3–29, 1797, May 3, nos. 125, 127. See also Board to Suptd., POWI, Mar. 11, 1796, BPC, Feb. 29–Mar. 28, 1796, Mar. 14, no. 40. 35. “A.D. Regulation LIII,” Harington’s Regulations; Mulvany, “Bengal Jails,” pp. 297–98. The section in Regulation II of 1799 extending transportation to escaped prisoners was rescinded. Fisch, Cheap Lives, pp. 3–4. 36. Fisch, Cheap Lives, pp. 78, 62; “Regulation LIII.” 37. “Resolutions,” BCJC, Nov. 26–Dec. 10, 1811, Dec. 10, no. 2; “A.D. 1811. Regulation XIV.” 38. Fisch, Cheap Lives, p. 78, attributes the abolition to three reasons: the building of a new jail at Alipur, the frequent delays experienced in carrying out transportation, and the costs incurred. 39. “A.D. 1813. Regulation IX.” 40. “A.D. 1828. Regulation I.” 41. Letter from Governor, POWI, May 31, 1800, Extract BPC, July 10, 1800, BC, 1803–1804, F/4/152. 42. “Extract from . . . the Colonial Dept.,” June 5, 1813, BCJC, June 26–July 24, 1813, July 24, no. 18; extract from Fort Marlbro to Fort William, Aug. 5, 1806, in BC, 1808–1809, F/4/259. K. Hazareesingh, History of Indians in Mauritius (London, 1977), pp. 4–9. In 1815, 700 prisoners were sent from Bengal to work in Mauritius. 43. “Extract letter from Governor General…,” Dec. 20, 1806, BC, 1808–1809, F/4/245; “Seizure and Trial of the Rebel Yeman Nair . . . ,” BC, 1809–10, F/4/268; “Extract. . . from Fort St. George,” May 9, 1803; Lt., 2nd Battalion, 6th Regt., N.I., March 8, 1803 to Fort St. George, BC, F/4/55, 1803–1804. 44. “A.D. 1828. Regulation I”; John R. Mclane, Land and Local Kingship in Eighteenth-Century Bengal (Cambridge, 1993), pp. 75–76; and his “Bengali Bandits, Police and Landlords after the Permanent Settlement,” in Crime and Criminality in British India, Anand A. Yang, ed. (Tucson, 1985), pp. 26–47. 45. McNair, Prisoners, p. 11. 46. Sandhu, Indians in Malaya, pp. 132–33; Chief Secty’s memo, Nov. 1824; T. S. Raffles to Secty, April 5, 1824, in BC, 1825–26, F/4/825; Bombay to Court of Directors, May 22, 1841, BCJC, July 5–Sept. 27, 1841, Aug 16, no. Used by permission for Bridging World History, The Annenberg Foundation copyright © 2004 26 9; C. M. Turnbull, A History of Singapore 1819–1988, 2nd ed. (Singapore, 1989), p. 46. 47. PDC Report, pp. 73–74, 77, 101; “Abstract . . . of Madras convicts. . . ,” Oct. 17, 1837, BCJC, Nov. 13–Dec. 29, 1837, Dec. 18, no. 7; Committee to Mauritius, July 20, 1847, ICJC, July 1–30 Dec. 1848, Aug. 19, no. 14; Secty. to Fort Cornwallis, no 942, April 10, 1828, BCJC, April 2–May 1, 1828, April 10, no. 8. 48. Mauritius was phased out as a penal colony and its convict traffic stopped in the late 1830s. Colonial Secty. to Secty., GOI, June 13, 1848; and Committee to Governor, July 20, 1847, ICJC, July 1–Dec. 3 1848, Aug. 19, no. 14. 49. Governor to GOI, no. 106, Aug. 20, 1855, and Malacca to Secty., ICJC, Oct. 5–Dec. 31, 1855, Nov. 16, nos. 13, 16; Singapore to Governor, April 7, 1846, Singapore to GOB, no. 154, Nov. 12, 1847, ICJC, May 3o-Oct. 17, 1846, June 13, no. 22 and Oct. 21, no. 1; Governor to GOI, ICJC, July 7–Dec. 22, 1854, Sept. 22, no. 14; GOB to GOI, no. 2310, Oct. 31, 1853, ICJC, Oct. 5–Dec. 31, 1855, Nov. 23, no. 13. Whether convicts were sent to Burma or to the Straits depended at times on the exigencies of the day. When the costs of shipping them to the Straits was ascertained to be more than to transport them to the Arakan or Tenasserim, transportation to the former area was halted. But when the ensuing influx into Burma produced overcrowding in the jails there, traffic was redirected to the Straits. The then-governor of the Straits, Colonel Butterworth, proposed to take in as many as 500 to 600 additional convicts. 50. Sandhu, Indians, p. 47. 51. BPC, Feb. 29–Mar. 28, 1796, Mar. 7, no. 6. 52. Resident, Fort Marlborough, Nov. 30, 1805, in G/34/24, Sumatra, 1799– 1808, Nov. 30, 1805. 53. J. Taylor, Richard Becker to Sir George H. Barlow, Nov. 18, 1806, G/34/24, Sumatra, 1799–1808, Nov. 30, 1805. 54. Sandhu, Indians, p. 47. 55. Minute by Governor, G/34/65, Jan. 3–April 3, 1818, Jan. 22. 56. Minute by President, POWI, G/34/8, Jan 8–May 27, 1824, April 15. 57. Ibid. 58. PP, XL, (1862), paper no. 12, pp. 32–33. 59. Fort Cornwallis to Capt Bunbury and others, Nov. 6, 1827, BPC, Sept. 15– Oct. 15, 1830, Sept. 15, no. 12. In Penang in the 1850s, convicts were also put to work in “industrial employment,” including “rattan work,” the Used by permission for Bridging World History, The Annenberg Foundation copyright © 2004 27 manufacture of chairs, baskets, and other items that were produced for public consumption. McNair, Prisoners, p. 19. 60. Yang, “Slave/Convict/Laborer.” Those convicts who performed military service were initially reluctant to return their uniforms or to accept a reduction in their food allowances. 61. McNair, Prisoners, p. 18. 62. Foujdari Adalat to Chief Secty., Madras, Aug. 22, 1835, BC, F/4/1628, 1836–37, no. 65135. 63. K. S. Sandhu, cited in Sharon Siddique and Nirmala Puru Shotam, Singapore’s Little India: Past, Present, and Future (Singapore, 1982), p. 9. 64. Turnbull, Singapore, p. 55. 65. Cited in ibid. 66. C. B. Buckley, An Anecdotal History of Old Times in Singapore (Kuala Lumpur, reprint [1902] 1965), pp. 575–631; Hong Kong to GOI, no. 786, Oct. 28, 1856, India Public Consultations (IPC), Jan.-Mar. 1857, Jan. 9, no. 7; Governor to GOI, no. 60, June 1, 1853, ICJC, July-Sept. 28, 1855, July 6, no. 6. 67. GOB to GOI, IPC, July-Aug. 1857, Aug. 28, no. 39. 68. “Respectful memorial of Christian inhabitants . . . ,” ICJC, Sept.-Oct. 1857, Oct. 2, no. 77. 69. Buckley, Anecdotal History, p. 657. 70. Blundell to GOI, no. 201, Nov. 26, 1857, IPC, Jan. 1858, Jan. 8, no. 7. 71. GOI to Suptd., Moulmein, no. 87, Jan. 15, 1858, IPC, Jan., no. 21. 72. Howell, Note on Jails, p. 71; GOI to Bombay, Jan. 12, 1858, IPC, Jan. 1858, no. 13. An excellent study of this penal colony is Satadru Sen, Disciplining Punishment: Colonialism and Convict Society in the Andaman Islands (Oxford, 2000). 73. Secty. to Suptd., Alipur Jail, BCJC, Feb. 14–28, 1828, Feb. 28, no. 49; Colonial Secty. to GOI, April 29, 1841 and Bombay to Court of Directors, May 22, 1841, ICJC, July 5–Sept 27, 1841, July 19, no. 9. The decision to halt penal traffic to Mauritius was based in part on the fear that a continuing infusion of Indian convicts would unduly influence the island’s growing Indian population. Once the convict traffic was stopped, free laborers and their families were brought in. See also Clare Anderson, Convicts in the Indian Ocean: Transportation from South Asia to Mauritius, 1815–53 (London, 2000). Used by permission for Bridging World History, The Annenberg Foundation copyright © 2004 28