Sailing the British Empire : The Voyages of The Clarence, 1858-73Main MenuSailing the British Empire: The Voyages of the Clarence, 1858-73IntroductionThe Crew / AcknowledgmentsThe Provenance of Watson's LogAdditional Sources: Logs, Crew Lists, DiariesInside Lloyd's Register"Green's Celebrated Service"Details on owner of the ship at the time of our voyage, Richard Green.The Master Builder: William PileThe Master: Joseph Watson's BiographyA Mate's ProgressThe Career of Henry Berridge, First Mate of the ClarenceThe Crew of the Clarence in 1864An annotated crew listThe 18th HussarsThe Clarence and the Cyclone of 1864Origins of Indian Emigrants Aboard The ClarenceThe Surgeon-SuperintendantWages of indentured labourers in Demerara (1870-1900)The Clarence Sails to AustraliaMutiny! Violence and Resistance Aboard "Coolie Ships"Cholera: The Killer from CalcuttaSTSC 077, Fall 2015 First Year Seminar, University of Pennsylvaniab33a025deaa7595ed0079bfc9b77ea3cb14b8d08STSC 077, The University of Pennsylvania, fall 2015
1media/SugarCane.jpgmedia/Hierarchy of jobs.jpg2015-11-24T22:14:02-08:00Wages and trends in wages19plain2016-02-24T10:00:19-08:00
Different jobs in plantations
In a given plantation in British Guiana or Demerara, indentured laborers had different jobs that would be assigned to them in regards to their physical capacities or time in the plantation. Each job would have different pays, in accordance to their difficulties or physical requirements. Not every plantation offered the same set of jobs but the following are six that were present in every plantation:
Canecutters
Shovelmen
Weeders
Suppliers
Puntmen
Porters
Wages
The pay for each job was determined by its difficulty. The following table shows the average wages of each type of worker in three time periods:
Average rate (in cents) of daily wages for field labor
Field workers
1880-1884
1885-1895
1896-1905
Average wage (job)
Canecutters
60
72
60
64.00
Shovelmen
50
36
36
40.67
Weeders
28
26
28
27.33
Suppliers
46
48
36
43.33
Puntmen
48
40
36
41.33
Porters
N/A
40
40
40.00
Average wage (time period)
46.40
43.67
39.33
The general trend that can be observed here is that the average wage for all workers, as a function of time, decreased. Reasons for this are the depression suffered by the sugar industry and overcapacity of indentured laborers, discussed further in the previous page. A hierarchy of jobs, as observed by their daily wages, can be constructed from this information:
A picture of canecutters:
It is pertinent to mention that laborers were protected by law by a daily minimum wage of 25 cents. Considering how close to this wage some of the jobs listed in the previous table were, it is fair to assume that if not for this law, wages of indentured laborers would have suffered considerably more as a result of the depression.
Another thing to take into consideration is the fact that the decrease in average wage for all workers was caused because of a particular set of jobs. Wages of shovelmen, suppliers and puntmen suffered the most. Surprisingly, the value of the wages for canecutters, weeders and porters did not fluctuate during this time period. This can be appreciated in the following table:
Decrease (range) of wages per job
Job
Wage (1880-1884)
Wage (1896-1905)
Range (cents)
Canecutters
60
60
0
Shovelmen
50
36
14
Weeders
28
28
0
Suppliers
46
36
10
Puntmen
48
36
12
Porters
40
40
0
Not coincidentally, the jobs which did not experience a decrease in wages (shovelmen, suppliers and puntmen) are the three jobs at the top of the hierarchy of jobs.
Sources:
Mangru, Basdeo. A History of East Indian Resistance on the Guyana Sugar Estates, 1869-1948. Lewiston, NY: Edwin Mellen, 1996. Print.
Rodway, James. Hand-book of British Guiana. Georgetown, British Guiana: Pub. by the Committee, 1893. Print.