Khoo Salma Nasution, Vice-President, Penang Heritage Trust
Most historical writing on early tin-mining history in Malaya has largely relied on colonial records and British accounts. The book, Kinta Valley: Pioneering Malaysia’s Modern Development (Khoo, S. N. and Abdur-Razzaq Lubis, 2005), which I co-authored in 2005, was no exception. Soon after its publication, I received a critical email:
The recent book on the Kinta Valley published by Perak Academy is very good although it commits a bit of heresy, possibly because the antecedence of the bucket dredge was not appreciated and so the presence of NZ and Australian dredge-men has not got due glory spot.
Alluvial mining technology for both gold and tin are highly transferrable, so it is no surprise to find Australian miners venturing into the Malay states’ tin-fields. James Williams, a Victorian miner who became inspector of mines in Selangor, was said, in 1879, to have been prospecting in Perak since 1872. William Scott, a well-known miner from Sandhurst, Bendigo, Victoria, experimented with shafting in the Larut area under Patrick Doyle’s supervision, and later became inspector of mines in Perak (Birch, 1976, pp. 26–27 and Doyle, 1879, pp. 15–16). 2
For hundreds of years, the indigenous people in the Siamese–Malay peninsula have been extracting tin, a metal sought after by Indian traders. Even before British arrival in the region, the local Malay and Siamese chiefs had successfully engaged Chinese headmen to organize labour for the mines. Chinese and Sumatran miners brought or innovated various mechanical water-lifting devices and smelting furnaces. As the British Resident of Perak in 1877–1889, Hugh Low was instrumental in introducing Western technology into the Perak mines in 1878, in the form of the portable steam-powered centrifugal pump.
But did the transfer of modern technology flow only from North to South? Or did it occasionally flow from the South as well? A work on recent conceptualizations of eco-cultural networks states the need to rethink the divisions between cultural and material approaches to the environmental history of the British Empire, to emphasize relational connections in making networks, and to focus anew on questions of agency—in short, the right people in the right place:
The work of James Beattie examines how some nineteenth-century Chinese seized on the opportunities presented by British imperialism to take advantage of resource frontiers opening up in places like Australia and New Zealand. He shows how British military expansion set up the pre-eminence of the colonial entrepôt of Hong Kong, but also connected Chinese migrants with international shipping networks and newly opening British imperial commodity frontiers. His work reveals the porous boundaries of the British Empire and the unexpected connections they fostered (Beattie, Melillo, and O’Gorman, 2014, p. 572).
From the early 19th century, tin mining in Malaya quickly expanded through the agency of Chinese fraternal associations (which the colonial administration called ‘secret societies’), based in the Straits Settlements, where it sourced mercantile capital, mining provisions, and Chinese labour. British colonial expansionism took advantage of local conflicts between Malay chiefs—using the excuse that they were disrupting the Straits interests—to impose political control on the Malay states from 1874. Both British administrators and Chinese mining entrepreneurs had a hand in encouraging early Australian ventures in Perak’s tin mining.
Owing to a general lack of interest from British investors, Hugh Low felt justified in inviting French companies to try their hand at tin exploitation. The French Société des Etains de Kinta, which ran an open-cast mine with labour-intensive methods, became the most successful European company in Kinta, operating for almost a century, from 1886 until 1985. The one large British concern during Low’s term as Resident was the Perak Tin Mining and Smelting Company Limited (of Shanghai), financed mainly by European merchants in Shanghai, which operated unsuccessfully from 1883 until 1890 (Straits Times Weekly Issue, 1884, p. 5 and 1890, p. 2).
Influence of Sir Fredrick Weld
In 1880, Sir Fredrick Weld took up his position as the Governor of the Straits Settlements, after serving as Governor of Western Australia (1869–1874) and Governor of Tasmania (1875–1880). At his instigation, two Australian companies started mining tin in Perak in 1883 (Wong, 1964, p. 137). The Perak Tin Mining Company NL (of Sandhurst), formed in Bendigo, was subsequently superseded by the Sandhurst Tin Mining Company operating the same concession. The Melbourne Tin Mining Company was founded by investors from Melbourne. The two companies lasted 11 and 10 years respectively (Birch, 1976, pp. 28–29).
As British Resident of Perak, Frank Swettenham lamented that all the above companies could not compete with Chinese miners, as they were run along top-down Western lines and spent most of their capital on managerial salaries and expenses, but without bringing the advantages of any superior European methods. Hence, they were short-lived (Swettenham, 1893, p. 341 and Wong, 1965, p. 138). Indeed, a newspaper article on ‘Mining in the Malay Peninsula’ encapsulated the wisdom of the day:
... experience gained has shown that what is true in other parts of the world is equally true in regard to the Malay Peninsula, viz. that alluvial mining will pay Chinese but will not pay Europeans, and that the only kinds of mining that will pay Europeans there, as elsewhere, are either tin lodes or gold-bearing quartz reefs, at least so far as these two metals are concerned (Straits Times Weekly Issue, 1889, p. 4).
However, the assumption that the first Australian companies in Perak met with failure is refuted by Birch (1976). He points out that as far as limited evidence would show, the Australian investors ventured into Malaya when tin prices were high, made a profit, and left when investment prospects were better in Australia (Birch, 1976, pp. 28, 34–35). Birch explains that the reason for their relative success, compared with other European companies of the period, was that Australians miners were used to dealing with the Chinese:
Two-thirds of the labour employed in the tin-mining industry of New South Wales, for instance was Chinese, and there were doubtless many Chinese employed on the Tasmanian mine-fields. Australians were accustomed to employing the Chinese under the tribute system, where the owners of the mine were essentially preferred shareholders, and the labourers were ordinary shareholders. The mine-owner supplied the necessary capital equipment and in return received an agreed proportion of any profit from the sale of the mine’s output. The balance of the profits went first to the gang boss and then to the labourers (Birch, 1976, p. 45).
The first Australian companies brought investment to Perak, but apparently did nothing noteworthy in terms of transferring technology. Rather, these Australian miners secured concessions from the government at low cost and then let them out to Chinese miners to operate on tribute (Birch, 1976).
The ‘Endless Chain Earth Lifter’ proved unsuccessful due to high working costs. The Scottish mining pioneer Grant Mackie, who was also involved in the Tronoh Mines in the initial stage, later confessed that he, too, lacked the methods to work tin alluvial deeper than 40 feet (The Straits Times, 1913, p. 9).… a Chinese water wheel driven by steam, with ledges set along the chain upon which the baskets of wash dirt are placed by the hands in the mine, and which are again removed by hands at the top (Ingham and Bradford, 1960, pp. 156–158, 171–172; Khoo, S. N. and Abdur-Razzaq Lubis, 2005, p. 79).
When the Chinese towkays and workmen saw the massive timber works going up to carry the puddlers they told Foo Choon I would ruin him. He told them to mind their own business, that I was spending his money not theirs. In three months, I had the machines working. Then when they saw they were a success, they said that the “orang puteh” [white man] was very clever. And now there are about forty of these machines working here; and the Towkays reckon that one machine is equal to one hundred men (The Straits Times, 1902, p. 3).Proving the pay-dirt to be 140 feet thick, Addis sank a deep shaft to reach the deep alluvial layer and personally trained 250 workers to work the mines (Straits Times Weekly Issue, 1904, p. 5; Singapore Free Press, 1908, p. 8; Wong, 1965, p. 200). After making a profit of Straits$20,000 per month for three years, the success of the Tronoh Mines attracted the interest of Cornwall stockbroker James Wickett and his son, mining engineer Fred Wickett. Based on Fred’s prospecting report, Tronoh Mines Ltd was floated in December 1901, through his father’s agency, for Straits$1 million, half in cash and half in shares. In 1902, Fred became the manager of the Tronoh Mines (Khoo, S. N. and Abdur-Razzaq Lubis, 2005, p. 106).
Ballarat, as acknowledged by Americans and all other visitors, is, or was, the leading alluvial goldfield in the world. Its engineers, mechanical and mining, hold their own among the best from other parts of the world; and I must, at the risk of being thought egotistical, inform you that I graduated in practical underground work in the Ballarat deep alluvial leads in the early fifties, and afterwards at the Ballarat School of Mines, from which I hold a certificate (Straits Times Weekly Issue, 1904, p. 5).Addis, who had earned the moniker ‘father of the Tronoh Mines’, bristled at the lack of respect shown to him by the Cornwall miners. He left Ipoh for Singapore in 1905 and then to Australia for a holiday of about six months:
Mr Addis now wears a magnificent diamond and sapphire ring, which was presented to him on leaving. It is no secret to state that the Towkay has settled a handsome pension on the man who helped so well to build up his enormous fortune (Times of Malaya, 1905).Instead of retiring, Addis was raising support for his own mining venture at Sungai Raia in Kinta. The Sungei Raia Tin Mines company was formed as a ‘no liability’ company with capital raised from Melbourne investors. Addis was the managing director in Perak, while R. Archbold was chairman and G.E. Robinson legal manager, with offices at 317 Collins Street, Melbourne (The Argus, Melbourne, 1908, p. 10). All the machinery was manufactured in Melbourne, and shipped out in around April 1906 (Sunday Times, Sydney, 1906). The Melbourne businessman Louis Ah Mouy, an original shareholder and board member of the company, visited Perak and on his return insisted on one-tenth of the shares in any formation (Melbourne Punch, 1906, pp. 9–10).
As the Malayan tin-fields proved themselves, they began to attract Western capital in a big way through stock exchanges in the United Kingdom and Australia. While the search for less labour-intensive technologies continued, the 1910s would see a second wave of Australian investment in tin mining. Having made a success of hydraulic mining in Perak with the use of gravel pumps and monitors, the legendary firm Osborne & Chappel began to advance suction cutter technology (Palmer and Joll, 2011). But it was the bucket dredge, introduced to Southeast Asia by a Tasmanian entrepreneur in 1906, that trumped all other methods for large-scale tin extraction. British firms in Malaya adopted the bucket dredging technology from 1913 and continued to recruit, among others, Australian and New Zealand mining talent to work in the tin-fields of Malaya.
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